- Jan 16, 2001
- 31,528
- 3
- 76
OK, here's a nice change-of-pace topic for OT. 
I have a Citizen chronograph watch, model number WR100. Nice-looking watch and keeps perfect time. Had it about a year now.
Anyway, it has this "outer dial" that has the compass markings (N, S, E & W) as well as numerical points going from 0 - 360 degrees interspaced with the compass points.
The dial is rotatable by hand, but it also moves all on it's own...I don't recall the dial moving at all when I first got the watch. One day, I turned the dial by hand...*shrugs* nothing happened. Since then, it spins by itself, keeping "time" or whatever the heck it's doing.
So, what is it doing, exactly? What's the dial for, why is it moving and how to I make it stop?
Next question: the sweep second hand. The watch is also a stopwatch and it has a sweep-second hand. The second hand doesn't "zero" at the twelve o'clock postion anymore; it zeroes at exactly on four (4).
I don't know what happened...the watch hasn't been dropped or banged it it's accurate to about a minute a month...no exagerration there.
I have tried various combinations of the start/stop/reset buttons. They work as advertised, but reset the second hand to 4 instead of 12. 
Ah, I can hear the chants of RTFM, RTFM, RTFM! already, but the booklet that comes with it is in 310 different languages. The book is like two inches thick, but when you come down to it, the portion in English is about 4 pages and doesn't mention the dial and mentions nothing about "resetting the second hand to 12."
Educate me, please?
I have a Citizen chronograph watch, model number WR100. Nice-looking watch and keeps perfect time. Had it about a year now.
Anyway, it has this "outer dial" that has the compass markings (N, S, E & W) as well as numerical points going from 0 - 360 degrees interspaced with the compass points.
The dial is rotatable by hand, but it also moves all on it's own...I don't recall the dial moving at all when I first got the watch. One day, I turned the dial by hand...*shrugs* nothing happened. Since then, it spins by itself, keeping "time" or whatever the heck it's doing.
So, what is it doing, exactly? What's the dial for, why is it moving and how to I make it stop?
Next question: the sweep second hand. The watch is also a stopwatch and it has a sweep-second hand. The second hand doesn't "zero" at the twelve o'clock postion anymore; it zeroes at exactly on four (4).
I don't know what happened...the watch hasn't been dropped or banged it it's accurate to about a minute a month...no exagerration there.
Ah, I can hear the chants of RTFM, RTFM, RTFM! already, but the booklet that comes with it is in 310 different languages. The book is like two inches thick, but when you come down to it, the portion in English is about 4 pages and doesn't mention the dial and mentions nothing about "resetting the second hand to 12."
Educate me, please?
