(2023-08-28) Another basic but iconic analogue watch movement ------------------------------------------------------------- Recently, I stopped my Bertucci A-1R experiment and got a stunning result: it's less than 0.5 s/month slow. And it's running on Miyota 2035, the most basic non-Chinese quartz movement you can possibly imagine. And I already talked about it enough in my previous posts, but now I'm going to tell you about another iconic Miyota movement I've been familiar with since a long time ago without even knowing it. Enter Miyota 2S60... or, in Casio's classification, module 2719. Yes. That one. The one in LIN-168, MTP-1219A, HDA-600, EF-125 and other three-hander greatest hits from mid-2000s. My personal encounter with this movement began when I was a poor student in 2007 who, nevertheless, could finally afford his first "serious" watch, and Casio MTP-1219A became one. It suited all my needs, the only annoying part being the requirement to manually adjust the date every two months. Back then, I didn't really value what that watch had offered me though: fully stainless steel case, decent WR rating AND long-lasting battery. In fact, when I gave it away to my friend 14 years later, it was still ticking. But in my student years, this watch quickly became too boring to me. It just worked. It just told the time (provided you adjust it twice a year because of that damn DST) and date (provided you don't forget to adjust it every two months). It did nothing else. I quickly lost interest in it and kept buying whatever I could afford in different leagues: Illuminators, ToughSolars, even a titanium LIN-168, uh-huh. And I didn't even notice that LIN-168 had the same module 2719 inside. The exterior and case material mattered to me more. But at the end of the day, it was just the same three-hander with a date window. And I didn't pay much attention to it. Oh, how dumb and shortsighted I was. Fast-forward to the present day, August 2023. I have a HDA-600B in my collection, again, no fucks given about the module. And I decide to try my luck with another sapphire model... you guessed it: MTS-100. Actually, it's 100L, but I stripped off the L on the first day of possession and put on a normal (but thinner) all-black NATO strap instead of that awful stock leather. Actually, I also planned to try it out with the stock strap from the Bertucci A-1R but that one turned out to be too thick to fit under the bars. And then I realized something really terrible: not only is it the same 2719 module I had actively used 15+ years ago, but this module is the only pure-analogue one still sporting a CR-type battery that lasts 10+ years, and you can't buy any other (analogue) modules with the same battery life anymore in 2023. And I also realized the battery itself is not CR2025 and not even CR2016 (although I bet it _might_ fit there): it's CR2012. And it still runs for 10, 11, 12 and even 13 years on this extremely thin lithium cell. Whoever designed this movement is a genius. But who did? Citizen, of course. In case you didn't know, all low-cost (non-solar and non-radio-controlled) all-analogue Casios are Citizens inside. Only after buying the MTS-100 did I do some additional research and find out that this module 2719 is indeed pure, unmodified Miyota 2S60 in all its glory. But as you probably know, you just cannot buy a new dressy-looking Citizen three-hander with a flat sapphire glass for such price. Well, you obviously can if it's branded as Casio. Interestingly though, the sister movement 2S65 which also features a day of the week wheel, has been used in much fewer Casio watches (it's denoted as module 3716 in Casio's nomenclature and mostly known to be used in the MTP-1228, MTP-1229 and MTD-1085 models). It's a real shame so few Casio models keep using these 2S60/2S65 movements right now (although EF-121D and MTD-1085 still can be bought new somewhere, they are already discontinued long ago). The overall picture is a bit depressing: Casio is surely moving towards the "single-use things" trend in their low- and mid-price segment. This is why I'm going to create another rating table with the best movements/modules you should look for in case of digital, analogue and ana-digi scenarios, and going to publish it soon enough. --- Luxferre ---