There are way too many features to list individually, so here are the main ones:
- Multi-Band Atomic Timekeeping (US, UK, Germany, Japan, China)
- Tough Solar Power
- 200M Water Resistant
- Altimeter
- Barometer
- Thermometer
- World Time
- 5 Daily Alarms (1 with snooze)
- Countdown Timer (1 minute to 24 hours)
- 1/100 second stopwatch (24 hours)
- Measuring modes: Elapsed time, split time, 1st-2nd place times
- Hourly Time Signal
- Approx. battery life: 9 months on full charge (without further exposure to light)
- Size of case/total weight: 51 x 48.9 x 15.9mm / 60.9g
There are other Casio “ABC” watches (Altimeter, Barometer, Compass), namely the Pathfinder/Protrek series, but the Riseman does not have a compass. What you gain, however, is a watch that is more in line with the G-Shock styling with the protected, recessed mineral crystal glass, and the plastic resin body that hides minor wear marks quite well.
At first glance, the Riseman has a funny lump on the left side, which houses the barometric pressure sensor.
Unlike most Casio G-Shocks, the Riseman is controlled with six buttons instead of the usual five. Where’s the sixth button? The big red one on the right labeled “ALTI”. More on individual functions later.
Before I put it on, I imagined a watch with so many features would be huge. Turns out that wasn’t the case. Very average for a G-Shock.
When compared to other classic G-Shocks, such as the 5600 series (GW-M5600 solar atomic shown) and the DW6900 (”three eyed monster”), the GW9200-1 Riseman falls somewhere in between in terms of bulk.
The Riseman’s face is split into several sections. The bottom digits display the time. The middle portion shows the year and month/date. The top section shows the day of the week. The red circle shows the barometric trend for the last 24 hours in two hour intervals per dot. Increasing pressure generally means improving weather, and decreasing pressure equates to degrading weather. Your results will vary!
The solar panels that charge the battery surround the LCD display. Current battery level is displayed via tiny LCD segments for L, M and H (Low, Medium, High). Tosave power, the Riseman has a user-selectable feature that turns the LCD off after a preset interval of no light, such as when you turn the lights out to sleep. This power saving feature can be also be activated if you wear long sleeves covering the watch long enough. I’ve never found this to be an issue as the watch comes back to life quickly.
Since this watch has an atomic clock sync feature, a small three-lined indicator to the right of the red circle that appears when the watch has successfully synchronized. Unlike the battery indicator, the receive indicator is either on or off. There is no intermediate indication for a low or medium signal. However, you can manually perform a time sync by pressing and holding the START button (lower right) and the time display flashes your relative signal strength from L1 (lowest) to L3 (strongest). This is handy when trying to determine where in the house you can leave the watch to sync overnight at midnight, 1AM, 2AM, etc until the Riseman obtains a suitable signal.
Pressing the MODE button cycles through the various watch modes. The first one is the barometer. In this mode, the current barometric pressure is displayed on the first row in either hPa or inHg, depending if you prefer metric or imperial units. The second row displays current temperature (C or F), and the red circle displays the recent barometric trend, user selectable as the 24-hour dot matrix graph or an easy to read arrow. What’s nice is that the Riseman constantly displays the current time at the bottom line. One problem is that as you wear the watch, the temperature displayed is most likely skewed due to heat from your wrist. Taking off the watch for a few minutes assumes a more accurate room temperature.
The next mode is the world time display. The city code shows on the top line (LAX, NYC, etc.) and the bottom row shows the time in that time zone. The middle row shows your local, current time for reference.
Pressing the mode button again gets you to the stopwatch. Pressing the START button starts and stops the stopwatch. The RESET button (upper right) clears to zero. You may notice the red circle shows the elapsed number of hours. The Riseman is rare in that it’s one of the few Casio G-Shocks to measure up to 24 hours, as well as displaying the current time in the middle display. This feature is more rare than you’d think.
The next mode is the countdown timer. You start and stop the timer much like the stopwatch. The countdown timer can be set for a maximum of 24 hours and also displays the current time in the middle display. When the time reaches zero, the Riseman beeps.
The alarm is the next mode. There are four individual alarms you can set, and one individual alarm you can set with a built-in snooze feature. In a break with Casio standards, pressing the big red ALTI button toggles each alarm on or off. If you’re familiar with G-Shocks and don’t read the manual to the Riseman, you’ll get confused at first as I did!
Small three-letter abbreviations appear on the bottom row to indicate Snooze (SNZ), Alarm (ALM) and hourly signal chime (SIG).
The last mode serves as an altimeter high/low playback. It shows the “min” and “max” recorded altitudes with the time stamp.
Speaking of altitude, the digital altimeter can be accessed in the timekeeping mode by pressing the red ALTI button. I have not calibrated this watch yet so it shows my altitude as a negative. A quick elevator ride proved to me that the altitude does change as expected.
No do-it-all watch would be complete without a backlight! Pressing the big “G” button brings up an electroluminescent backlight. This can also be programmed to turn on with a flick of the wrist.
The back of the watch is no slouch, either. It’s surrounded by a plastic trim piece that must be removed to access the battery hatch. Notice the dragon pattern on the back. If you have a “flying squirrel” on the back instead of a dragon, you’ve got a version originally slated for sale outside the United States.
Edit: The Flying Fire dragon case back is found not only on US models but on all International atomic versions and on all non atomic version. The Flying squirrel is exclusive to Japanese domestic markets models and only found on the atomic versions. The Japanese versions do not support metric and imperial conversions for the different measurements given by the sensors, they are strictly metric only.