My quartz watch Romanson was slow exactly 60 minutes during one night, about 10 days ago. After that it works totally correct. What could cause this slow of exactly 1 hour??? Isn't it very strange?
There isn't any mode button. I left it on the table, at same place I used to leave it for years. I wear it on left hand. I know that magnetism could interfere with quartz, but it wasn't situatuon that time.There isn't any mode button. I left it on the table, at same place I used to leave it for years. I wear it on left hand. I know that magnetism could interfere with quartz, but it wasn't situatuon that time.
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The date changes every second time the hour hand passes 12 O'clock.
Your watches' second pass is at midday instead of midnight, so to make it operate correctly, you need to wind it on 12 hours. The date will then change at midnight.
The list of problems is impressive and if you still have the proof of purchase, it should go back to Tissot for repair or replacement. It shouldn't matter where you bought it, so long as you can prove that it is within the warranty period.
(It sounds as though it has been dropped onto a hard surface)
If you haven't got any proof of purchase, then you will have to pay for any repairs.
Hello, I am not sure if I understand your question. Are you asking how this particular quartz movement operates?
All
Quartz movements are pretty much the same operational wise. They can
vary greatly in materials used for construction and number of jewels.
At it's basic a quartz watch uses a piece of quartz crystal called a transistor oscillator
to vibrate a tuning fork. This vibration is a is brought down by micro
processors to a meaningful number then converted into mechanical energy
trough the movement and hands.
In the case of a chronograph it means more internal gears and jewels. Although this is a good movement it is the low side of middle of the road.
The
G10.211 is an analog display of hours and measured time. These include
hours, minutes and a small jumping second as 6 o'clock. Mechanical date
and counters for 1/10 second, 60 seconds and 30 minutes with "ADD" and
'SPLIT" functions. Operated by 2 push buttons. It has 6 jewels.
If you want to know something more specific please just ask. Hope this helps.
Hi honestfunguy. Take it back! Omega watches are usually guaranteed for 2 years or even 3 years (Co-axial escapement), so you should not have a problem getting it repaired under warrantee. No way should it be be gaining (or losing) 10 minutes per day, let alone 10 minutes per hour. Could be any number of things, from a broken mainspring to problems with the timing regulator, but they are very complex watches and should not be looked at by anyone apart from Omega whilst in warrantee, otherwise you'll probably void the warrantee. Hope this helps; Eagle58
There is nothing wrong with your watch. Probably it's the one measuring heart rate and pulse (heart beats per second). Use your users manual to set the watch. By the way: Timex is one of the worst watch producers.
There isn't any mode button. I left it on the table, at same place I used to leave it for years. I wear it on left hand. I know that magnetism could interfere with quartz, but it wasn't situatuon that time.
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