Model Information and Characteristics
- Arabic numerals at 12, 6 and 9, and magnified date window at 3.
- Water resistant to a maximum depth of 200 meters/666 ft.
- It has a unidirectional bezel that rotates anti-clockwise with "0-60" scale. It is useful for any kind of measures, especially diving times.
- The black dial version has silver numbers with orange markers. It also has silver color skeleton hands. The silver dial version has black skeleton hands.
- The Omega Seamaster 200 Omegamatic use screw-down crown for a tight water seal.
- This watch has a screw-in back. It has a series of five holes/notches evenly placed around the back. These are the indentations for the screw-back case opener tool to grip the back piece open and close it.
- The bracelet is 18mm wide and it is made of solid links, therefore not prone to stretching over time. This kind of bracelet is one of the most difficult to add or remove links
- There is at least one known special edition of the seamaster 200 omegamatic. There were 1997 units produced in a case that resembled a diver’s tank.
Read more about this topic: Omega Seamaster Omegamatic
Famous quotes containing the words model and/or information:
“...that absolutely everything beloved and cherished of the bourgeoisie, the conservative, the cowardly, and the impotentthe State, family life, secular art and sciencewas consciously or unconsciously hostile to the religious idea, to the Church, whose innate tendency and permanent aim was the dissolution of all existing worldly orders, and the reconstitution of society after the model of the ideal, the communistic City of God.”
—Thomas Mann (18751955)
“If you have any information or evidence regarding the O.J. Simpson case, press 2 now. If you are an expert in fields relating to the O.J. Simpson case and would like to offer your services, press 3 now. If you would like the address where you can send a letter of support to O.J. Simpson, press 1 now. If you are seeking legal representation from the law offices of Robert L. Shapiro, press 4 now.”
—Advertisement. Aired August 8, 1994 by Tom Snyder on TV station CNBC. Chicago Sun Times, p. 11 (July 24, 1994)