Casio F-91W
The Casio F-91W is a digital watch manufactured by Japanese electronics company Casio. Introduced in 1989, it is popular for its low price and long battery life. Annual production of the watch is 3 million units per year.
Specifications
Design
Designed by Ryusuke Moriai as his first design for Casio, the case of the F-91W measures and weighs. The case is primarily made of plastic, with a stainless steel caseback and buttons with the manufacturer's module number, 593, stamped on the caseback. The resin strap is at the fitting and 22mm across the widest part of the lugs.Features
The F-91W has a second stopwatch with a count up to 59:59.99. The stop watch also has the feature to mark net and split time. Other features include an hourly time beep and a single daily alarm lasting 20 seconds and an annual calendar, with adjustment for leap years not supported as the watch does not record the year. February is always counted as 28 days. The watch uses a faint, green LED backlight located to the left of the display for illumination. According to manufacturer estimates, the watch is reported to be accurate to ±30 seconds per month.The quartz movement is powered by a single CR2016 3-volt lithium button cell.
Water resistance
The watch front is marked "Water Resist", but Casio reports different values for different variants of the watch. The black version is "30 meter / 3 bar", the ISO standard meaning of which is: "Suitable for everyday use. Splash/rain resistant. NOT suitable for showering, bathing, swimming, snorkeling, water related work and fishing".Operation
The watch is controlled by three side-mounted push-buttons.- The upper left button, labeled "Light", turns on the light, cancels the alarm, resets the stopwatch or marks the split time, and is used for selecting settings.
- The lower left button, labeled "Mode", cycles the modes of the watch: time display, alarm, stopwatch, and time/date adjustment.
- The right button, labeled "Alarm On-Off/24hr", is the function button: when used, it starts and stops the stopwatch, changes the settings currently being adjusted, or switches between the 12- and 24-hour modes, depending on what mode the watch is currently in. Pressing all three buttons at the same time will fill all the cells on the LCD until any button is pressed again.
The watch display shows the day of the week, day of the month, hour, minute, seconds, and the signs PM in the afternoon – or 24H – at all times, the alarm signal status, and the hourly signal status are present when activated in the alarm mode.
In stopwatch mode, minutes, seconds, and hundredths of a second are shown.
Usage in terrorism
According to secret documents issued to interrogators at Guantanamo Bay, obtained and released by The Guardian, "the Casio F-91W digital watch was declared to be 'the sign of al-Qaeda' and a contributing factor to continued detention of prisoners by the analysts stationed at Guantanamo Bay. Briefing documents used to train staff in assessing the threat level of new detainees advise that possession of the F-91W and the A159W – available online for as little as £4 – suggests the wearer has been trained in bomb making by al-Qaeda in Afghanistan." United States Military intelligence officials have identified the F-91W as a watch that terrorists use in constructing time bombs.This association was highlighted in the Denbeaux study, and may have been used in some cases at the Guantanamo Bay detention camp. An article published in the Washington Post in 1996 reported that Abdul Hakim Murad, Wali Khan Amin Shah, and Ramzi Ahmed Yousef had developed techniques to use commonly available Casio digital watches to detonate time bombs. Casio watches were mentioned almost 150 times in prisoner assessments from Guantanamo.
On July 12, 2006, the magazine Mother Jones provided excerpts from the transcripts of a selection of the Guantanamo detainees.
The article informed readers:
More than a dozen detainees were cited for owning cheap digital watches, particularly "the infamous Casio watch of the type used by Al Qaeda members for bomb detonators."
The article quoted Abdullah Kamel Abudallah Kamel:
When they told me that Casios were used by Al Qaeda and the watch was for explosives, I was shocked... If I had known that, I would have thrown it away. I'm not stupid. We have four chaplains ; all of them wear this watch.
Variants
Model name | Description |
F-91-WC | Neon colours: orange, blue, green, pink, beige and yellow |
F-91-WM | Metallic coloured cases |
F-84W | Japanese Domestic Market model patterned after the colours and text arrangement of a similar 1987 Casio digital watch. Lugs instead of embedded strap. |
F-94W | Circular icon arrangement in the display |
W59 | Waterproof up to 50 metres |
A158W, A159W, A163W, A164W | Stainless steel band |
A159WGA-1 | Stainless steel band, gold colour |
F-105W, A168W, A168WG, A168WEGM, A168WEM | Equipped with electroluminescent backlighting instead of the LED incandescent backlight in other variants. Available in black colour with a resin strap or in silver or gold colours with a stainless steel bracelet. Slightly different icon arrangement on the display and a thicker case due to the backlight system. Some versions also feature a negative display |
LA680 | A smaller variant, marketed towards women |
F-91-WS | Translucent colours: blue, pink, white, and grey |