LEDluvr wrote:I'll open up the Sport to remove the module and clean the button contacts. My question is - how to remove the buttons for cleaning? Is it as simple as just pushing them out from the inside of the case?
I'm totally puzzled as to why you would think of removing the buttons on a Sport.

They are basically a single piece of stainless, with a thin insulator around them. The only failing they can have, is getting shorted out and keeping the watch
on. The contact at the inside might be dirty/weak, but more likely you are suffering from poor contact between your body and the watch case, and your body to the button. Wipe your entire case with some rubbing alcohol on a paper towel(body oil, lotion etc don't conduct electricity well), change the batteries and consider whether your fingers and other skin are terribly dry at this time of year. I know you are in a warmer region, but the air is drier in general in the Northern Hemisphere at this time. I implore you to consider not removing the buttons - you will be a sad man if those insulators get screwed up....trying to retrofit a replacement insulator will be shear hell, and you will always wonder about it if the watch has issues.
Good batteries are crucial with those - it needs all the power it can get to successfully go through your body and trigger things. I've wondered if some peoples' body chemistry works better/worse. Like the way some peoples' hand prints will almost instantly show up as rust on bare steel, others hardly at all(I'm one of those).
I know one person with some spare
new buttons and insulators(me) but those are all destined for Men's TC cases. Apparently nobody else thought they were useful when Mike Barbaro sold of them off on ebay. I was the only bidder.

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