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Home / News / Breitling’s B55 Connected watch won’t answer calls or track your steps, but it still plays nice with your phone

Breitling’s B55 Connected watch won’t answer calls or track your steps, but it still plays nice with your phone

The company's latest wristhugger is controlled directly from your smartphone

Breitling’s B55 can’t control your music or show you directions to the nearest KFC, but that’s OK – it’s not pretending to be a smartwatch.

Instead, it’s a regular watch that’s decided to swot up a bit and learn a few new tech tricks, without compromising on the design, durability and soul of a traditional mechanical watch.

The B55 is an electronic multifunction chronograph with both analog and digital displays, and can manage a host of aeronautical time functions, including measuring RPM with an electronic tachometer, a mission elapsed time counter, and a countdown/countup system. You can even record flight times, landing times and take-off times if you’re a pilot (or enthusiastic passenger). Oh, and you can set alarms too.

And as for what makes it a sort-of-smartwatch? Well, all of those functions are operated using a connected smartphone, which will be far less fiddly than using that watch’s buttons.

Inside, you’ll find Brietling’s “super quartz” movement, which is able to adjust for changes in temperature, providing accuracy that’s ten times more than a standard quartz watch.

http://youtu.be/gkFXJVCh8jA

The screen’s ultra-bright backlight automatically brightens up its two LED displays when its tilted at a 35-degree angle, and its can be juiced up via a magnetic charging connector when not in use.

It’s chunkier than any smart watch we’ve ever worn, and that’s just the way it’s meant to be. It’s a proper, rugged-looking mechanical timepiece, and we’d happily wear it on our wrists, sidelining our Android Wear devices for something hefty and substantial. We could have done without that blue wireless connection logo, mind.

There’s no official price at the moment, but we expect Brietling to reveal more at Baselworld, so stay tuned.

[Gizmag]

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Esat has been a gadget fan ever since his tiny four-year-old brain was captivated by a sound-activated dancing sunflower. From there it was a natural progression to a Sega Mega Drive, a brief obsession with hedgehogs, and a love for all things tech. After 7 years as a writer and deputy editor for Stuff, Esat ventured out into the corporate world, spending three years as Editor of Microsoft's European News Centre. Now a freelance writer, his appetite for shiny gadgets has no bounds. Oh, and like all good human beings, he's very fond of cats.