![]() ![]() ![]() Most everyone makes at least one, there are some fantastic designs and they are easier to read than a 24-hour-only watch (especially if swapping between a 12 and 24 hour models).įinally, as much as I love EDCF this is one of those better asked (or searched) on the watchuseek forums type of questions. Typically the 2nd hand is marked for and sweeps a 24-hour scale and nothing prevents you from showing the same time zone with both the 12 and 24 hour hands. I'd also start looking at GMT watches - these will have 2 hour hands that can be set independently to show 2-time zones. I'd look at forte and at nowatch to start, as well as the 24hourtime info site. A 24-hour replacement might be difficult to get. The risk is, you generally don't repair quartz when something goes wrong but, instead, replace the entire movement. Quartz will be less expensive, possibly easier to find and orders of magnitude more accurate. Without looking, I think they were rated for something like -20/+40 seconds per day.Īt the price point you are looking at that's probably going to be an issue with any mechanical you find. The Raketa's are interesting, but they aren't particularly accurate and accuracy issues tend to be compounded by the slower 24-hour movement. ![]()
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