
Forum member kjkt3 challenges the community to identify a perceived 'error' in a watch dial, sparking a lively debate on design choices versus horological conventions. This discussion delves into the intricacies of dial markings and the subjective nature of what constitutes a flaw in watch design, particularly concerning alarm watches.

From 9 to 2 is printed differently from the part from 3 to 8
To set the alarm, you push the alarm pusher all the way in, which pops the main crown all the way out. You can then set the alarm hand. The crown is in the same position--all the way out--that it was in when setting the time, but now it is setting the alarm. Then you push the main crown all the way in, and, as I mentioned, the alarm is engaged. The alarm pusher pops all the way out.
Have a good week! FH
Inherently, due to the alarm function taking up 1/6 markings between hours (10 minutes each segment), it means it's difficult to accurately read minutes off the dial (which needs a 1/5 marking scale instead). Regards, skyeriding
Tritium on some numerals is in bad condition? Hands are dirty? Strap is not the right size? Vte
Did it originally look like this? Best, NickO
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