The Stopwatch Your Coach Had
Before phones, timing meant a stopwatch in the palm: a big sweeping hand doing one lap of the dial per minute, a little sub-dial quietly counting the minutes, and a satisfying click to start and stop. This is that — with the precision of your device's clock underneath. The red hand sweeps smoothly around the 60-second dial, the sub-dial tracks up to 30 minutes, and the digital line below reads to the centisecond for when the hands aren't precise enough.
Laps and Splits
Press Lap (or L) while running to record a split without interrupting the timing — each row shows the individual lap time and the running total, with your fastest lap in green and slowest in red. For timing several people at once, the multi-stopwatch runs independent clocks side by side.
FAQ
Why does the hand sweep instead of tick?
Mechanical stopwatches beat several times per second, producing a near-continuous sweep — so that's what this one does. It also makes fractions of a second easier to judge by eye.
How long can it run?
Indefinitely — the sub-dial wraps every 30 minutes like the real thing, and the digital readout keeps counting hours beyond that.
Does it keep running if I switch tabs?
Yes — timing is based on the clock, not on the page being visible, so it stays accurate when you come back.