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Gammawatch: Radiation Detector

Tower2.gifApparently, "more and more ordinary citizens are interested in personal radiation protection. " Really? Tell me more!

The $250 GammaWatch Basic packs a plethora of paranoia tucked inside a fine looking timepiece. Using a solid state radiation detector, the watch displays any threatening levels of radiation displayed in immediate and cumulative exposure (3 months after the bomb drops, you will know just how much radiation was required for your third nose to fall off). At last, we have an affordable method to fine-tune our experiments with turtles/spiders/bunnies. And don't knock bunny powers, they run really, really fast. Plus they are cuddly.

Product Page [via ohgizmo]

12:17 PM on Sun Dec 10 2006
By Mark Wilson
825 views
10 comments

Comments

  • So, having this strapped to your wrist means that by the time it reads a critical level of Radiation, you might as well call urself Radioactive Boy. XD

  • This shall be donated to the Alexander Litvinenko investigation.

  • Where can I find a watch that detects abnormal levels of stupid watches?

    (Seriously that would be a good watch for those who work/play with radioactive things. However for the normal person, I think that is totally overkill. And if a normal person buys one of those because he/she is scared, I think he/she should just rub whatever is emitting the radiation and let natural selection take its course.)

    As for just being a gadget... Awesome! Sorry, just had to put my two cents in.

  • Interesting, someone invented the "useless" tool of my dreams.

    I've always wanted to have a geiger counter inside a watch, just for the conversation alone.

    Yes...I'm a geeky nerd that just love to show off useless gadgets. Err...actually - that gadget is rather USEFUL!

    Here is why:

    Want to find out the stuff in the antique stores that are actually worth something without knowing too much? Well...A geiger counter will telltale and you'll know if that super-cool old-style watch that seems to have "glowing numbers or dots" that just glows on forever?

    You'll be surprised to find out that it contains Thorium or other radioactive substances. That watch will tell. Even some sort of colors used in old pottery are VERY radioactive.

    I have one of those Ebay Cheapo 10 dollar Russian Geiger counters - works! believe it or not. Cool stuff - gets the talk going!

  • Huh...a useless gadget for the average consumer that - for once - doesn't look half bad. Who'd have thought.

  • FINALLY! I can use this to surreptitiously track those atomic-powered android bastards from the future that have infiltrated our society and seduced our women with their everlasting roboboners.


  • Methinks these should be government issue in Russia.

  • I'd love one just to pwn those nerds that have the baro-compass-gps-temperature-surf-moon-stars watches.

    I wasn't familiar with what the watch actually measures, but it is the 'sievert' (divided by planks constant). Here is some info from Wikipedia on the measure:

    "The millisievert (mSv) is commonly used to measure the effective dose in diagnostic medical procedures (e.g. X-rays, nuclear medicine, positron emission tomography and computed tomography). The natural background effective dose varies considerably from place to place, but typically is around 2.4 mSv per year.

    For acute full body equivalent dose, 1 Sv causes slight blood changes, 2-5 Sv causes nausea, hair loss, hemorrhage and will cause death in many cases."

    So if you're standing in line at the airport and your radiation watch goes nuts, It is prolly not the guy next to you, it is just the x-ray machine leaking in your direction.

    I'm sure sticking this watch through the airport x-ray is going to send it over the edge.... No? different type of radiation? Any radiation experts out there?

  • Actually, I may get one of these for my dad.. he works at a hospital doing nuclear resonance imaging, and while they have them wear radiation detecting tags that are checked in monthly, a watch like this may prove handy.

  • Don't forget that bunnies breed like ... well ... bunnies.

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