Citizen Men’s Eco-Drive 3-Hand Date Avion Watch with Leather Strap (Style: AW1361:10H)








Key features
- •Case diameter : 45 mm. Gray, Luminous Hands
Citizen Men’s Eco-Drive 3-Hand Date Avion Watch with Leather Strap (Style: AW1361:10H)
List Price: $272.81$245.53DEALYou Save: $27.28 (10%)
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Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.6
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
50%
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Extremely Well Proportioned Timepiece!
Vanscore ✓ Verified Purchase•September 1, 2023
This watch is snazzy! Readable sized numbers, modern-classic look, handsome watch face. I swapped in a black band for the brown, beautiful. Can't go wrong buying this watch.
All around watch, recharges with light/solar energy
gsxr✓ Verified Purchase•September 1, 2023
This is a very nice watch, and I've had good experiences with the Citizen brand of watches in general. This watch is in the middle price range for nice watches, and it comes with the Citizen eco-drive, which is basically rechargeable batteries that operate on light energy, the best source being direct sunlight.
The watch face is easy to read and this watch keeps accurate time. The numbering is that of vintage aviator watches, with 0-60 outer dial numbers, and 24-hour on the inner part of the dial. The luminous hands show up dimly in the dark, but no other dial markings show, just the hands.
The band is simple, basic, thick, sturdy leather that is just right for this watch. The crystal is mineral, which is expected for a watch at this price point.
This watch arrived with the battery mostly discharged, with the second hand skipping to two seconds for each tick. I looked this up on the Citizen website, and the solution was to fully recharge this in direct sunlight. Indoor light was insufficient to recharge the watch. A day in the direct sun worked perfectly.
For every day wear, using ordinary light seems fine for this watch. Keeping this in a case with my other watches, and using this only on occasion is a little more problematic, because I have to take it out every so often and leave it by a window next to the sun to ensure the battery stays charged. But this seems to be a minor inconvenience overall, and I do like this watch.
The watch face is easy to read and this watch keeps accurate time. The numbering is that of vintage aviator watches, with 0-60 outer dial numbers, and 24-hour on the inner part of the dial. The luminous hands show up dimly in the dark, but no other dial markings show, just the hands.
The band is simple, basic, thick, sturdy leather that is just right for this watch. The crystal is mineral, which is expected for a watch at this price point.
This watch arrived with the battery mostly discharged, with the second hand skipping to two seconds for each tick. I looked this up on the Citizen website, and the solution was to fully recharge this in direct sunlight. Indoor light was insufficient to recharge the watch. A day in the direct sun worked perfectly.
For every day wear, using ordinary light seems fine for this watch. Keeping this in a case with my other watches, and using this only on occasion is a little more problematic, because I have to take it out every so often and leave it by a window next to the sun to ensure the battery stays charged. But this seems to be a minor inconvenience overall, and I do like this watch.
not quite there...
E. K. Arnold✓ Verified Purchase•August 29, 2023
this replica aviation watch has a lot going for it on the surface. IRL it misses the mark a bit. plusses are eco-drive, 100m water resistance, and classic design. but the lume is weak and the band, although good quality leather and soft, is meh. i hate that the minute hand is so thin, which makes this hard to read, even though it's a historically accurate detail. i may try to see if a suede band perks it up a bit.
Great watch but with a couple of missed opportunities
Tom H.✓ Verified Purchase•August 21, 2023
This Flieger-style watch from the venerable Japanese watchmaker, Citizen, went into my collection this past September. Citizen calls this watch the "Avion", but a Flieger it is. I paid $130 US, but it has gone for sub-$100 at times on Amazon. Now that I've worn it a number of times in the past two months, I have a few thoughts.
First a little history. "Flieger" is German for "flyer", and modern variants like this one are homages based on the aesthetics of the watches provided to German pilots and particularly the navigators on larger aircraft, such as bombers, in the Second World War. Interestingly, the watches were aircraft equipment and not the personal property of the flyer, meaning that each was kept with its plane and returned with it at the end of each mission. They were huge, 55 millimeters in diameter, with pocket-watch movements, and had long leather straps to wrap around the outside of the flyers' thick flightsuit sleeves. They were intended to be easily readable at a glance in a variety of flying conditions, so they usually had highly contrasting colors with simple indices and Arabic numerals, and the hands were easily distinguishable, with a long, thinner minute hand, a short, thicker hour hand and a very long skinny seconds hand. All of the variants had a triangle at the 12 o'clock position so that the flyer could easily orient to the correct time no matter the attitude of the aircraft at a given moment in flight.
This Avion is pretty true to the Flieger aesthetic with a pleasing modern twist or two. At 45 millimeters in diameter, it's the largest watch in my collection, and just about the largest I'd ever want to have on my 7-1/2 inch wrist. It's got two race tracks of markers, as some of the WW2 variants had, with minutes/seconds on the outer track, and a combined civilian/military hour racetrack on the inner part. The dial is a pie-pan so that the hands and indices are in-set on the dial face, which is a pleasing effect if you ask me. The Avion also has a date window, which the original Fliegers never had, but the modern ones typically do, and I usually like a date complication when I can get it. The date is at once both small and large - the numerals are small almost to the point of being unreadable except in very good light or with reading glasses (at least for this middle-aged+ guy), and nevertheless it shows not only today's date, but yesterday's and tomorrow's as well. I'm not sure why I need to see yesterday's and tomorrow's dates and for me the aesthetics of that may be slightly too much given that the dial is already pretty busy.
Although this is a quartz watch, it never needs a battery change, thanks to Citizen's 'Eco-Drive' movement which utilizes solar energy to charge its capacitor. Once fully charged, it will last months in complete darkeness, and it only needs occasional wearing to stay topped up. Many people seem puzzled by its 2 second skip behavior - this is a feature, not a bug, and indicates that the capacitor charge is low. It will be seen to exhibit this behavior right out of the box which may prompt the uninitiated to return the watch. Just put the watch in a well-lit area for a couple of hours for its initial full charge. Not direct sunlight, however, as that may be too intense for some of the components.
The case is stainless steel and despite its diameter, it isn't thick or heavy. The included leather band works well with the watch and seems good quality. It has a very pleasant feel on the wrist and the watch is fun to look at. And since it's a Citizen, you're getting a precision movement and quality build. It's water resistance is rated at 100 meters, which isn't as good as it sounds since it doesn't have a screw-down crown. It's fine for accidental splashes and dunks but I wouldn't swim or bathe while wearing it.
I have a few quibbles (as, admittedly, I do with all of my watches.) I have already referred to the date window, which could stand to show just today's date and be a bit larger, or include a magnifyer on the crystal, or perhaps just be removed altogether.
I would have preferred a sapphire crystal but instead it is mineral. However, it is flat, which I much prefer to domed as that makes them less likely to scratch and there is less light reflectivity and glare, in my experience.
Perhaps my biggest dissatisfactions are the color contrasts and the lume. The hand and indices colors do not contrast enough with the dial, making them harder to read at a glance, especially the very narrow seconds hand, for which I have to search for a few moments as it blends in to the background. There is lume on the hands and some of the indices but it's not bright and it fades fast, and curiously the 12 o'clock triangle is not lumed, a disappointing missed opportunity.
Still, this watch will stay in my daily wear rotation, at least for now. If you can find one on sale for around $100 or less, take it, as that is a very good price in my opinion.
First a little history. "Flieger" is German for "flyer", and modern variants like this one are homages based on the aesthetics of the watches provided to German pilots and particularly the navigators on larger aircraft, such as bombers, in the Second World War. Interestingly, the watches were aircraft equipment and not the personal property of the flyer, meaning that each was kept with its plane and returned with it at the end of each mission. They were huge, 55 millimeters in diameter, with pocket-watch movements, and had long leather straps to wrap around the outside of the flyers' thick flightsuit sleeves. They were intended to be easily readable at a glance in a variety of flying conditions, so they usually had highly contrasting colors with simple indices and Arabic numerals, and the hands were easily distinguishable, with a long, thinner minute hand, a short, thicker hour hand and a very long skinny seconds hand. All of the variants had a triangle at the 12 o'clock position so that the flyer could easily orient to the correct time no matter the attitude of the aircraft at a given moment in flight.
This Avion is pretty true to the Flieger aesthetic with a pleasing modern twist or two. At 45 millimeters in diameter, it's the largest watch in my collection, and just about the largest I'd ever want to have on my 7-1/2 inch wrist. It's got two race tracks of markers, as some of the WW2 variants had, with minutes/seconds on the outer track, and a combined civilian/military hour racetrack on the inner part. The dial is a pie-pan so that the hands and indices are in-set on the dial face, which is a pleasing effect if you ask me. The Avion also has a date window, which the original Fliegers never had, but the modern ones typically do, and I usually like a date complication when I can get it. The date is at once both small and large - the numerals are small almost to the point of being unreadable except in very good light or with reading glasses (at least for this middle-aged+ guy), and nevertheless it shows not only today's date, but yesterday's and tomorrow's as well. I'm not sure why I need to see yesterday's and tomorrow's dates and for me the aesthetics of that may be slightly too much given that the dial is already pretty busy.
Although this is a quartz watch, it never needs a battery change, thanks to Citizen's 'Eco-Drive' movement which utilizes solar energy to charge its capacitor. Once fully charged, it will last months in complete darkeness, and it only needs occasional wearing to stay topped up. Many people seem puzzled by its 2 second skip behavior - this is a feature, not a bug, and indicates that the capacitor charge is low. It will be seen to exhibit this behavior right out of the box which may prompt the uninitiated to return the watch. Just put the watch in a well-lit area for a couple of hours for its initial full charge. Not direct sunlight, however, as that may be too intense for some of the components.
The case is stainless steel and despite its diameter, it isn't thick or heavy. The included leather band works well with the watch and seems good quality. It has a very pleasant feel on the wrist and the watch is fun to look at. And since it's a Citizen, you're getting a precision movement and quality build. It's water resistance is rated at 100 meters, which isn't as good as it sounds since it doesn't have a screw-down crown. It's fine for accidental splashes and dunks but I wouldn't swim or bathe while wearing it.
I have a few quibbles (as, admittedly, I do with all of my watches.) I have already referred to the date window, which could stand to show just today's date and be a bit larger, or include a magnifyer on the crystal, or perhaps just be removed altogether.
I would have preferred a sapphire crystal but instead it is mineral. However, it is flat, which I much prefer to domed as that makes them less likely to scratch and there is less light reflectivity and glare, in my experience.
Perhaps my biggest dissatisfactions are the color contrasts and the lume. The hand and indices colors do not contrast enough with the dial, making them harder to read at a glance, especially the very narrow seconds hand, for which I have to search for a few moments as it blends in to the background. There is lume on the hands and some of the indices but it's not bright and it fades fast, and curiously the 12 o'clock triangle is not lumed, a disappointing missed opportunity.
Still, this watch will stay in my daily wear rotation, at least for now. If you can find one on sale for around $100 or less, take it, as that is a very good price in my opinion.
Dope watch
Mitchell Hustad✓ Verified Purchase•August 17, 2023
Don't ever have to change the batter and it looks sick
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