Yorkshire Air Ambulance Comes In The...
Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Digital clocks should be accurate as they are timed by a very small crystal of quartz that rings at an extremely high frequency. This is accurately known from the physical size of the crystal. This frequency is repeatedly divided and eventually resolves to a second, divided further to minutes and again for the hours. Simple counters do the days months and years. There is likely a small capacitance set to "pull" the crystal frequency very slightly, but this is not usually something you can do as it is set at the factory and encased in a chip.
I had a similar Motorola and this was only one of its annoying features, losing about a minute a fortnight. It eventually gave up the ghost completely and I got a different brand. Why I never threw the darned thing away earlier I'll never know. The quality control must be abysmal, as most people with Motorolas of that sort experience problems, lockups, batteries destroyed, random switching off during calls, or worse still just as it is about to ring.
You mentioned the word Motorola, I am sorry> Their technology seems to be a bit behind some other makes. My old Moto could only end calls by disconnecting the battery, not very good for a sales rep on the road all day. I gave on it, binned it and bought a Nokia, generally I have found to be much more accurate.
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