ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX
3 April 2007, 01:08 PM | #31 |
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Wow, looks like Kojack >>>
You could be twins. Maybe a career in TV will be in your future, JJ.
On the serious side I cannot answer your question. I can only find drivers at about 2000 ft. max. Could it possibly be for bragging rights? I doubt Rolex made this for nothing. They do over build their watches but........ =) maverick |
3 April 2007, 01:13 PM | #32 | |
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Nice chatting with you today over SKYPE. Guess you guys are right. The 4000 ft. is more like a sales ploy - no human on earth is ever going down that deep with an SD on his wrist to test it out....that's for sure!! See you later, Dennis!!
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3 April 2007, 01:33 PM | #33 |
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yeah it could be a sales ploy.......it could also be about having extra buffer or tolerance.....
just like a 2000 watts RMS amplifier........or a 800 bhp car.......BIG figures sell....you may never use all of it.....but it's nice to know u have it....:)
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3 April 2007, 01:39 PM | #34 |
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JJ, no human has ever been to 4000 ft with or without a watch, in fact no-one has come close. I think the current record for technical diving descent breathing mixed gases (designed to reduce the chance of getting bent) is about 315M.
Most recreational SCUBA divers don't do things like that; they breath air and go much less deep. Usually to between 100-120feet. Below that it gets dark and cold, so the professionals do it with mixed gas. The limiting element is the "area under the nitrogen curve" which is influenced by a number of things, chiefly depth and time spent at that depth. Tolerance to the temperature varies from individual to individual, fitness levels, activity underwater and water temperature. Most reasonably fit people will need a 2-4 mm suit if they want to dive tropical or sub-tropical 80 or greater feet at a surface temp of 20-24 degrees. Even then it can be chilly. It's a rough guide, and the only trade-off is that thicker wetsuits are more buoyant at less depth, so buoyancy is harder to manage for the novice. But the deepest a professional has been is 310-315 meters, and this was a "technical" dive ie a dive done for its own sake. The guy took 6 hours to decompress. Incidentally, you don't get crushed at depth because you're made of water. The air in you is compressed and that can be a problem in sinuses, including the middle-ear. Also, the deeper you go the higher the amount of nitrogen you absorb (not the proportion). You can go as deep as you like; pressure is not the limiting force. Limiting forces are nitrogen retention (decompression sickness or bends -only an issue if you get back), temperature, light and compression of air in trapped spaces. There is a whole book you can read on how this stuff affects the lungs, but it's boring. Does that hep? |
3 April 2007, 03:09 PM | #35 |
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Some good info there, Peter....thanks a lot - appreciated!!
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3 April 2007, 04:25 PM | #36 |
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I am going with the marketing theory. Rolex have always been into marketing in a sensational way. The channel swim in 1927 was one of the first of many.
When Rolex brought the 4000ft model out it was unbeatable at that time with such a gob smacking depth figure. Some of the buyers of this model may be associated with marine sport or even professional divers, but I would say far and away the majority of SD buyers wanted the watch because of the depth rating enscription on the dial. A big WOW factor if you like. Lowering a watch by line overboard into the sea and measuring the line is impractical. The pressure tests that Rolex carry out on their models in the factory are simulating ocean depths in special tanks. I read that years back, they pressure tested an Explorer I to some phenominal depth equivalent before the oyster case actually crumpled. (can't remember where I read it). This was used in an advertisement in magazines for the watch and showed pictures of it caved in. A great increase in sales of the model followed, they realised that pressure testing, especially on sports models used for snorkelling or scuba recreation would be more saleable with the marine depth 'limitation' enscribed on the dial. Similar advertisements were of the Sea Dweller being strapped to the outer hull of a submersible. Rolex usually understate the pressure that is the marine depth equivalent. The Submariner is 1000ft (300m) and I'm optimistic it may go half as much again before any water penetration or case damage occurs. Rolex were smart enough to know that their Sea Dweller would sell far better if it had the impressive 4000 feet written on the dial rather than 150 BAR or just "waterproof" I would say that today more Rolex Submariners and Sea Dwellers are sold because of this and that the majority of buyers are not scuba divers either. Rolex marketing may believe that to wear a Sea Dweller gives the owner a feeling of achievment and invicibility. He has no intention of diving to that depth for obvious reasons, but it gives him an dream image in his own mind that if he could descend to those cold black crushing depths, he would be able to so with the SD on his wrist. So JJ that's a few reasons why the SD has the 4000ft rating. Steve |
3 April 2007, 06:24 PM | #37 |
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If it plunged straight down could it handle the speed?
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3 April 2007, 07:46 PM | #38 |
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I think the extra protection from the increased Depth rating of the SD, just gives that extra edge you need. If you are a saturation commercial diver, you may only go down to couple hundred feet but you may be doing work and banging the watch against things that could cause additional pressure and stress on the watch. The SD was created out of a need by the COMEX divers. Of course the original SD's depth rating was less than it is today. But still had the HEV.
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3 April 2007, 08:55 PM | #39 |
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Rolex needs one to work in the Marianas trench!
...10,911 meters (35,798 ft or 6.78 miles) |
3 April 2007, 10:26 PM | #40 |
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They did on 30 September 1953,attached the Bathysphere Trieste but only to 3150m.But thats one Rolex thats was not designed for normal wrist wear.
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ICom Pro3 All posts are my own opinion and my opinion only. "The clock of life is wound but once, and no man has the power to tell just when the hands will stop. Now is the only time you actually own the time, Place no faith in time, for the clock may soon be still for ever." Good Judgement comes from experience,experience comes from Bad Judgement,.Buy quality, cry once; buy cheap, cry again and again. www.mc0yad.club Second in command CEO and left handed watch winder |
3 April 2007, 10:32 PM | #41 |
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4 April 2007, 04:43 AM | #42 |
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You're a certified nut, Robert!!! LOL!!!
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Words fail me in expressing my utmost thanks to ALL of you for this wonderful support during my hour of need!! I firmly believe that my time on planet earth is NOT yet up!! I shall fight this to the very end.......and WIN!! |
4 April 2007, 07:47 AM | #43 |
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[QUOTE=JJ Irani;201640]Okay guys,
Here are a few obvious questions coming your way...please answer them as best you can. Thanks!! 1. What is the maximum depth a professional trained diver can go down to with the usual breathing apparatus, but only wearing a normal dive suit? 2. What is the maximum depth a professional trained diver can go down to with a special extra thick diving suit and the huge metal helmet on top? 3. Whatever the depth, I'm pretty sure no human being on earth can get anywhere even close to 4,000 ft without being crushed like a tin can. So why this enormous depth rating on the SD when it can never be actually WORN by any man to that depth? Normal scuba on air(21%oxygen 79%nitrogen) can go to 66 metres but after that there are issues around CNS toxicity due to oxygen being breathed under pressure, may cause tonic/clonic sezures. With some training and a bit of nerve you can go deeper, using helium mixture to cut down the risk of oxygen toxicity. Pro Divers can work around 300metre mark, they use an umbilical line which pumps warm water and breathing gas to their suit. It can take up to a week to decompress in a bell from that depth, and ive heard stories of divers in Deco from a sat dive in the south china sea, when a hurricaine blew up and could not be pulled up, and had to wait for it to blow over, but sadly did not survive the storm. |
4 April 2007, 09:09 AM | #44 |
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I'll try posting a serious answer, and touch on something that I don't think anyone else has mentioned yet (unless I missed it).
It's really not about depth -- it's all about pressure. Pressure increases as you descend in the water, of course, but if you are simply waving your (Rolex-wearing) arm through the shallow end of a swimming pool, you are creating enormous amounts of pressure on the watch that simulate the pressure the (stationary) watch would receive at much deeper depths. Watchmakers no longer describe their watches as "waterproof" -- merely water resistant. A watch that is water resistant to, say, 50 feet, could actually be compromised by taking a shower or going for a swim through a shallow pool because it would receive more pressure from the movement than it would merely sitting stationary in 50 feet of water. So, yes, Rolex's depth rating on the Seadweller might be higher than most people would reasonably go, but even if human physiology allowed going to those depths, your Rolex would probably crack before you ever reached that rated depth if you're moving your arms. |
4 April 2007, 10:13 AM | #45 | |
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JJ
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Words fail me in expressing my utmost thanks to ALL of you for this wonderful support during my hour of need!! I firmly believe that my time on planet earth is NOT yet up!! I shall fight this to the very end.......and WIN!! |
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4 April 2007, 05:57 PM | #46 | |
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ICom Pro3 All posts are my own opinion and my opinion only. "The clock of life is wound but once, and no man has the power to tell just when the hands will stop. Now is the only time you actually own the time, Place no faith in time, for the clock may soon be still for ever." Good Judgement comes from experience,experience comes from Bad Judgement,.Buy quality, cry once; buy cheap, cry again and again. www.mc0yad.club Second in command CEO and left handed watch winder |
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