Published on February 19th,2009 at 5:55 PM
By daimaou
By daimaou
Casio’s New Protrek PRX-2000T Watch
Dedicated to those who love trekking, here’s Casio’s latest Protrek watch, the PRX-2000T. Protrek watches give you bearing, barometric pressure, altitude temperature, tide graph, etc… This is Casio’s first ultra slim model at only 11.3mm thick and will be sold in Japan from April 1st for 99,750 Yen (€850).

7 Comments
Category Misc
![]() |
Related Articles
- - Casio Unleashes a New Diver’s Watch, the Frogman GWF-1000 Series (August 28th,2009 at 4:27 PM)
- - Casio's Latest’s G-Shock - The Surfer's Best Friend (April 9th,2009 at 3:19 PM)
- - Casio Will Release Two New Baby-Gs in Japan (February 26th,2009 at 3:20 PM)
- - Six New Edifice Watches From Casio (February 16th,2009 at 4:19 PM)
- - Four New Casio Watches (January 22nd,2009 at 4:49 PM)




















damn it’s ugly
it is so beautiful, and the price is beautiful too
to zsdasd
You probably have no taste in quality, so, go hug your ipod and waste some more hours on Facebook, thanks.
to Nitram.. zsdasd had an opinion on the watch.. and you tried to ridicule him?
please post your own opinion without personal attacks..
If not, people will stop using boards like this
I think is a nice and functionality watch for the people who knows the price and warranty i hope see this watch In my country because for me is necessary.
Nice watch, but the price it’s insane. And stupid. And greedy. Very greedy.
The Casio 2000T looks nice, but does it have any new features?
I have been waiting for years for just one simple feature that NONE of the Casio watches yet has: two simple counters for repeated up and down travel, such as for skiers, snowboarders, runners, hikers, and cyclists:
1) A counter showing the total vertical distance covered in a day;
2) A counter showing the total number of runs (either uphill or downhill).
Why is it so difficult for Casio to add these two simple counters?
They should add these, and in then they can simplify the watch by removing the memories and graphs. Who needs those? When I run or ski up and down hills, I don’t have the time to fiddle with the watch to record my current position. And I don’t need any detailed history. All I need is the total at the end of the day.
Unfortunately, Casio has nothing to offer in this direction.