Welcome to the G-Shock Hacker's Handbook project!

Stealthed GW-5500G-Shocks (or "G's" as they are affectionately known) are not just cheap plastic watches that can survive a world of pain. They are also the stepping stone for a huge range of experiments (or "hacks"). These hacks cover everything from tweaking the accuracy, to stealthing, dyeing, fitting non-standard bands, and ruggedizing.

The very fact that G's are relatively cheap watches makes them ideal for this kind of experimentation. Imagine dyeing a Rolex just to see what happens, or boiling an Omega case in a saucepan for twenty minutes because you want slightly softer buttons. Unthinkable, but these kinds of activities are performed every day by G-philes all over the world. You can find many examples on the Watchuseek G-Shock Forum.

I decided it was about time to bring these techniques together into one volume, which could be read purely for interest, but also serve as a great starting point for your own experiments. Who knows, maybe you'll be inspired to try something that will appear in a future edition of the book!

The book will appear in draft form on this website as PDF. It will always be free to download. When it reaches a stage where it is ready for publication, I will make it into a print-on-demand book so you can buy a physical copy.

The book will be published under a Creative Commons Licence, so you will be able to make your own derived versions of it for other (non-commercial) purposes, provided you share your new work under the same licence.

Updates will appear on this site, so please keep visiting. You can also keep track of updates by subscribing to the RSS feed.

Good hacking!

 

News

 

v0.8

2008-06-21

Available from the downloads page.



Downloads Page

2008-02-26

I've added a downloads page to the site. You'll find all the full, draft and archived versions there.

The page is also linked from the sidebar menu.



First Post!

2008-02-24

I posted the suggestion for the G-Shock Hacker's Handbook on the Watchuseek G-Shock forum today. People generally seem to think it's a cool idea, so I've set up this web site to host the project.