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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to sci.electronics.repair,alt.engineering.electrical,alt.horology,uk.d-i-y
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The older consumer quartz wrist watches were a little temperature sensitive.
Wearing them could effect their accuracy a little. Whether or not it went faster or slower, depended on the temperature coefficiency of the particular quartz crystal and components in the watch and how the local oscillator in the watch was designed. The manufactures of the higher end watches tried to have their calibration set up for the watch to be at the average body surface temperature for approximately 14 hours per day, and at room temperature for approximately 10 hours per day. The newer watches are improved to a great extent. Many of the new watches will keep an average time of better than about 5 to 8 seconds per month. There are some very expensive models where they will guarantee an average accuracy of better than 2 to 5 seconds per month. The older watches going back more than about 8 to 10 years ago were usually not much better than 15 to 20 seconds per month. -- JANA _____ "daestrom" wrote in message ... "Ralph Mowery" wrote in message ink.net... "Christopher Tidy" wrote in message ... Hi all, I'm thinking of building an electronic clock control circuit which uses the 50 Hz mains frequency for time keeping. The reason for this is that the clock dial is rather large, so probably wouldn't run for long on battery power, and I don't fancy spending £40 buying a programmable quartz oscillator chip. Despite doing some research online and in electrical engineering books, I can't find a figure for the accuracy of the time keeping of the UK power grid. Perhaps this is because there aren't official bounds set for the time error - one of my electrical engineering books says it is a legal requirement that the frequency be kept "as close as possible to 50 Hz" - but even if this is the case it should be possible to determine a typical error figure. From my point of view I'd regard an acceptable error as 5 minutes every 6 months. Does anyone know the typical time error seen on the UK grid, or where I might find this information? Any suggestions would be much appreciated. Best wishes, Chris Tidy Can't say about the UK but in the US the clocks that run only on the power grid and depend on the frequency are very accurate over a long period of time. I would say more like less than a minuit or less over a year period of time if the clock its self is up to it. During periods of peak loads the nominal 60 hz may go down a cycle or so and when the load is taken away the power company will raise the frequency long enough to get the clocks back in time. Well, you got the basic idea right. But it never drifts down 1 cycle/second. Very rarely drops even a tenth of a cycle. In other words the power company keeps the frequency to an average of exectally 60 hz over a long period of time. Much more stable than any clock you could build that depends on a quartz chip. Indeed. Part of the standard equipment in the old days was a special 'crystal oven' with tightly controlled temperature. By regulating the temperature of the crystal inside, the accuracy its vibrations was improved. An old 'urban lengend' was that the first quartz watches were calibrated assuming the temperature of the crystal was going to be controlled by the body heat of the wearer. And that leaving your watch on the dresser over the week-end would cause it to slow down slightly. Don't know if it is really true, but it's a nice story. daestrom |
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