Handy-Necklace `Orkan` - PhoneCord - Smartphone Lenyard / Smartphone Necklace
All Hands on Deck - With the phone chain `Orkan`, you can save your communications center in a seaworthy manner and always ready for action on the man (or woman). Your smartphone is firmly and securely covered in a crystal clear silicone case, which hangs on an indestructible sailing robe in maritime optics.
Phone calls and listening to music are possible without annoying cable wooling, because connections and charging socket on the phone are not covered by the cordage. The sail rope is 6 mm thick and can be varied in length by moving the stainless steel closure.
No matter if you are sailing around Cape Horn or training a hand full of seals, thanks to the Smartphone Necklace `Orkan`, you have the fins free and your smartphone always and stylish within the 3 miles zone. Light effects in the dark are provided by the reflection fibers woven into the sheet.
The smartphone chain made at Hamburg's waterfront, is available in different colors and suitable for the current popular mobile phone models.
Material and Components:
- Sailing rope 6 mm (round wovent)
- Lenghts: 160 cm (2 x 80 cm)
- Color: blue / white
- Closure: Ring Shutter, stainless Steel
- Rigging: orange
Orkan (engl. Hurricane):
As a hurricane in the broader sense winds with speeds of at least 64 knots (117.7 km / h = 32.7 m / s) called. On the Beaufort scale, hurricanes with a rating of 12 are classified. In the narrower sense, these are understood to mean extratropical depressions in which winds with hurricane force occur.
Hurricanes can wreak havoc and pose a threat to shipping at sea.
Hurricanes occur mainly in autumn and winter, because during this time the temperature differences between the polar region and the tropics are particularly large. When these air masses meet (occlusion), strong storms arise.
On the mainland, except on exposed mountain peaks, islands and coastal areas, medium winds with hurricane force are rare because of increased soil friction. Usually such high wind speeds are only reached in gusts or tornadoes.
The hurricane or the gale gust is to be differentiated by definition from the gale-force storm or the hurricane gust, in which only a wind force 11 on the Beaufort scale is reached.