
In 1966, Heuer (before it was TAG Heuer) patented the first miniaturized electronic
timekeeping instrument accurate to 1/1000th of a second. Now, 38 years later, TAG
Heuer releases the first wristwatch capable of the same level of precision: the
Microtimer.
Features of the Microtimer
- F1 racing timer. Measurements precise to 1/1000th of a second.
- Time each lap individually, and quickly recover the fastest
lap in Best Lap mode. (Maximum lap time of
59 minutes, 59 seconds, and 999 thousandths of a second.) - Lap indicator. While in F1 racing mode, the watch displays the number of
the current lap. (Maximum of 80 laps.) - Total race time. In addition to the time of the current lap, watch the total
time of the race.
- Time each lap individually, and quickly recover the fastest
- Alarm (sounds for 60 seconds).
- Chronograph (stopwatch) with split times. (Measures to 1/1000th of a
second, maximum time of 99 hours, 59 minutes, 59 seconds, and 999 thousandths
of a second.) - Date.
- Dual time zone display.
- Quartz movement.
- Water-resistant to 100 meters (10 ATM, 10 BAR, or 330 feet).
- Scratch-proof, anti-reflective sapphire crystal.
- Water-resistant, vulcanized, anti-UV treated rubber strap.
- Backlight (illuminates for six seconds).
- Low battery indicator (battery life between
2 and 3 years, depending on use). - "Screen saver." Turns the watch display off when not in use.
The TAG Heuer Microtimer is a very unique looking, very sophisticated watch designed
for timing sporting events with unprecedented accuracy. The fact that TAG Heuer
was the first to achieve this level of precision is a testament to its reputation
in the world of racing.
The Microtimer sells for roughly $1,300.
Additional resources
- The
Microtimer product page. - The
Microtimer Diamonds. - Microtimer
product card (PDF). - Microtimer
user manual (PDF).
Update (4/15/2005): From Watch Report reader Victor Shiff, “The 1/1000 timer from TAG Heuer is not the first such watch. Some 12+ years ago (from fallible memory), Casio had several watches with 1/1000 second (1 ms) chronograph functions, cheaper than $1300 too!. There is an unstated problem with these 1 ms chronographs and that is the contact bounce of the button contacts that the watch circuitry has to ignore. This bounce can be from 5 ms to as much as 15 ms and is not necessarily repeatable. What this means to me is the 1 ms is marketing hype.”
Thanks, Victor. I noticed shortly after publishing this article that the Seiko Sportura World Time (SNJ005) quietly launched with a millisecond timer. Maybe what TAG meant is that they had the most expensive such watch, or perhaps the coolest looking. I’ll give them that.


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