Casio 2568 Users Manual QW
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2568 to the manual d8b4de5e-e15d-405e-8d52-6374d7f66483
2015-01-21
: Casio Casio-2568-Users-Manual-243756 casio-2568-users-manual-243756 casio pdf
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USER’S GUIDE 2568 Getting Acquainted About This Manual • Button operations are indicated using the letters shown in the illustration. • Each section of this manual provides you with the information you need to perform operations in each mode. Further details and technical information can be found in the “Reference” section. Congratulations upon your selection of this CASIO watch. To get the most out of your purchase, be sure to carefully read this manual and keep it on hand for later reference when necessary. Expose the watch to bright light to charge its battery before using it. You can use this watch even as its battery is being charged by exposure to bright light. • Be sure to read “Battery” of this manual for important information you need to know when exposing the watch to bright light. If the display of the watch is blank... If the Power Saving on (S) indicator flashes on the display, it means that the display is blank because the watch’s Power Saving function has turned off the display to conserve power. Power Saving automatically turns off the display and puts the watch into a sleep state whenever your watch is left for a certain period where it is dark. • The initial factory default setting is Power Saving on. • The watch recovers from the sleep state if you move it to a well-lit area*, if you press any button, or if you angle the watch towards your face for reading. * It can take up to five seconds for the display to turn on. • See “Power Saving function” for more information. General Guide World Time Mode Data Bank Mode ▲ ▲ • Press C to change from mode to mode. • In any mode (except when a setting screen is on the display), press B to illuminate the display. Timekeeping Mode Press C. ▲ ▲ Alarm Mode Day Counter Mode Countdown Timer Mode ▲ ▲ ▲ Stopwatch Mode Timekeeping Use the Timekeeping Mode to set the time and date. Day of week Month – Day Note Year This watch is capable of displaying text for the day of the week in any one of 16 different languages (English, Portuguese, Spanish, French, Dutch, Danish, German, Italian, Czech, Swedish, Polish, Greek, Romanian, Turkish, Russian, and Japanese). Hour : Minutes Seconds To set the time and date PM indicator 1. In the Timekeeping Mode, hold down A until the seconds start to flash, which indicates the setting screen. 2. Use C to move the flashing in the sequence shown below to select other settings. Language indicator Seconds DST on/off Hour Minutes Language Day Month Year Daylight Saving Time (summer time) advances the time setting by one hour from Standard Time. Remember that not all countries or even local areas use Daylight Saving Time. • While the language indicator is flashing on the display, use B and D to cycle through the language indicators as shown below, until the one for the language you want to select is displayed. ENx POR ESP FRA NED Press B. DAN Language English Portuguese Spanish French Dutch Danish Indicator DEU ITA CES SVE POL E Language German Italian Czech Swedish Polish Greek Indicator RO T)R PUC JPN To toggle between 12-hour and 24-hour timekeeping In the Timekeeping Mode, press D to toggle between 12-hour timekeeping (indicated by A or P on the display), or 24-hour timekeeping. • With the 12-hour format, the P (PM) indicator appears on the display for times in the range of noon to 11:59 p.m. and the A (AM) indicator appears for times in the range of midnight to 11:59 a.m. • With the 24-hour format, times are displayed in the range of 0:00 to 23:59, without any indicator. • The 12-hour/24-hour timekeeping format you select in the Timekeeping Mode is applied in all modes. Daylight Saving Time (DST) • The currently selected language indicator flashes on the display while the Language (setting) is selected in the above sequence. 3. When the setting you want to change is flashing, use B and D to change it as described below. To change this setting Perform this button operation Seconds Press D to reset to 00. Press D to toggle between Daylight Saving Time DST on/off (ON displayed) and standard time (OF displayed). Hour, Minutes, Year, Use D (+) and B (–) to change the setting. Month, Day Language Use B and D to change the language setting. Press D. Indicator • In addition to the day of the week display, the language setting also affects the type of characters you can input for the name in the Data Bank Mode and the text in the Day Counter Mode. • Holding down A in the Timekeeping Mode displays the indicator for the currently selected language. Keeping A depressed for about two seconds changes to the Timekeeping Mode setting screen (indicated by the seconds flashing). If you accidentally display the setting screen, press A again to exit. Language Romanian Turkish Russian Japanese 4. Press A to exit the setting screen. • The day of the week is automatically displayed in accordance with the date (year, month, and day) settings. • See the “Day of the Week List” for information on abbreviations used. To toggle the Timekeeping Mode time between DST and Standard Time 1. In the Timekeeping Mode, hold down A until the DST indicator seconds start to flash, which indicates the setting screen. 2. Press C to move the flashing to the DST on/off setting. 3. Press D to toggle between Daylight Saving Time (ON displayed) and standard time (OF displayed). 4. Press A to exit the setting screen. • The DST indicator appears on the display to indicate that Daylight Saving Time is turned on in the Timekeeping, Alarm, and Day Counter Mode. World Time Timekeeping mode time UTC differential City code Current time in the selected city code The World Time shows the current time in 28 cities (29 time zones) around the world. • The time settings of the Timekeeping Mode and the World Time Mode are independent from each other, so you must make separate settings for each. • Whenever you change the time setting for any city in the World Time Mode, the settings of all other cities are changed accordingly. • The UTC differential value indicates the number of hours difference in time between the currently selected time zone and UTC. • All of the operations in this section are performed in the World Time Mode, which you enter by pressing C. 1 USER’S GUIDE 2568 To set the current time in the World Time Mode 1. In the World Time Mode, use D to select the city code DST indicator whose time you want to set. 2. After you select a city code, hold down A until the DST on/off setting of the World time starts to flash, which indicates the setting screen. 3. Use C to move the flashing in the sequence shown below to select other settings. DST on/off Minutes Hour 4. When the setting you want to change is flashing, use B and D to change it as described below. To change this setting Perform this button operation DST on/off Press D to toggle between Daylight Saving Time (ON displayed) and standard time (OF displayed). • The above operation toggles all World Time city codes between Daylight Saving Time and Standard Time. Hour, Minutes Use D (+) and B (–) to change the setting. • While the settings are flashing on the display, pressing B and D at the same time changes the DST on/off, hour, and minutes settings so they match the Timekeeping Mode time. • When setting the world time using the 12-hour format, take care to set the time correctly as a.m. (A indicator) or p.m. (P indicator). 5. Press A to exit the setting screen. • The DST indicator appears on the display to indicate that Daylight Saving Time is turned on in the World Time Mode. • Note that you cannot make settings for individual city codes. Daylight Saving Time (summer time) advances the time setting by one hour from Standard Time. Remember that not all countries or even local areas use Daylight Saving Time. 10. Press A to store your data and return to the Data Bank record screen (without the cursor). • When you press A to store data, the name and number you input flash for about one second as Data Bank records are sorted. After the sort operation is complete, the Data Bank record screen appears. • The name can show only three characters at a time, so longer text scrolls continuously from right to left. The last character is indicated by the symbol after it. To recall Data Bank records In the Data Bank Mode, use D to scroll through Data Bank records on the display. To edit a Data Bank record 1. In the Data Bank Mode, use D to scroll through the records and display the one you want to edit. 2. Hold down A until the flashing cursor appears on the display. 3. Use C to move the flashing to the character you want to change. 4. Use D (forward) and B (back) to change the character. 5. After making the changes that you want, press A to store them and return to the Data Bank record screen. To delete a Data Bank record 1. In the Data Bank Mode, use D to scroll through the records and display the one you want to delete. 2. Hold down A until the flashing cursor appears on the display. 3. Press B and D at the same time to delete the record. • The message CLR appears to indicate that the record is being deleted. After the record is deleted, the cursor appears on the display, ready for input. 4. Input data or press A to return to the Data Bank record screen. Alarms You can set up to five independent multi-function alarms Timekeeping Alarm date with hour, minutes, month, and day. When an alarm is Mode time (month – Day) To view the time in another city code In the World Time Mode, press D to scroll city codes (time zones). • For full information on city codes, see the “City Code Table”. Data Bank Remaining memory Name L The Data Bank Mode lets you store up to 30 records, each containing name and telephone number data. Records are automatically sorted based on the characters of the name. You can recall records by scrolling through them on the display. • The characters you can input for the name depend on the language you select in the Timekeeping Mode. See “To set the time and date” for more information. Changing the language setting does not affect names that are already stored. • See “Sort Table” for details on how the watch sorts records. • All of the operations in this section are performed in the Data Bank Mode, which you enter by pressing C. Telephone number To create a new Data Bank record 1. In the Data Bank Mode, use D to display the new data screen. Name area • To jump directly to the new data screen, press B and D at the same time. • If the new data screen does not appear when you press D, it means that memory is full. To store another record, you will first have to delete some of the records stored in memory. 2. Hold down A until the flashing cursor (_) appears in Number area the name area of the display. New Data Screen 3. In the name area, use B and D to cycle through characters at the cursor position. The characters cycle in the sequence shown below. Press D. (space) Press B. A to Z @ to - 0 to 9 (alphabet) (symbol) (number) • The above character sequence is for English input. See “Character List” for the character sequences of other languages. 4. When the character you want is at the cursor position, press C to move the cursor to the right. 5. Repeat steps 3 and 4 until the name is complete. • You can input up to eight characters for the name. 6. After you input the name, press C as many times as necessary to move the cursor to the number area. • When the cursor is located at the eighth space of the name area, moving the cursor to the right causes it to jump to the first digit of the number. When the cursor is at the 16th digit of the number, moving it to the right (by pressing C) causes it to jump to the first character in the name. 7. In the number area, use B and D to cycle through numbers and symbols (hyphen, brackets, space) at the cursor position. The characters cycle in the sequence shown below. Press D. Press B. x 0 to 9 [ ] (space) 8. When the character you want is at the cursor position, press C to move the cursor to the right. 9. Repeat steps 7 and 8 until you complete number input. • You can input up to 16 digits for the number. • The number initially contains all hyphens. You can leave the hyphens as they are or replace them with numbers or other symbols (brackets, space). Alarm number Alarm time (Hour : Minutes) turned on, the alarm tone sounds when the alarm time is reached. One of the alarms can be configured as a snooze alarm or a one-time alarm, while the other four are one-time alarms. You can also turn on an Hourly Time Signal that causes the watch to beep twice every hour on the hour. • There are five alarms numbered 1 through 5. You can configure Alarm 1 as a snooze alarm or a one-time alarm. Alarms 2 through 5 can be used as one-time alarms only. • Alarm settings (and Hourly Time Signal settings) are available in the Alarm Mode, which you enter by pressing C. Alarm Types The alarm type is determined by the settings you make, as described below. • Daily alarm Set the hour and minutes for the alarm time. This type of setting causes the alarm to sound everyday at the time you set. • Date alarm Set the month, day, hour and minutes for the alarm time. This type of setting causes the alarm to sound at the specific time, on the specific date you set. • 1-Month alarm Set the month, hour and minutes for the alarm time. This type of setting causes the alarm to sound everyday at the time you set, only during the month you set. • Monthly alarm Set the day, hour and minutes for the alarm time. This type of setting causes the alarm to sound every month at the time you set, on the day you set. To set an alarm time Alarm number 1. In the Alarm Mode, use D to scroll through the alarm screens until the one whose time you want to set is displayed. Alarm1 Alarm 2 Alarm 3 Hourly Time Signal Alarm 5 Alarm 4 • Each of the five alarm screens has an alarm number. The Hourly Time Signal screen does not have an alarm number. 2. After you select an alarm, hold down A until the hour setting of the alarm time starts to flash, which indicates the setting screen. • This operation automatically turns on the alarm. 3. Use C to move the flashing in the sequence shown below to select other settings. Hour Minutes Month Day 4. While a setting is flashing, use D (+) and B (–) to change it. • To set an alarm that does not include a month (Daily alarm, Monthly alarm), set x for the month. Use D and B until the x mark appears (between 12 and 1) while month setting is flashing. • To set an alarm that does not include a day (Daily alarm, 1-Month alarm), set xx for the day. Use D and B until the xx mark appears (between the end of the month and 1) while the day setting is flashing. • When setting the alarm time using the 12-hour format, take care to set the time correctly as a.m. (A indicator) or p.m. (P indicator). 5. Press A to exit the setting screen. Alarm Operation The alarm tone sounds at the preset time for 10 seconds, regardless of the mode the watch is in. In the case of the snooze alarm, the alarm operation is performed a total of seven times, every five minutes, until you turn the alarm off or change it to a onetime alarm. • Pressing any button stops the alarm tone operation. • Performing any one of the following operations during a 5-minute interval between snooze alarms cancels the current snooze alarm operation. Displaying the Timekeeping Mode setting screen Displaying the alarm 1 setting screen 2 USER’S GUIDE 2568 To test the alarm • In the Alarm Mode, hold down D to sound the alarm. To turn Alarms 2 through 5 and the Hourly Time Signal on and off 1. In the Alarm Mode, use D to select a one-time alarm (alarm number 2 through 5) or the Hourly Time Signal. 2. Press A to toggle it on and off. • The on/off status of Alarms 2 through 5 and the Hourly Time Signal is shown by indicators along the bottom of the displays. • The alarm on indicators and Hourly Time Signal on indicator are displayed in all modes. Alarm on • While an alarm is sounding, the applicable alarm on indicator indicator flashes on the display. Hourly time signal on indicator To delete a Day Counter record 1. In the Day Counter Mode, scroll through the records and display the one you want to delete. 2. Hold down A until the flashing cursor appears on the display. 3. Press B and D at the same time to delete the record. • The message CLR appears to indicate that the record is being deleted. After the record is deleted, the cursor appears on the display and Timekeeping Mode current date is set as the target date, ready for input. 4. Input data or press A to exit the setting screen. Stopwatch The stopwatch lets you measure elapsed time, split times, Timekeeping Mode time To select the operation of Alarm1 1. In the Alarm Mode, use D to select Alarm1. 2. Press A to cycle through the available settings in the sequence shown below. 1 on indicator Snooze on indicator and Alarm1 Press A. Hours Alarm off One-time alarm on Snooze alarm on • The snooze on indicator and Alarm1 on indicator are displayed in all modes. • The snooze on indicator flashes during the 5-minute intervals between alarms. • The alarm indicator (Alarm1 on and/or snooze on) flashes while the alarm is sounding. 1/100 second and two finishes. • The display range of the stopwatch is 23 hours, 59 minutes, 59.99 seconds. • The stopwatch continues to run, restarting from zero after it reaches its limit, until you stop it. • The stopwatch measurement operation continues even if you exit the Stopwatch Mode. • Exiting the Stopwatch Mode while a split time is frozen on the display clears the split time and returns to Minutes elapsed time measurement. Seconds • All of the operations in this section are performed in the Stopwatch Mode, which you enter by pressing C. To measure times with the stopwatch Elapsed Time D Start Day Counter The Day Counter lets you count the number of days from the Timekeeping Mode’s current date to a specific target date. • There are five Day Counter records, each of which can be set with its own text and target date (year, month, day). • When the target date falls before the current date (as kept in the Timekeeping Mode), the number of days is displayed as a negative value. Year • Whenever the date specified by any one of the Day Counters matches the date of the Timekeeping Mode Month – (regardless of the Day Counter’s year setting), the DAYS Day indicator flashes on the Timekeeping Mode and Day Counter Mode. • The initial default target date when you purchase the watch, after you have its battery replaced, or when battery power drops to Level 5 is January 1, 2001. • The characters you can input for the text depend on the language you select in the Timekeeping Mode. See “To set the time and date” for more information. Changing the language setting does not affect texts that are already stored. • All of the operations in this section are performed in the Day Counter Mode, which you enter by pressing C. To create a new Day Counter record 1. In the Day Counter Mode, use D to scroll through the Day Counter records until the one you want is on the display. 2. Hold down A until the flashing cursor appears in the text area of the display, which indicates the setting screen. 3. Press C to move the flashing in the sequence shown below. Text area Character 1 Character 2 Character 8 Target date Day Month ➤D Stop ➤A Clear Start ➤A Split ➤A Split release ➤D Stop ➤A Clear ➤D Stop ➤A Split release ➤A Clear (SPL displayed) Two Finishes ➤A Split D First runner finishes. Display time of first runner. Second runner finishes. Display time of second runner. Countdown Timer The countdown timer can be set within a range of 1 minute to 24 hours. An alarm sounds when the countdown reaches zero. • Countdown timer functions are available in the Countdown Timer Mode, which you enter by pressing C. To set the countdown start time Hours 1. In the Countdown Timer Mode, hold down A until the Minutes hour setting of the countdown start time starts to flash, Seconds which indicates the setting screen. 2. Press C to move the flashing between the hour and minute settings. 3. While a setting is flashing, use D (+) and B (–) to change it. • To set the starting value of the countdown time to 24 hours, set 0:00. 4. Press A to exit the setting screen. To use the countdown timer Press D while in the Countdown Timer Mode to start the countdown timer. • When the end of the countdown is reached, the alarm sounds for 10 seconds or until you stop it by pressing any button. The countdown time is automatically reset to its starting value after the alarm stops. • Press D while a countdown operation is in progress to pause it. Press D again to resume the countdown. • To completely stop a countdown operation, first pause it (by pressing D), and then press A. This returns the countdown time to its starting value. • The countdown timer measurement operation continues even if you exit the Countdown Timer Mode. Year 4. While the cursor is in the text area, use B and D to cycle through characters at the cursor position. The characters cycle in the sequence shown below. Press D. (space) D Timekeeping Mode time Number of days DAYS indicator Press B. ➤D Re-start Split Time Timekeeping Mode time Text area Target date (Alternate at the 1-second interval) ➤D Stop A to Z @ to - 0 to 9 (alphabet) (symbol) (number) • The above character sequence is for English input. See “Character List” for the character sequences of other languages. 5. When the character you want is at the cursor position, press C to move the cursor to the right. 6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 until the name is complete. • You can input up to eight characters for the text. 7. After you input the text, press C as many times as necessary to move the cursor to the target date. • When the cursor is located at the eighth space of the text area, moving the cursor to the right causes it to jump to the year setting. When the cursor is at the day setting, moving it to the right (by pressing C) causes it to jump to the first character in the text. 8. While the year, month, or day setting is flashing, use D (+) and B (–) to change the setting. • You can set a target date in the range of January 1, 1940 to December 31, 2039. 9. After everything is the way you want, press A to exit the setting screen. • The text can show only three characters at a time, so longer text scrolls continuously from right to left. The last character is indicated by the symbol after it. Note • Use the above procedure to edit Day Counter records, too. To recall Day Counter records In the Day Counter Mode, use D to scroll through the Day Counter records. Backlight The backlight uses an EL (electro-luminescent) panel that causes the entire display to glow for easy reading in the dark. The watch’s auto light switch automatically turns on the backlight when you angle the watch towards your face in the dark. • The auto light switch must be turned on (indicated by the auto light switch on indicator) for it to operate. Auto light switch • See “Backlight Precautions” for other important on indicator information about using the backlight. To turn on the backlight manually In any mode, press B to illuminate the display for about one second. • The above operation turns on the backlight regardless of the current auto light switch setting. About the Auto Light Switch Turning on the auto light switch causes the backlight to turn on for about one second, whenever you position your wrist as described below in any mode. Note that this watch features a “Full Auto EL Light,” so the auto light switch operates only when available light is below a certain level. It does not turn on the backlight under bright light. Moving the watch to a position that is parallel to the ground and then tilting it towards you more than 40 degrees causes the backlight to turn on. Parallel to ground More than 40° 3 USER’S GUIDE 2568 Warning! • Always make sure you are in a safe place whenever you are reading the display of the watch using the auto light switch. Be especially careful when running or engaged in any other activity that can result in accident or injury. Also take care that sudden illumination by the auto light switch does not surprise or distract others around you. • When you are wearing the watch, make sure that its auto light switch is turned off before riding on a bicycle or operating a motorcycle or any other motor vehicle. Sudden and unintended operation of the auto light switch can create a distraction, which can result in a traffic accident and serious personal injury. Charge Times Exposing the watch to light for the periods shown below each day restores the power used by the above operating conditions. To turn the auto light switch on and off In the Timekeeping Mode, hold down B for about two seconds to toggle the auto light switch on ( displayed) or off ( not displayed). • The auto light switch on indicator ( ) is on the display in all modes while the auto light switch is turned on. • Stable operation is promoted by frequent charging. The battery power indicator on the display shows you the current status of the rechargeable battery’s power. Battery Power indicator Function Status 1 All functions enabled. 2 All functions enabled. 3 All functions enabled. 4 Beeper tone, backlight, display, and buttons are disabled. (Charge Soon Alert) 5 Level 2 Level 1 16 hours 2 hours ▲ Battery Power Indicator Power Saving on (S)/ Charge (C)/Recover (R) indicator Level 3 33 hours 3 hours 166 hours 16 hours 80 hours 12 hours ––– 33 hours 162 hours 25 hours • The above exposure time values are all for reference only. Actual required exposure times depend on lighting conditions. Important! • 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 bright light can cause rechargeable battery power to run down. Be sure that the watch is normally exposed to bright light whenever possible. • This watch employs a solar cell that converts light into electricity, which charges a built-in rechargeable battery. Normally, the rechargeable battery should not need replacement, but after very long use over a number of years, the rechargeable battery may lose its ability to achieve a full charge. Should you notice problems with getting the rechargeable battery to a full charge, contact your dealer or CASIO distributor about having the rechargeable battery replaced. • The rechargeable battery should be replaced with a CASIO-specified ML2016 battery only. Other rechargeable batteries can cause damage to the watch. • 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. • Turn on the watch’s Power Saving function and keep it in an area normally exposed to bright light when storing it for long periods. This helps to keep the rechargeable battery from going dead. Level Outdoor Sunlight (50,000 lux) Sunlight Through a Window (10,000 lux) Daylight Through a Window on a Cloudy Day (5,000 lux) Level 4 ▲ Solar cell • Note that charging efficiency drops when any part of the solar cell is blocked by clothing, etc. • The illustration shows how to position a watch with a resin band. Level 5 ▲ Example: Orient the watch so its face is pointing at a light source. Approximate Exposure Time ▲ This watch is equipped with a solar cell and a rechargeable battery (secondary battery) that is charged by the electrical power produced by the solar cell. The illustration shown below shows how you should position the watch for charging. Approximate Exposure Time 5 minutes 24 minutes 48 minutes 8 hours Recovery Times The table below shows the amount exposure that is required to take the battery from one level to the next. Exposure Level (Brightness) Battery Battery power indicator Exposure Level (Brightness) Outdoor Sunlight (50,000 lux) Sunlight Through a Window (10,000 lux) Daylight Through a Window on a Cloudy Day (5,000 lux) Indoor Fluorescent Lighting (500 lux) All functions, including timekeeping, are disabled. • The flashing charge (C) indicator at Level 4 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. Functions are enabled once again after the rechargeable battery is charged, but you need to set the time, date, and all other settings after the battery is recharged to Level 3 from Level 5. Though the time appears on the display after the battery is charged to Level 4 (indicated by flashing charge (C) indicator), you will not be able to change the time, date, and all other settings until the battery reaches Level 3 (no charge (C) indicator) . • Leaving the watch in direct sunlight or some other very strong light source can cause the battery power indicator to temporarily show a reading that is higher than the actual battery level. The correct battery power indicator should appear after a few minutes. • If you use the backlight or any of the alarm functions a number of times during a short period, the recover (R) indicator appears on the display and the following operations become disabled until battery power recovers. Backlight; Beeper tone After some time, battery power will recover and the recover (R) indicator will disappear, indicating that the above functions are enabled again. Charging Precautions Certain charging conditions can cause the watch to become very hot. Avoid leaving the watch in the areas described below whenever charging its rechargeable battery. Also note that 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. Warning! Leaving the watch in bright light to charge its rechargeable battery 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 as incandescent lamp • Under direct sunlight Charging Guide After a full charge, timekeeping remains enabled for up to about six months, while the watch is used under the conditions described below. Operating Conditions • Watch is not exposed to light • Display on 18 hours per day, sleep state 6 hours per day • 1 backlight operation (1.5 seconds) per day • 10 seconds of alarm operation per day Reference This section contains more detailed and technical information about watch operation. It also contains important precautions and notes about the various features and functions of this watch. Power Saving Function Power saving on indicator When turned on, the Power Saving function automatically puts the watch into a sleep state whenever it is left in an area where it is dark for about one hour in the Timekeeping Mode or Auto Display screen. The sleep state is indicated by a blank screen with Power Saving on (S) indicator flashing on it. In the sleep state, all functions are enabled, except for the display. • Wearing watch inside the sleeve of clothing can cause it to enter the sleep state. • The watch will not enter the sleep state between 6:00 AM and 9:59 PM. If the watch is already in the sleep state when 6:00 AM arrives, however, it will remain in the sleep state. To recover from the sleep state Perform any one of the following operations. • Move the watch to a well-lit area. It can take up to five seconds for the display to turn on. • Press any button. • Angle the watch towards your face for reading. To turn Power Saving on and off In the Timekeeping Mode, hold down D for about two seconds to toggle Power Saving on (S indicator displayed) and off (S indicator not displayed). • Note that pressing D also toggles between 12-hour timekeeping and 24-hour timekeeping. Auto Display Auto Display continually changes the contents of the digital display. To turn off Auto Display Press any button (except for B) to turn off Auto Display. This returns to the Timekeeping Mode. To turn on Auto Display Hold down C for about three seconds until the watch beeps. • Note that Auto Display cannot be performed while a setting screen is on the display. Auto return features • After you perform any button operation (except for the backlight button) in any mode, pressing C returns directly to the Timekeeping Mode. • If you leave the watch in the Data Bank, Alarm, and Day Counter Mode for two or three minutes without performing any operation, it automatically changes to the Timekeeping Mode. • If you leave a screen with flashing digits or a cursor on the display for two or three minutes without performing any operation, the watch automatically saves any settings you have made up to that point and exits the setting screen. Data and Setting Scrolling The B, C, and D buttons are used in various modes and setting screens to scroll through data on the display. In most cases, holding down these buttons during a scroll operation scrolls through the data at high speed. Initial Screens When you enter the Data Bank, Alarm, or Day Counter Mode, the data you were viewing when you last exited the mode appears first. Timekeeping • Resetting the seconds to 00 while the current count is in the range of 30 to 59 causes the minutes to be increased by 1. In the range of 00 to 29, the seconds are reset to 00 without changing the minutes. • The year can be set in the range of 2000 to 2039. • The watch’s built-in full automatic calendar automatically makes allowances for different month lengths and leap years. Once you set the date, there should be no reason to change it except after you have the watch’s battery replaced or when battery power drops to Level 5. 4 USER’S GUIDE 2568 UTC Character List The letters “UTC” stands for “Universal Time Coordinated,” which is the world-wide scientific standard of timekeeping. It is based upon carefully maintained atomic (cesium) clocks that accurate to within microseconds. Leap seconds are added reference point for UTC is Greenwich, England. ENx: (space) A B C D E F x H I J n L o N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z @ ] ?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 Backlight Precautions • The electro-luminescent panel that provides illumination loses power after very long use. • The illumination provided by the backlight may be hard to see when viewed under direct sunlight. • The watch may emit an audible sound whenever the display is illuminated. This is due to vibration of the EL panel used for illumination, and does not indicate malfunction. • The backlight automatically turns off whenever an alarm sounds. • Frequent use of the backlight shortens the battery life. Auto light switch precautions • Wearing the watch on the inside of your wrist and movement or vibration of your arm can cause the auto light switch to activate and illuminate the display. To avoid running down the battery, turn off the auto light switch whenever engaging in activities that might cause frequent illumination of the display. • The backlight may not light if the face of the watch is more than 15 degrees above or below parallel. Make sure that the back of your hand is parallel to the ground. • The backlight turns off in about one second, even if you keep the watch pointed towards your face. More than 15 degree too high • Static electricity or magnetic force can interfere with proper operation of the auto light switch. If the backlight does not light, try moving the watch back to the starting position (parallel with the ground) and then tilt it back toward you again. If this does not work, drop your arm all the way down so it hangs at your side, and then bring it back up again. • Under certain conditions, the backlight may not light until about one second after you turn the face of the watch towards you. This does not necessarily indicate malfunction of the backlight. City Code Table City Code PPG HNL ANC LAX DEN CHI NYC CCS RIO ––– ––– LON PAR CAI JRS JED THR DXB KBL KHI DEL DAC RGN BKK HKG TYO ADL SYD NOU WLG UTC City Other major cities in the same time zone Differential PAGO PAGO –11.0 HONOLULU –10.0 PAPEETE ANCHORAGE –9.0 NOME VANCOUVER, SAN FRANCISCO, LAS VEGAS, LOS ANGELES –8.0 SEATTLE, DAWSON CITY DENVER –7.0 EL PASO, EDMONTON MEXICO CITY, HOUSTON, DALLAS/FORT WORTH, CHICAGO –6.0 NEW ORLEANS, WINNIPEG MIAMI, MONTREAL, DETROIT, BOSTON, NEW YORK –5.0 PANAMA CITY, HAVANA, LIMA, BOGOTA CARACAS –4.0 LA PAZ, SANTIAGO, PORT OF SPAIN SAO PAULO, BUENOS AIRES, BRASILIA, RIO DE JANEIRO –3.0 MONTEVIDEO –2.0 –1.0 AZORES, PRAIA DUBLIN, LISBON, CASABLANCA, DAKAR, +0.0 LONDON ABIDJAN MILAN, ROME, BERLIN, MADRID, FRANKFURT, +1.0 PARIS AMSTERDAM, VIENNA, ALGIERS, STOCKHOLM, HAMBURG CAIRO ISTANBUL, ATHENS, HELSINKI, BEIRUT, +2.0 JERUSALEM DAMASCUS, CAPE TOWN MOSCOW, KUWAIT, RIYADH, ADEN, ADDIS JEDDAH +3.0 ABABA, NAIROBI TEHRAN +3.5 SHIRAZ DUBAI +4.0 ABU DHABI, MUSCAT KABUL +4.5 KARACHI +5.0 MALE DELHI +5.5 MUMBAI, KOLKATA DHAKA +6.0 COLOMBO YANGON +6.5 BANGKOK +7.0 JAKARTA, PHNOM PENH, HANOI, VIENTIANE SINGAPORE, KUALA LUMPUR, TAIPEI, PERTH, HONG KONG +8.0 BEIJING, MANILA, ULAANBAATAR TOKYO +9.0 SEOUL, PYONGYANG ADELAIDE +9.5 DARWIN SYDNEY +10.0 GUAM, MELBOURNE, RABAUL NOUMEA +11.0 PORT VILA WELLINGTON +12.0 CHRISTCHURCH, NADI, NAURU ISLAND POR: (espaço) A ; ( , h B C ^ D E = [ F x H I > J n L o N O ? ] i P QRSTU@VWXYZ@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p5 6q89 ESP: (espacio) A ; B C D E = F x H I > J n L o N ` O ? P Q R S T U @ )VWXYZ@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 FRA: (espace) A ( , B C ^ D E = a [ c F x H I e d J n L o N O ] g P QRSTUbf)VWXYZ@]?', .;:( )/+-0123 p56q89 NED: (Spatie) A B C D E F x H I J n L o N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z @ ]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 DAN: (Mellemsrum) A B C D E F x H I J n L o N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Zuvw@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 DEU: (Leerzeichen) A h B C D E F G H I J n L M N O i P Q R S T U ) V WXYZ@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 ITA: (spazio) A ( B C D E = a F x H I j e J n L o N O ? k P Q R S T U bVWXYZ@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 CES: (prostor) A a B C D E = F x H I > J n L o N O ? P Q R S T U@ VWXY Z @]?', .;:( )/+-0123p5 6q89 SVE: (Mellanslag) A B C D E F x H I J n L o N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z whi@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 POL: (epacja) A l B C m D E n F x H I J n L o o N p O ? P Q R S q T U VWXYZrs@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 E ENx POR ESP FRA NED DAN DEU ITA CES SVE POL E ROo TgR RUS JPN NED SiN NIE YP DUo PAZ CS SUN PON owN PON EY LUN PZT QO oON eTE TIS WTO TPI oAR SAL BT TUE ST ONS qRO TET oIE mAR SR WED TV TOR CZW QEM JOI PER YT THU Friday FRI SEX VIE VEN VRI FRE FRE VEN PaT FRE PIl QAP VIN CUo QT FRI EZH Idn oN OQP TY /+-0123p56q89 VX @ ( ) PUC: (npo en) A B C D E F G * I J K L M o O P Q R S T U V W X Y a bciefh@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 JPN: ( ) IJnLoNOPQRSTUVWXYZ@]?', -0123p56q89 ABCDEFxH .; :( ) /+ Sort Table 1 (space) 13 2 14 3 15 4 16 5 17 6 18 7 19 8 20 9 21 10 22 11 23 12 24 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 Saturday SAT SaB SaB SAo ZAT LvR SAo SAB SOB LiR SOB AB Sjo CTS SB SAT )ABD .;: T)R: (bo luk) A B C ^ D E F x y H I t J n L o N O i P Q R S s T U ) VWXYZ@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 Day of the Week List Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday oON TUE WED THU SEx TER QUA QUI LUN oAR oIb JUE LUN oAR oER JEU oAA DIN WOE DON oAN TIR ONS TOR oON DIE oIT DON LUN oAR oER xIO , ROM: (spa iu) A r , B C D E F x H I e J n L o N O P Q R S s T t U V W XYZ@]?', .;:( )/+-0123p56q89 • Based on data as of December 2001. Sunday SUN DOo DOo DIo ZON SvN SON DOo :( ]?' 169 170 171 172 173 174 • • • • I > j e d t J n L o M N U V W 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 p 175 176 177 178 179 180 X Y ` O ? k l i + g P Q a b c 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 181 182 183 184 185 186 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 R 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 f ) t U @ b 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 e f h @ ] 187 188 189 190 191 192 ? ' , S q s T V W X Y Z r s . ; A a 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 f r j h h l B C m m H c * I J K L 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 0 1 2 3 205 206 207 208 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 u v w h i B C D E F Z 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 193 194 195 196 197 198 : ( ) / + - 199 200 201 202 203 204 D I d n 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 E b a [ c n F H M M N O P Q R S T Y 6 7 8 9 4 5 Character 2 through 58 are for Japanese. Character 64 ( h) is for German, character 136 ( h) is for Swedish. Character 104 ( i) is for German and Turkish, character 137 ( i) is for Swedish. Character 138 through 184 are for Russian and/or Greek. 5
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