More Stores: Apparel|Jewelry|Watches|Cameras Help
 
 

Search
Go

Shop by category
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Timex Women's T41181 Expedition Classic Analog Watch
Email a friendView larger image

Timex Women's T41181 Expedition Classic Analog Watch

List Price: $49.95
Our Price: $34.94 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
You Save: $15.01 (30%)
SKU:

T41181SU

In Stock
Usually ships in 1 business days

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Product Promotions:
  • Eligible for Free Returns on qualified Clothing, Shoes, Jewelry, Watches, Luggage, Accessories, and Sunglasses fulfilled by Amazon.  Here's how (restrictions apply)
Description:

While it looks like a sturdy but casual watch, this Timex Expedition is built to excel just about anywhere you take it, as demonstrated by its most celebrated owner, Everest mountaineer Conrad Anker. The hands are illuminated, and the white dial also features the Indiglo night light function and a date calendar at the three o'clock position. Black Arabic numerals and full indexes allow for easy time-keeping in any situation. The strap is a dark brown leather. The watch also features a metallic case and is water resistant to 165 feet (50 meters). The watch uses analog-quartz movement.

Features:

Quartz movement


Strong mineral crystal protects dial from scratches and scrapes


Case diameter measures 26.4 mm


Metal case; Off-white dial; date function


Water-resistant to 165 feet (50 M)


Product Details:
Product Weight: 0.16 pounds
Package Length: 3.3 inches
Package Width: 2.7 inches
Package Height: 2.6 inches
Package Weight: 0.2 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 48 reviews
Watch Information:
Crystal Material: Mineral
Clasp: Buckle
Case Diameter: 25 millimeters
Case Thickness: 8.3 millimeters
Case Material: Metal
Band Material: calfskin
Bezel Material: stainless-steel
Dial Color: beige
Movement: Quartz
Calendar: Date
Water Resistance Depth: 165 feet
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.5 ( 48 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.


Most Helpful Customer Reviews

17 of 18 found the following review helpful:

4Another sturdy, dependable Timex productOct 07, 2009
By Sylvia Weiser Wendel
I buy these because they're inexpensive and I don't want (or need) a status watch. This one quickly became my favorite because the strap actually fit my wrist; most bracelet-types are too big. Does the job, is unobtrusive, and weighs next to nothing.

16 of 17 found the following review helpful:

5LOVE IT!May 14, 2008
By mittbks2020
This is my everyday watch for work. I enjoy everything about the watch from the comfortable, stylish band to easy-to-read face with second hand. The calendar is set independent of the time setting. This watch is everything I was looking for.

29 of 36 found the following review helpful:

4A L M O S T.......P E R F E C TJun 27, 2009
By Patricia "A Reader"
This watch -- Timex T411819 -- has many pluses -- but sadly, a minus or two as well.....

This is a very nicely-sized watch. It can be worn by anyone, of course -- but is of the size which (used to be? is?) called a "boy's watch". The diameter is approximately an inch across, and the numers are nicely-sized and readable, without over-powering the
face of the watch. Around the outer-most part of the face, are tinier numbers. These numbers, "13 - 24", make it a watch to tell 24-hour, or military, time, as well, should the need ever arise. (And it sort of puts the old joke to rest. To wit: "What time is it when the clock says 13:00?" "It's time to get the clock fixed!" : ) Of course, this joke is about clocks, not watches....but it's still quite funny, so I include it here!)

Many "sports" watches, (including Timex Expediton watches, of which this is one), have, (or used to have), these HUGE bezels around the face of the watch, usually with numbers "5 - 60" printed, or engraved, just above the usual "1-12" intervals on the watch-face. Sometimes this "extra ring around the watch-face" even swiveled! There seemed no reason for this... No stop-watch function was usually included with such analogue watches, and, anyway, most people are familiar with the "4" number indicating 20 seconds, and the "9" number indicating 45 seconds, etc. All these extra rings did was to make these "sport" watches even chunkier and more inelegant than ever. Even today, most quartz analogue watches stil have remnants of this practice, even if it only amounts to an extra bit of bezel, raising up and high-lighting the winding knob.

NOT SO ON THE TIMEX T411819! No extra, inelegant "trimming" around the bezel on this watch! Stylish and as slender as any sports watch can be,
it looks just about exactly like the old, wonderful-wind-up analogue watches used to look! (Sigh..........!) As pretty and elegant a quartz sports-watch as anyone could ask for!

This watch comes equipped with BOTH glow-in-the-dark hands, AND Timex's trademark "indiglow" feature. With "indiglo", one just presses the winding knob, (or, I guess, it's more proper to now call it a "setting knob"), inwards -- and the entire face of the watch lights up! I owned another Timex Indiglo watch previous to this, (one without glow-in-the-dark hands), and can attest to the fact that, though producing a pleasant, glowing watch-face, too much use of this feature definitely shortens battery life! Also, Indiglo -- used mainly in the darkest of rooms -- if used too frequently -- can really hurt the eyes of someone on the verge of, or someone who actually has, cataracts. With my other Timex Indiglo watch, I would close my eyes as I pressed the setting-knob, to produce the glow, then opened them directly afterwards, so that I would only get the slighter "after-glow", and not the full-lit "indiglo".
This present watch, however, seems to have a far less strong, and less lasting "after-glow" than my previous Timex watch with indiglo.

Why, one would wonder, would Timex now put BOTH glow-in-the-dark hands, AND an "indiglo" lit up watch face, in the same watch? The answer, sadly, (in this case anyway), is because, if there is any light in the room at all, the "glow-in-the-dark" hands on this model are kind of hard to see! This is because the hands themselves do NOT have ENOUGH "black outlining" around the glowing part of the hand, to help distinguish the hand from the rest of the watch! For the watch-face here is NOT white: it is the palest, palest, PALEST "powder green" colour. The glow-in-the-dark watch hands are a somewhat brighter, "glow green" colour....but there just isn't enough contrast between the two greens -- especially as there is far too thin a black outline around each hand -- to easily see what time it is at first glance. If only the outline around each hand had been just the tiniest bit thicker! Now, this watch-face is VERY easy to read, at SECOND glance, even in the brightest room....but being able to instantly see, at very FIRST glance, what time it is, would have been deeply appreciated!

Wind-up watches -- even the cheapest ones -- used to have a RAISED crystal, set ON TOP of the bezel. In this watch, it is the bezel that is raised, and the crystal, (made happily of glass!), fitted and set into it. This makes for a neater looking watch, and most probably a more water-proof one....but I do miss the look and feel of a RAISED crystal.

Many people use the reflected image in a watch face, or the numberical window of a calculator, to look at a TV, whilst lying in bed. I know I do. Using most of these watch-faces or calculator windows, I've found that taking my glasses off makes them work best. But when using this Timex Expedition T41181 watch, I find it's better to wear my glasses. Perhaps it's the glass crystal of this watch that makes the difference....

Many people do not know that to prolong the life of ANY battery-powered watch, all one must do is pull out the stem. This stops the watch from working....but you do save on the battery. Keep in mind, too, that, as this watch contains a (tiny) date-window, one must realize the advancing of the date will also be effected. But one can always glance at one's calendar, (or computer!), to realize, if in doubt, what day it is!

On the back of this watch, the letters "PR" can be found. As I no longer have the accompnaying literature, I THINK this means the watch was made in Puerto Rico. If so, GOOD! Puerto Rico is a U.S. Protectorate, (and I THINK this means they can apply for state-hood any time they want!) To me, buying ANYTHING made ANYWHERE but in (Communist) China, (and/or totalitarian North Korea), is a good thing. To buy anything made in the U.S.A., its protectorates, or our allies, (Mexico, Canada, Japan, the UK, France, etc., etc.,), is a good thing...a VERY good thing,....and is sadly beginning to become too rare an experience! So, if this watch is made in Puerto Rico....this sure is another plus for it!

Do I miss wind-up watches? More than almost anything!!!!! (:_( However, this little Timex Expedition watch sure LOOKS more like a wind-up watch than any quartz watch I have ever seen. Automatic, self-winding watchee have now, almost totally, taken over the "non-quartz" market...but they are often heavy, and usually, very VERY expensive. For my money, this is a Timex Expedition T411819 watch gives just about anything one could ask for, in a non-winding, non-automatic watch. With good care, and battery replacement when necessary, it can last and last.

P.S.: It ticks! Not 5 or more times a second, like a mechanical watch -- but just once every second. A good, loud tick, too! Good ol' Timex watches....as John Cameron Swayze used to say, "they take a licking, and keep on ticking!" Happily, this watch not only looks like a mechanical watch -- in many ways, it acts like one too! (Double sigh.........)

9 of 10 found the following review helpful:

4Very Nice WatchAug 12, 2007
By A Careful Shopper
I purchased this watch because I needed an analog watch with 24 hour time showing on the dial for an upcoming trip overseas. I was very pleased with the watch as a whole because it is the most feminine-looking one I could find, the band is comfortable, the price is very reasonable, the numbers 1 through 12 are easy to read and I love the Indiglo feature which allows you to read the time in low light and when it's dark by pressing on the stem and the face lights up. The reason I gave it 4 stars instead of 5 is because I had a very hard time reading the numbers 13 through 24 - which was the reason I needed this type of watch in the first place. In hindsight I realize that this was because the watch face was smaller and more feminine than the other watches I looked at and perhaps if I'd gotten a bigger face - I wouldn't have had trouble reading it. You have to decide what's more important to you.

4 of 4 found the following review helpful:

5Happy with my New WatchMay 18, 2010
By alooknac
I purchased this watch after comparing it and the Easy Reader in person. I liked the look of this model better. The dial is off-white rather than the stark white of the Easy Reader. I do wish the hands were solid black instead of white edged in black but I can see them OK. The date is tiny; I can't really read it. It has a nifty feature to advance the date without twirling past midnight innumerable times.

It is keeping good time. The band fits me well and has a lot of holes so it would fit a wrist an inch bigger or smaller than mine. (I think I'm average.) The band has a textured insert that is very attractive. Maybe it's packcloth. It doesn't stand out a lot, just a nice detail.

See all 48 customer reviews on Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
Apparel   Cameras   Watches   Help   About Us   Contact Us
Privacy Policy Copyright © , Watch Store. All rights reserved.