Suunto M-9 Wrist Compass
Retail Price: $29.95
Our Price: $23.99
You Save: $5.96 (20%)
Average Rating: 4.5
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Details
Main Features
- Handy and reliable wrist compass for navigating around town or the country
- Employs Suunto's two-zone system for reliable readings in northern hemisphere
- Serrated bezel ring turns easily even when you're wearing gloves
- Ratchet mechanism for setting direction; jewel bearing and side reading window
- Measures 1.6 x 0.6 x 1.9 inches (W x H x D) and weighs 1.2 ounces; lifetime warranty
Description
A handy and reliable wrist compass for accurate navigation in town or country.
Other Details
- Brand: Suunto
- EAN: 0045235209002
- HazardousMaterialType: ORM-D Class 3
- Label: Suunto
- Manufacturer: Suunto
- Model: M-9
- MPN: 51-M9
- UPC: 045235209002
- Item Dimensions: 0.20 lb
- Package Dimensions: 11.50 in x 5.00 in x 1.30 in; 0.15 lb
Customer Reviews
Best Bang for Buck Compass out there ...

If you need a compass, bigger is best, but just how big can big be? Reason is, the aiming accuracy and capability gets better if you have a large stable platform and sight. OTAH, getting a wrist compass to do the same thing is difficult to achieve, and the M-9 meets this role well. With GPS being the principle guide these days to terrestrial navigation, compasses are mostly for backup and rough heading use, so best accuracy is less practical these days in lieu of compactness, ruggedness, and light weight. Underwater, the M-9 is as good as a dedicated SCUBA compass.
I've used an M-9 since 2001, and it finally died, the plastic case cracked, some liquid leaked, so a bubble that formed keeps the pointer from spinning freely.
This is my 3rd M-9, as I've bought two, keeping one as a spare. I use them both on surface and underwater to as deep as 260' ... although not rated as a diving compass, all fluid filled devices are non-compressible and should take great depths without issue. Diving capacity has been proven for the years I've owned this compass and others who use it similarly.
Pros
Very free spinning and accurate
Light weight
Rotating degree bezel
sighting capacity
transparent case, easy to check for defects
Usable underwater to depths at least to 260'
Velcro strap binds very well underwater
Cons
If not leveled during sighting, pointer will lock [fix: flick it with your finger, and a proper direction will not change much with movement]
Plastic case, will not last forever
Summary:
I've seen a number of compasses for field use in the middle of nowhere, and for so simple a device, its amazing so many are unreliable [whatever magnets they use don't hold its magnetism permanently], inaccurate markings, or poor construction. If you get lost because your compass doesn't work when you need it, its not worth any amount of money.
Suunto has made a name for itself in compasses, and what seems cheap looking is very well engineered, yet simple.
If you need a compass for general use, the watch mounted Clipper works best. I use those underwater too to 260', to backup the M-9.
Good compass for the city

I bought this so that I could easily figure out which way is north after I get off the subway. It really comes in handy. The compass isn't really steady all the time, it tends to sway a little, but so far is has reliably pointed me in the right direction each time I hold it level and steady. The only thing is that the strap is like a cheap velcro material with a plastic buckle. It works fine, I just expected something a little nicer based on the price and from looking at the picture. For some reason too, the compass arrived seperated from the strap and it was pretty annoying to figure out how to put it on at first, and there were no directions to explain how to do it. The material that came with it that explains how to read a compass (& map) was pretty informative and useful though.
