Last year, my fellow Gear Patrol editor Brad Lanphear wrote a story about Nodus field-testing a prototype tool watch with real-world explorers on a two-week scientific research expedition in the Gobi Desert.
Nodus Nomad prototypes were given out to explorer Bob Atwater and his 15-person team in the RC Andrews Legacy Camel Expedition (yes, they rode camels) to test during the arduous fortnight journey of the Roy Chapman Andrews Legacy Expedition. During the trek, the team encountered three strong sandstorms, unexpected torrential downpours, blistering temperatures of 124 degrees Fahrenheit and other trials and tribulations.
Following the adventure, Atwater and company went back to Nodus with feedback on how the watches performed and what could be improved. Now, Nodus has translated that real-world feedback into the production version of the Nomad, a battle-tested GMT tool watch that’s literally ready for whatever you can throw at it.

Test subject
The production version of the Nomad has several differences from the prototype version, all based on feedback from the Gobi explorers.
First and foremost, the dial is entirely new. The explorers wanted thicker and brighter lume on the hands and markers, more prominent cardinal indices with bolder outlines on all indices, and a date complication at 4:00. Nodus added all of these to the new Nomad’s dial, making it more legible in all conditions and adding the date for additional functionality without replacing an index.





