Omega's first super-dominant male watch was introduced in 1957 to provide scientists and athletes with precise timing. NASA, in preparation for the Apollo mission to the moon, anonymously acquired and tested different brands of time meters, resulting in the Omega Super Watch as the only brand that could pass a severe test.
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Later, the Omega Superwatch accompanied the astronauts on all lift-off missions, from the Gemini spacecraft to the Sun God Apollo, including six landings to the moon; Until now, it was the only watch in the world that had landed on the moon, and it was the designated timeometer for NASA and the Soviet Space Agency's astronaut launch program.
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In 1962, NASA equipment buyers went directly to a watch store in Houston, bought six time-code tables, and went back to space center for a test. In a vacuum, tests for temperature changes from 93 degrees Celsius to -18 degrees Celsius, humidity changes, severe hits, accelerated centrifurism, high and low pressure, noise, water resistance, antimagnetic and anti-seismic functions are included. In the six timed watches selected, as soon as the Omega Super Watch reaches the super-high specification set by NASA, it becomes a watch that lands on the moon!