Originally Posted by Dylan Thomas
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This morning I made my biannual tour of the house adjusting any clocks that do not update themselves at the GMT/DST changeover, and made a little count-up as I went. There were four in bedrooms, ten in living spaces, and six in kitchen/utility/garage areas making a total of 20.
It's something that I rather enjoy doing other than the daft oven clock that jumps from single digit adjustment to rapid ten minute increments after about five seconds. Most of the others are vintage mechanical or electronic analogue clocks that are a pleasure to interact with. The only one that has to regularly have the manual dug out for is a large Nixie tube clock that has the GMT/DST setting buried amongst a long set of registers.
Any watches that need adjusting just get done the next time that they are worn.
Is anybody fully automated? What's the average amongst the TZ massif?
Don't just do something, sit there. - TNH
Just two. My wife is fond of the kitchen clock and won't have it replaced by a radio-synchronised model. And my highly dimmable LED bedside clock. I've never been able to find a radio-synchronised one that will dim sufficiently.
Three in our house.
Four here, not counting our two bedside clocks.
Cheers,
Neil.
Only the oven clock inside the actual house, we don't bother with the thermostat clock. Outside my mini and the two in my wife's Suzuki (slightly annoyingly the two in the Suzuki have to be done independently and use totally different proceedures). Plus whatever mechanical watch I'm wearing at the time and my wife's Seiko auto. My gshock changes automatically.
Only the three at the moment. Oven, thermostat and one of my favourite time pieces which my son made at school last year:
Legibility is a bit pants but I love the colours. We might try luming the hands which should help.
Once I have finished my study there will be another, a lovely silver clock I inherited but has spent too much time in the attic as it was banished from the last house for being too loud.
5 clocks for me, the problematic one is the Atmos which shouldn't be turned backwards. So I have to leave it for an hour or wind it forwards 23 hours.
Don't forget the clocks in your car / cars and also your watches need doing as well. Not forgetting the cookers and micro waves. It's a PITA.
7 clocks in our house. Can't work out why a modern car can't adjust itself, but that's another one to do when I next drive it.
Wish the time could just be left alone rather than this bi-annual PITA!
Currently 6 in my house including the oven plus. I ended up adjusting three, the other were done by the kids. The cars are yet to be done.
Wall clock in the kitchen, oven clock, couple of bedroom alarm clocks, although one is an ancient Sony radio alarm with a little DST button so easy-peasy, and the two cars. Oh, and the boiler thermostat.
I don't want to talk about the quartz watch collection
Wall clock and car clock.
Oven can fend for itself for 6 months.
Only 2, replaced our alarm clocks and most of the wall clocks with radio-synched ones years ago. The oven one I can't be bothered with, it's an utter faff to set at the best of times so is currently claiming that it is 3am. I'll have to do the car one as well next time I leave the house.
Dave E
Skating away on the thin ice of a new day
3 in the house + the oven clock, 1 motorbike & 3 cars
Andy
Wanted - Damasko DC57
Seiko kitchen clock
Microwave & oven
Living Room pendulum
Hall clock
Others are radio controlled
1 Navy Chelsea Clock Co
1 Jungans kitchen
1 10 inch Smiths
1 8 inch Smiths. (small dial hours, large minutes)
1 bedside of dubious quality
3 JLC travel clocks.
Gave my nephew my vintage radio room clock to celebrate him sailing Brazil, SA, Seychelles. All vintage apart from bedside clock so there's room for one more. Enjoy the changing.
Why are oven clocks such a pain?
Yeah my oven is a nightmare. Including when you set the timer for cooking anything - the most common lengths of time required to be input must surely be 15/30/60 minutes. The clock rapidly increases in value at 20 something minutes so in a millisecond it’s at about 4 hours. Now I use Siri or a dive bezel!
2 cars, an oven and a microwave.
3 quartz, the microwave, one table clock… i think that’s all.
Sent from my iPad using TZ-UK mobile app
Car
Microwave (Can't be arsed with the cooker)
3xKitchen clocks
+Brother's Clock
Just leave them on God's time. Time is just a form of control anyway.
Only the cooker for me but the quartz wrist watches…
Agree the oven / micro ones are a pain for reasons described above.
To add to the pain we have two next to each other and I need them both to the same second so they move minute at the same moment.
Trying to do them both one handed at the same precise moment is not easy especially as they are very fiddly in the first place.
Aside from that, one quartz on the wall and I think that’s about it.
Lounge clock, oven clock, the clock in the car ... and 27 quartz watches :-)
We have to manually adjust a long case clock in the hall, carriage clock in the dining room and mantle clock in the lounge plus a wall clock in the kitchen and another in the utility room. Then there are the awkward ones, a digital clock for the cooker and another for the microwave, both of which are a pain.
The burglar alarm is also a work of art. Sometimes easy and sometime awkward.
The car is easy enough.
The good ones are the bedroom ones, we have an old, mid seventies, Amstrad which takes less than 10 seconds and the other three all adjust themselves automatically.
Finally even the new CH boiler also adjusts itself.
I can't see any reason for for us having to alter the times for no apparent benefit. It's a pure anachronism.
It seems like the older they are, the easier they are to adjust. Our quickest is an eight-day movement Smiths Radio Room clock which takes a couple of seconds to move the minute hand forward an hour. The Smiths Sectric clocks take a few seconds to adjust, although they sometimes they start running in reverse when the motor is re-engaged
Don't just do something, sit there. - TNH
Don't just do something, sit there. - TNH
I spent a happy few hours upgrading the movements etc on most of our clocks to radio controlled last year
The Mercedes, in its wisdom, decided to put itself forward two hours. After a couple of minutes driving it put itself right.
Oven clocks are a pain though. Quite why they don't have back up batteries like every other mains driven clock and timer, I cannot fathom. We have at least two power cuts a month. I've given up resetting them
Cars, ovens and whatever watches are being worn by any of the four of us - so possibly 10 in all. But have only done the ovens, 2 watches and a car today.
Actually a lot simpler and less time consuming than I remember it being a while ago.
Not that many, but feels like too many as I find them over a period of days! First the watch I'm wearing, then cooker, living room clock and bedside clock. Then car later in the day. Then rice cooker in the evening, when finding it hasn't cooked anything yet and wondering why. I'm sure there's more.
Never bothers me too much - I'm still just happy that phones change automatically, so on the Saturday night I don't need to remember to reset the one I use as an alarm!
Half a dozen around the house.
I usually find one a month later that I've not noticed.
Around a dozen quartz watches, although only about half are currently running, so that saved me time.
I didn't use my car over the weekend, so that's still to be done, but is simply a case of going into the settings and checking the DST box.
M
Breitling Cosmonaute 809 - What's not to like?