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Old 13 October 2021, 11:53 PM   #1
p3k4y1981
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Adjusting time on Explorer

So I've been monitoring the accuracy of my Explorer 39mm and it seems to consistently lose 2 seconds every 24 hours.

Obviously this is within tolerances but what I'm interested to know is the best practise for adjusting the time back on track - should I leave it for a few days/weeks and see if there are some days when it will run slightly fast and therefore catch up slightly - or is it fine to reset it daily?
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Old 14 October 2021, 12:17 AM   #2
rmagoo57
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I would reset it once a week at the most. Just set it ahead 7 seconds and it'll only be 7 seconds slow a week later!
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Old 14 October 2021, 12:20 AM   #3
Lesnerelli23
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There is easily found guide for keeping it more accurate by laying it in different positions at night. Sorry I can’t share the guide easily from my phone. However there does exist an official Rolex guide for this that you can find a pic of :)

This should solve it for you! Enjoy the Explorer!!!! One of my favs!
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Old 14 October 2021, 12:23 AM   #4
Raku
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Just regulate it doing this at night:
- to gain time: rest it dial up
- to lose time: rest it on its side, crown down
- to lose even more time: rest it on its side, crown up
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Old 14 October 2021, 01:06 AM   #5
Lesnerelli23
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Originally Posted by Raku View Post
Just regulate it doing this at night:
- to gain time: rest it dial up
- to lose time: rest it on its side, crown down
- to lose even more time: rest it on its side, crown up
Thanks for posting this. This is exactly what I was referring to lol.
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Old 14 October 2021, 04:21 AM   #6
pikers
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Originally Posted by Raku View Post
Just regulate it doing this at night:
- to gain time: rest it dial up
- to lose time: rest it on its side, crown down
- to lose even more time: rest it on its side, crown up
This is what I do. ^
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Old 14 October 2021, 12:41 AM   #7
OG1982
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I'd set it 15 seconds fast and reset it again in a couple of weeks if it's that important to you, but even then it would only be around 14-15 seconds slow.

Saying that, if we wanted accuracy we could rely on, we'd all be wearing quartz watches.
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Old 14 October 2021, 01:12 AM   #8
SDREW22
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Wash,wind and reset every Friday.
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Old 14 October 2021, 01:21 AM   #9
p3k4y1981
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Ha, thanks all - it's not that important to me. I'm just going to enjoy taking an interest in mechanism and it's various quirks, it's pretty amazing stuff.
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Old 14 October 2021, 02:49 AM   #10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by p3k4y1981 View Post
. . .
Obviously this is within tolerances but what I'm interested to know is the best practise for adjusting the time back on track - should I leave it for a few days/weeks and see if there are some days when it will run slightly fast and therefore catch up slightly - or is it fine to reset it daily?
It is not likely to change significantly.

If it was mine I would simply set it a minute or two ahead whenever I felt the need. Unless you are a stickler and time it down to the seconds routinely.

If you are one of us who simply prefers their watch to be slightly fast, rather than slow (it is only 2 seconds daily), you should discuss what you want with a watchmaker at the Dealers.
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Old 14 October 2021, 05:32 PM   #11
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It is not likely to change significantly.

If it was mine I would simply set it a minute or two ahead whenever I felt the need. Unless you are a stickler and time it down to the seconds routinely.

If you are one of us who simply prefers their watch to be slightly fast, rather than slow (it is only 2 seconds daily), you should discuss what you want with a watchmaker at the Dealers.
Have to agree and speaking for myself would never adjust any watch for a few seconds.
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Old 14 October 2021, 03:17 AM   #12
extra260
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I enjoy regulating my watch to the second by letting it rest over night in different positions. Its not that i need 1 second accuracy, it just more of a fun personal challenge. I have found that my 214270 runs 1 second fast overnight with the crown up and 1 second slow overnight with the crown down. I have been able to keep my watch within 1 second of my atomic clock for 6 months doing this. I have found that an inexpensive time grapher will allow you verify which positions your watch runs fast or slow and then you will know how to self regulate it without a long time sample needed. My real world findings do not match the rolex manual for self regulation positions.
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Old 14 October 2021, 06:42 AM   #13
bigrustypig
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Quote:
Originally Posted by extra260 View Post
I enjoy regulating my watch to the second by letting it rest over night in different positions. Its not that i need 1 second accuracy, it just more of a fun personal challenge. I have found that my 214270 runs 1 second fast overnight with the crown up and 1 second slow overnight with the crown down. I have been able to keep my watch within 1 second of my atomic clock for 6 months doing this. I have found that an inexpensive time grapher will allow you verify which positions your watch runs fast or slow and then you will know how to self regulate it without a long time sample needed. My real world findings do not match the rolex manual for self regulation positions.




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Old 14 October 2021, 04:13 AM   #14
LA_LEC
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Quote:
Originally Posted by p3k4y1981 View Post
So I've been monitoring the accuracy of my Explorer 39mm and it seems to consistently lose 2 seconds every 24 hours.

Obviously this is within tolerances but what I'm interested to know is the best practise for adjusting the time back on track - should I leave it for a few days/weeks and see if there are some days when it will run slightly fast and therefore catch up slightly - or is it fine to reset it daily?
Interestingly my Explorer 39mm runs 2 seconds FAST every 24 hours. I lay it flat face up. I am ok with that and just adjust it a couple of times a month.
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Old 15 October 2021, 09:55 AM   #15
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Interestingly my Explorer 39mm runs 2 seconds FAST every 24 hours. I lay it flat face up. I am ok with that and just adjust it a couple of times a month.
Funny, mine has been doing the exact same since I bought it. I’m OK with it, for some reason I’d find it more annoying if it was 2 seconds SLOW per day. *shrug*
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Old 14 October 2021, 04:25 AM   #16
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I'd set it a minute ahead and you're good for two months.
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Old 14 October 2021, 05:44 AM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by p3k4y1981 View Post
Obviously this is within tolerances but what I'm interested to know is the best practise for adjusting the time back on track - should I leave it for a few days/weeks and see if there are some days when it will run slightly fast and therefore catch up slightly - or is it fine to reset it daily?
I find that wearing it while sleeping is the best way to regulate it.
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Old 15 October 2021, 10:05 AM   #18
Brny11
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Set it fast, 30-49 seconds.

I have the same watch with the same accuracy. Remarkable… 2 seconds out of 86,400. Fast is always better than slow, but I am not worried about a few seconds as I’m late to pretty much all my meetings regardless. Weekends, could care less what time it is!


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Old 15 October 2021, 02:32 PM   #19
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Practically speaking, I would simply set it ahead a minute or so every time I notice it's a bit behind the real time without going to much fuss with it and be done with it.
One could also try self regulation overnight in a resting position that could potentially make it up if possible
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Old 15 October 2021, 05:22 PM   #20
simon101
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Old 16 October 2021, 12:32 AM   #21
Eagles4133
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Consistency is more important than accuracy! If your watch is constantly -2 spd then nothing to worry about. As others have said, if you want accuracy, get a GS 9F. They say that you should manually wind your watch at least once per month even if you wind it daily, but I never usually do that. Maybe reset once a month at most, but every two should be fine as you're not keeping trains on time!
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