Culture Raskh launches "world's first" watch with built-in bottle opener

Article (Archive)
raskh-hong-kong-design-watches_dezeen_2364_col_0-1.jpg
Hong Kong design studio Raskh has developed the Leverage watch, which features a patented mechanism that reveals a hidden bottle opener concealed in the case body.

Created as Raskh's first watch design, the timepiece uses a specially developed case construction to incorporate the bottle opener without adding excessive bulk to the watch.
raskh-hong-kong-design-watches_dezeen_2364_col_1-852x479.jpg
Raskh has designed a watch with a hidden bottle opener concealed in the case body

"People won't bring a bottle opener with them everywhere, but they will have their daily watch with them every day," the designers told Dezeen.

"Leverage watch can bring a wow moment to the party when everyone sees a person using it to open beer or soda. This is a watch that makes happy hour even happier."

To access the opener, users remove the watch from their wrist before rotating and releasing an octagonal crown located at the eight o'clock position.

With the locking system released, the inner case body slides outwards to reveal a lozenge-shaped indent that can be used to remove a bottle cap.

According to Raskh, the moveable track and hidden opener within the case body is a patented element that "brings a new page of watch community, or you can say a new page of bottle opener".

The watch itself features a classic design, with the bezel and case body combining polished and brushed finishes to create a tactile contrast.

The watch face's indexes are treated with Swiss Super-LumiNova so they glow in the dark. Their enlarged size makes it easier to tell the time while adventuring outdoors at nighttime or drinking at a bar.

A 24-hour sub-dial at the nine o'clock position features luminous paint on the half that is dedicated to nighttime hours. There is also a small date window at the three o'clock position.
raskh-hong-kong-design-watches_dezeen_2364_col_8-852x479.jpg
The watch has polished, brushed finishes and face indexes that glow in the dark

Raskh spent two years developing the concept for the Leverage watch and refining the mechanical details to make it as thin and lightweight as possible.

The overall case thickness is 13.8 millimetres and the case size is 44 millimetres, with a dial opening of 33.5 millimetres. The watch features an automatic Miyota 8217 movement and is water resistant to 50 metres.

Raskh is producing the watch in four colourways, three with black dials and one white dial. Nylon and leather straps provided with each watch can be easily swapped out using a quick-release spring bar system.

Recently Bulgari unveiled the world's thinnest watch, which is as skinny as a five-pence coin, while we rounded up six watches designed by Pritzker Architecture Prize-winning architects.
 
This is for single people who can't use their wedding ring? Not that I do, I use my snus-can. Taking off your watch seems bothersome.
Hell they even make rings that are specifically designed to be used as bottle openers. Seems that would be way more convenient than taking your watch off.
 
This is for single people who can't use their wedding ring? Not that I do, I use my snus-can. Taking off your watch seems bothersome.

For faggots who don't know how to open a bottle with a lighter.

Or the heel of your boot, or another bottle of beer, or the back of your knife, or any flat surface like the edge of a counter, or utensil, or tool, within 5 steps of you unless you're drinking in the literal middle of a field, naked.

Fuck the sperging about restricting the vote to property owners, this is how we should determine the franchise
 
And: most drinks come in cans, because 20+ years ago someone decided that glass is heavy and thus bad for the climate. Now they have decided microplastics an aluminium are bad for you and the environment, so we might go back to glass slowly. Where I live, only fancy beer comes in a glass bottle.
 
This is for single people who can't use their wedding ring? Not that I do, I use my snus-can. Taking off your watch seems bothersome.
F tools, I use my teeth. Once you know how to do it right you never need a bottle opener again. It's not like cavemen opened their beers with some fancy tool.

I've always just used my teeth.
Godspeed brother.
 
I just push the bottle as hard as I can into the underside of my forearm and flex while twisting+pulling down at the same time. Extremely easy for twist off caps, but you really gotta apply max pressure for non-twist off...and the caps can cut you a little if you're not careful. Still looks neat though
 
This is for single people who can't use their wedding ring?
Here's the answer:
"Leverage watch can bring a wow moment to the party when everyone sees a person using it to open beer or soda. This is a watch that makes happy hour even happier."
It's for forever alone shut-ins to buy and dream about being the heart of the party.
 
Is Raskh a pajeet company? The writing style strikes me as very Pajeetish. Indians are such a plague. A truly awful people.
"This is RASKH, established in Hong Kong in 2021"

Looks to be the Chinks up to their old tricks.

I would be ashamed to advertise this, the bottle opener has long been worthless in how easy it is to add to pretty much anything.
 
  • Like
Reactions: GloJojo
It's an exciting time to be a horologist. Just imagine what else might be in their skunk works... I've been thinking of a competitor to the Casio CA53W personally but that might be just a foolish dream.
220px-Casio_CA-53W,_1.jpg
But with how far touch surfaces and button technologies have come the possibilities for a truly great user experience are there!
 
That's just painfully lame. You can put a bottle opener in anything, it's not some grand engineering marvel. I have a fingernail clippers that has a bottle opener on one end, for fuck's sake.

Dick Tracy's watch was a two-way radio, James Bond's watch had a cutting laser, George H. W. Bush's watch had a garrote wire; how did we go from that to this lame shit?
 
Back