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Operation Guide 3258

E-8

E-91  Using the Countdown Timer

E-91 

To enter the Countdown Timer Mode

E-93 

To confi gure countdown timer settings

E-94 

To use the countdown timer

E-94 

To turn the progress beeper on and off

E-95  Checking the Current Time in a Different Time Zone

E-95 

To enter the World Time Mode

E-95 

To view the time in another time zone

E-96 

To specify standard time or daylight saving time (DST) for a city

E-97 Illumination

E-97 

To turn on illumination manually

E-97 

To change the illumination duration

E-99 

To turn the auto light switch on and off

E-101 Other Settings

E-101  To turn the button operation tone on and off
E-102  To turn Power Saving on and off

E-103 Troubleshooting

E-109 Specifi cations

E-9

Charging the Watch

The face of the watch is a solar cell that generates power from light. The generated power charges a 
built-in rechargeable battery, which powers watch operations. The watch charges whenever it is exposed 
to light.

Charging Guide

Whenever you are not wearing the 
watch, leave it in a location where it 
is exposed to light.

 Best charging performance is 

achieved by exposing the watch to 
the strongest light available.

When wearing the watch, make sure 
that its face is not blocked from light 
by the sleeve of your clothing.

 The watch may enter a sleep state 

(page E-13) if its face is blocked 
by your sleeve even only partially.

Warning!
Leaving the watch in bright light for charging can cause it to become quite hot.
Take care when handling the watch to avoid burn injury. The watch can become particularly hot 
when exposed to the following conditions for long periods.

 On the dashboard of a car parked in direct sunlight

 Too close to an incandescent lamp

 Under direct sunlight

E-10

Important!

 Allowing the watch to become very hot can cause its liquid crystal display to black out. The 

appearance of the LCD should become normal again when the watch returns to a lower temperature.

 Turn on the watch’s Power Saving function (page E-13) and keep it in an area normally exposed to 

bright light when storing it for long periods. This helps to ensure that power does not run down.

 Storing the watch for long periods in an area where there is no light or wearing it in such a way that it is 

blocked from exposure to light can cause power to run down. Expose the watch to bright light 
whenever possible.

Power Levels

You can get an idea of the watch’s power level by observing the battery power indicator on the display.

Level Battery Power Indicator

Function Status

1

(H)

All functions enabled.

2

(M)

All functions enabled.

3

(L)

Auto and manual receive, illumination, 
beeper, and sensor operation disabled.

4

(C)

Except for timekeeping and the 

C

 (charge) 

indicator, all functions and display 
indicators disabled.

5

All functions disabled.

Battery power 
indicator

Battery power 
indicator

E-11

 The fl ashing 

LOW

 indicator at Level 3 (

L

) tells you that battery power is very low, and that exposure to 

bright light for charging is required as soon as possible.

 At Level 5, all functions are disabled and settings return to their initial factory defaults. Once the battery 

reaches Level 2 (

M

) after falling to Level 5, reconfi gure the current time, date, and other settings.

 Display indicators reappear as soon as the battery is charged from Level 5 to Level 2 (

M

).

 Leaving the watch exposed to direct sunlight or some other very strong light source can cause the 

battery power indicator to show a reading temporarily that is higher than the actual battery level. The 
correct battery level should be indicated after a few minutes.

 All data stored in memory is deleted, and the current time and all other settings return to their initial 

factory defaults whenever battery power drops to Level 5 and when you have the battery replaced.

Power Recovery Mode

 Performing multiple sensor, illumination, or beeper operations during a short period may cause all of 

the battery power indicators (

H

,

M

, and 

L

) to start fl ashing on the display. This indicates that the watch 

is in the power recovery mode. Illumination, alarm, countdown timer alarm, hourly time signal, and 
sensor operations will be disabled until battery power recovers.

 Battery power will recover in about 15 minutes. At this time, the battery power indicators (

H

,

M

,

L

) will 

stop fl ashing. This indicates that the functions listed above are enabled again.

 If all of the battery power indicators (

H

,

M

,

L

) are fl ashing and the 

C

 (charge) indicator also is fl ashing, 

it means the battery level is very low. Expose the watch to bright light as soon as possible.

 Even if battery power is at Level 1 (

H

) or Level 2 (

M

), the Digital Compass Mode, Barometer/

Thermometer Mode, or Altimeter Mode sensor may be disabled if there is not enough voltage available 
to power it suffi ciently. This is indicated when all of the battery power indicators (

H

,

M

,

L

) are fl ashing.

 Frequent fl ashing of all of the battery power indicators (

H

,

M

,

L

) probably means that remaining battery 

power is low. Leave the watch in bright light to allow it to charge.

E-12

Charging Times

Exposure Level (Brightness)

Daily

Operation

*1

Level Change *2

Level 5

Level 4

Level 3

Level 2

Level 1

Outdoor sunlight (50,000 lux)

5 min.

2 hours

12 hours

3 hours

Sunlight through a window (10,000 lux)

24 min.

5 hours

57 hours

16 hours

Daylight through a window on a 
cloudy day (5,000 lux)

48 min.

9 hours

115 hours

31 hours

Indoor fl uorescent lighting (500 lux)

8 hours

91 hours

– – –

– – –

*1 Approximate amount of exposure time required each day to generate enough power for normal daily 

operation.

*2 Approximate amount of exposure time (in hours) required to take power from one level to the next.

 The above exposure times all are for reference only. Actual exposure times depend on lighting 

conditions.

 For details about the operating time and daily operating conditions, see the “Power Supply” section of 

the Specifi cations (page E-112).

E-13

Power Saving

When turned on, Power Saving enters a sleep state automatically whenever the watch is left for a certain 
period in an area where it is dark. The table below shows how watch functions are affected by Power 
Saving.

 For information about enabling and disabling power saving, see “To turn Power Saving on and off” 

(page E-102).

 There actually are two sleep state levels: “display sleep” and “function sleep”.

Elapsed Time in Dark

Display

Operation

60 to 70 minutes (display sleep)

Blank, with 

PS

 fl ashing

Display is off, but all functions are enabled.

6 or 7 days (function sleep)

Blank, with 

PS

 not fl ashing

All functions are disabled, but timekeeping is 
maintained.

 The watch will not enter a sleep state between 6:00 AM and 9:59 PM. If the watch is already in a sleep 

state when 6:00 AM arrives, however, it will remain in the sleep state.

 The watch will not enter a sleep state while it is in the Stopwatch Mode or Countdown Timer Mode.

To recover from the sleep state

Move the watch to a well-lit area, press any button, or angle the watch towards your face for reading (page 
E-98).

E-14

Radio Controlled Atomic Timekeeping

This watch receives a time calibration signal and updates its time setting accordingly. However, when 
using the watch outside of areas covered by time calibration signals, you will have to adjust the settings 
manually as required. See “Confi guring Current Time and Date Settings Manually” (page E-31) for more 
information.
This section explains how the watch updates its time settings when the city code selected as the Home 
City is in Japan, North America, Europe, or China, and is one that supports time calibration signal 
reception.

If your Home City Code setting is this:

The watch can receive the signal from the transmitter 
located here:

LIS, LON, MAD, PAR, ROM, BER, STO, ATH, MOW

Anthorn (England), Mainfl ingen (Germany)

HKG, BJS

Shangqiu City (China)

TPE, SEL, TYO

Fukushima (Japan), Fukuoka/Saga (Japan)

HNL, ANC, YVR, LAX, YEA, DEN, MEX, CHI, NYC, YHZ, 
YYT

Fort Collins, Colorado (United States)

Important!

 The areas covered by 

MOW

,

HNL

 and 

ANC

 are quite far from the calibration signal transmitters, so 

certain conditions may cause reception problems.

 When 

HKG

 or 

BJS

 is selected as the Home City, only the time and date are adjusted according to the 

time calibration signal. You need to switch manually between standard time and daylight saving time 
(DST) if required. See “To confi gure Home City settings” (page E-28) for information about how to do 
this.

E-15

Approximate Reception Ranges

UK and German Signals

Anthorn

500 kilometers

1,500 kilometers

The Anthorn signal is 
receivable within this area

Mainflingen

2,000 miles
(3,000 kilometers)

600 miles
(1,000 kilometers)

Fort Collins

North American Signal

Japanese Signals

Chinese Signal

500 kilometers

Changchun

Beijing

Shangqiu

Shanghai

Chengdu

Hong Kong

1,500 kilometers

1,000 kilometers

Signals are receivable in the Taiwan area 
when reception conditions are good.

Fukuoka/Saga

500 kilometers

Fukushima

Summary of Contents for 3258

Page 1: ...the current time To set the time using a time calibration signal See To get ready for a receive operation page E 16 To set the time manually See Configuring Current Time and Date Settings Manually page E 31 The watch is now ready for use For details about the watch s radio controlled timekeeping feature see Radio Controlled Atomic Timekeeping page E 14 E 5 Contents E 2 About This Manual E 3 Things ...

Page 2: ...ctions listed above are enabled again If all of the battery power indicators H M L are flashing and the C charge indicator also is flashing it means the battery level is very low Expose the watch to bright light as soon as possible Even if battery power is at Level 1 H or Level 2 M the Digital Compass Mode Barometer Thermometer Mode or Altimeter Mode sensor may be disabled if there is not enough vol...

Page 3: ...form any button operation for about two or three minutes Note You can interrupt a time calibration signal reception operation by pressing any button Receive failed If there was a previously successful reception Receive failed If there was a previously successful reception E 20 Signal Level Indicator During manual receive the signal level indicator displays the signal level as shown below Weak Unst...

Page 4: ...o flash The watch will exit the setting mode automatically if you do not perform any operation for about two or three minutes For details about city codes see the City Code Table at the back of this manual 2 Use A East and C West to scroll through the available city codes Keep scrolling until the city code you want to select as your Home City is displayed 3 Press D to display the DST setting screen...

Page 5: ... is paused temporarily while the watch is performing an alert operation daily alarm Hourly Time Signal countdown timer alarm or while illumination is turned on by pressing L The measurement operation resumes for its remaining duration after the operation that caused it to pause is finished See Digital Compass Precautions page E 46 for important information about taking direction readings Calibratin...

Page 6: ...To set a map and find your current location on page E 42 for information about how to perform the above step 2 As shown in the illustration to the left change your position so you and the 12 o clock position of the watch are pointed in the direction of objective while keeping the northerly direction indicated on the map aligned with north as indicated by the watch If you find it difficult to perform ...

Page 7: ...eck for changes and plan your day accordingly Reading the Barometric Pressure Change Indicator Indicator Meaning Sudden rise in pressure Sudden fall in pressure Sustained fall in pressure changing to a rise Sustained rise in pressure changing to a fall The barometric pressure change indicator is not displayed if there has been no noteworthy change in barometric pressure E 52 Important To ensure pr...

Page 8: ...ke sure that an altitude reading is on the display If an altitude reading is not displayed press A to take one See To take an altimeter reading page E 56 for details 2 Use the contour lines on your map to determine the difference in altitude between your current location and your destination 3 In the Altimeter Mode press E to specify your current location as the altitude differential start point T...

Page 9: ...he International Civil Aviation Organization ICAO These values define relationships between altitude air pressure and temperature 0 m 500 m 1000 m 1500 m 2000 m 2500 m 3000 m 3500 m 4000 m 899 hPa 795 hPa 701 hPa 616 hPa 8 5 C 2 C 4 5 C 11 C 15 C 1013 hPa About 6 5 C per 1000 m About 8 hPa per 100 m About 9 hPa per 100 m About 10 hPa per 100 m About 11 hPa per 100 m About 12 hPa per 100 m Altitude ...

Page 10: ...double check to make sure you really want to delete the contents of the memory area you select here 3 Hold down E until CLR Hold appears on the display and then Hold disappears This deletes the record you displayed in step 2 Release E after CLR appears on the display E 77 Viewing Tide and Moon Data The Tide Moon Data Mode shows tide and Moon information for the Home City you selected in the Timeke...

Page 11: ... phase page E 81 to change the indicator Moon phase indicator Moon age Moon phase indicator Moon age E 83 Moon Phase Indicator Moon Age Moon Phase New Moon First Quarter Waxing 28 7 29 8 0 0 0 9 1 0 2 7 2 8 4 6 6 5 8 3 4 7 6 4 8 4 10 1 10 2 12 0 12 1 13 8 Moon Phase Indicator Moon Age Moon Phase Full Moon Last Quarter Waning 13 9 15 7 15 8 17 5 17 6 19 4 21 3 23 1 19 5 21 2 23 2 24 9 25 0 26 8 26 ...

Page 12: ...e 5 minutes Countdown time 10 minutes Time up alert Countdown beeper Each second for the final 10 seconds Timer Settings Countdown Time You can select from one minute to 60 minutes You can select in one minute steps Reset Time You can select from one minute to five minutes within the range of the timer time You can select in one minute steps E 93 Note See To configure countdown timer settings for inf...

Page 13: ...o light switch on indicator Auto light switch on indicator E 100 Illumination Precautions The electro luminescent panel that provides illumination loses power after very long use Illumination may be hard to see when viewed under direct sunlight Illumination turns off automatically whenever an alarm sounds Frequent use of illumination runs down the battery Auto light switch precautions Wearing the ...

Page 14: ...17 which will cause the time to be adjusted automatically according to your currently selected Home City If this results in the wrong time setting check your Home City setting and correct it if necessary page E 28 E 108 The current time setting is off by one hour Possible Cause Remedy Page Signal reception on a day for switching between standard time daylight saving time DST may have failed for so...

Page 15: ... 5 second interval once per month 2 hours of barometric pressure measurement per day 4 minutes of signal reception per day Frequent use of illumination runs down the battery Particular care is required when using the auto light switch page E 100 L 2 City Code Table City Code City UTC Offset GMT Differential PPG Pago Pago 11 HNL Honolulu 10 ANC Anchorage 9 YVR Vancouver 8 LAX Los Angeles YEA Edmont...

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