Garmin fēnix® 6 Pro Solar | Multisport Solar Watch

fenix® 6 Pro Solar is a solar charging smartwatch featuring a Power Glass lens, which helps the fenix 6 Pro Solar stay on and performance ready for weeks.

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SKU: 702902 Categories: , Tag:

HARNESS THE POWER OF THE SUN

Featuring a Power Glass™ solar charging lens and customizable power manager modes, this smartwatch can stay on and performance-ready for weeks.

Get a battery boost from the sunlight, so you can go longer between charges.

How is your body holding up? Wrist-based heart rate1 and Pulse Ox2 will let you know.

Need running pace guidance that knows the terrain? Check out the PacePro™ feature.

Navigate every adventure with TOPO maps right on your wrist.

Music on your wrist, and no phone weighing you down.

Leave the cord at home. Solar charging lets you get up to 14 days of battery life — and then some!

QUALITY BY DESIGN

The rugged yet sophisticated design features a large 1.3” display. It is tested to U.S. military standards for thermal, shock and water resistance.

PREMIUM MATERIALS

Fit the look to your lifestyle with your choice of titanium, stainless steel or DLC coated bezels.

Additional information

IN THE BOX

fēnix 6 Pro Solar
Charging/data cable
Documentation

6 (six) is the natural number following 5 and preceding 7. It is a composite number and the smallest perfect number.

F, or f, is the sixth letter of the Latin alphabet and many modern alphabets influenced by it, including the modern English alphabet and the alphabets of all other modern western European languages. Its name in English is ef (pronounced ), and the plural is efs.

Garmin Ltd. (shortened to Garmin, stylized as GARMIN, and formerly known as ProNav) is an American, Swiss-domiciled multinational technology company founded in 1989 by Gary Burrell and Min Kao in Lenexa, Kansas, United States, with operational headquarters in Olathe, Kansas. Since 2010, the company is legally incorporated in Schaffhausen, Switzerland.

The company specializes in GNSS technology for automotive, aviation, marine, outdoor, and sport activities. Due to their development in wearable technology, they have also been competing with activity tracker and smartwatch consumer developers such as Fitbit and Apple.

Multisport may refer to:

  • Multi-purpose stadium, where different sports are played
  • Multi-sport clubs, which compete in several sports
  • Multi-sport event, such as the Olympic Games
  • Multisport race, such as a triathlon
  • Multisport video game

Pro is an abbreviation meaning "professional".

Pro, PRO or variants thereof might also refer to:

A watch is a portable timepiece intended to be carried or worn by a person. It is designed to keep a consistent movement despite the motions caused by the person's activities. A wristwatch is designed to be worn around the wrist, attached by a watch strap or other type of bracelet, including metal bands, leather straps, or any other kind of bracelet. A pocket watch is designed for a person to carry in a pocket, often attached to a chain.

Watches appeared in the 16th century. During most of its history, the watch was a mechanical device, driven by clockwork, powered by winding a mainspring, and keeping time with an oscillating balance wheel. These are called mechanical watches.

In the 1960s the electronic quartz watch was invented, which was powered by a battery and kept time with a vibrating quartz crystal. By the 1980s the quartz watch had taken over most of the market from the mechanical watch. Historically, this is called the quartz revolution (also known as the quartz crisis in Switzerland).

Developments in the 2010s include smart watches, which are elaborate computer-like electronic devices designed to be worn on a wrist. They generally incorporate timekeeping functions, but these are only a small subset of the smartwatch's facilities.

In general, modern watches often display the day, date, month, and year. For mechanical watches, various extra features called "complications", such as moon-phase displays and the different types of tourbillon, are sometimes included. Most electronic quartz watches, on the other hand, include time-related features such as timers, chronographs, and alarm functions. Furthermore, some modern watches (like smart watches) even incorporate calculators, GPS and Bluetooth technology or have heart-rate monitoring capabilities, and some of them use radio clock technology to regularly correct the time.

Most watches that are used mainly for timekeeping have quartz movements. However, expensive collectible watches, valued more for their elaborate craftsmanship, aesthetic appeal, and glamorous design than for simple timekeeping, often have traditional mechanical movements, despite being less accurate and more expensive than their electronic counterparts. As of 2018, the most expensive watch ever sold at auction was the Patek Philippe Henry Graves Supercomplication, the world's most complicated mechanical watch until 1989, fetching US$24 million (CHF 23,237,000) in Geneva on 11 November 2014. As of December 2019, the most expensive watch ever sold at auction (and wristwatch) was the Patek Philippe Grandmaster Chime Ref. 6300A-010, fetching US$31.19 million (CHF 31,000,000) in Geneva on 9 November 2019.

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