Why is the Breitling Cosmonaute so special? Discover the unique story and features of this astronaut watch.

by Rod Nichol

So, I got my hands on this Breitling Cosmonaute a while back. Wasn’t brand new, mind you. Picked it up used because I was always curious about that 24-hour dial. You know, the hand goes around just once a day. Seemed like a neat idea, maybe useful, maybe just different.

Why is the Breitling Cosmonaute so special? Discover the unique story and features of this astronaut watch.

Getting Used To It

First thing, putting it on. Felt solid, heavy. That’s Breitling for you, I guess. Then came the reading part. Honestly? Took me a good week to stop doing double-takes. My brain was so wired for a 12-hour clock. Looking down and seeing the hour hand pointing somewhere like the usual 4 o’clock position, but it’s actually 8 AM? Yeah, that messed with my head for a bit.

I decided to wear it straight for a month, see if I could actually make it work for me. This was during a time I was working on a pretty intense project from home. My hours were all over the place. Sometimes starting work at 3 PM, sometimes 3 AM. Sleep schedule was a total wreck. I thought, okay, maybe THIS is where the 24-hour watch shines. Tells you exactly where you are in the full day cycle, no AM/PM confusion.

The Actual Experience

Here’s the thing though. While the project was chaos, the watch… well, it told the time. In 24-hour format. Did it magically fix my messed-up schedule or sense of time? Nah. Not really.

  • Reading it: I got faster, sure. But it always required that extra half-second of mental calculation, especially when I was tired. Quick glances were tough.
  • Usefulness?: In my specific messed-up schedule situation? It didn’t offer much advantage over just looking at my phone or computer clock, which clearly say AM or PM or use 24-hour format anyway. Maybe if I was locked in a room with no windows for weeks? But I wasn’t. I was just working weird hours.
  • Winding: Mine was a manual wind Navitimer Cosmonaute. So, every morning, or whenever I remembered, I had to wind it. Became part of the ritual. Didn’t hate it, didn’t love it. Just something I had to do. Felt a bit old-school.

After The Project

Once the project finished and I got back to a more normal routine, the 24-hour dial felt even less necessary. Actually, it became slightly annoying again. Trying to quickly tell the time during a meeting or while driving? That little extra brain-check got old.

So, what happened? I wore it less and less. It wasn’t because it’s a bad watch. It’s built like a tank, looks pretty cool with that busy Navitimer dial. But the core feature, the 24-hour thing, just wasn’t practical for me in everyday life. It felt more like a specific tool for a specific job I didn’t have – maybe for pilots back in the day, or astronauts like Scott Carpenter who asked for it. Makes sense for them perhaps.

Why is the Breitling Cosmonaute so special? Discover the unique story and features of this astronaut watch.

Now? It mostly sits in the box. I take it out sometimes, give it a wind, wear it for a day to remember that crazy project period. It’s a conversation piece, definitely. People ask about the dial. But for daily use? I just grab a standard 12-hour watch. Easier on my brain, you know?

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