
I'm new to this group and hoping some of you can offer a solution to a digital watch quandry I have. I'm handy with electronics, but new to watches.
The most common frequency for the quartz crystals in digital watches seems to be 32,768 Hz, which is 2 to the 15th power (2**15.) This makes sense for a timepiece that measures in seconds because dividing by 2 is the simplest/cheapest digital division you can do.
For a watch that keeps time to the nearest second, all I have to do is divide by 2 fifteen times and I get one pulse per second.
For a watch that times to 1/100 th of a second, however, I need a 100 Hz signal, but there's no way to get that from a 32,768 signal. Yet on my desk I have 2 watches with timers to 1/100 second, each with 32,768 Hz crystals. How is this done?
I had assumed that such watches must use 25,600 Hz crystals, which would be 100 x 2**10 Hz. I find such crystals to be readily available, but that does not seem to be what's actually used.
I can imagine 2 ways to approximate the hundredths of a second, but both require "fudging" the time slices.
You could have a free running oscillator that ran at about 100 Hz, and let that do the timing under 1 second, but that would not have the same accuracy as the main clock.
Or:
You could pick off the 1024 Hz (2**10) signal and use that to approximate 1 kHz, possibly dropping one count 24 times within each second, then divide by 10 to get 100 Hz. That would work, but 24 of our hundredths would be slightly longer than the others.
None of this seems like the kind of thing an actual watch company would do, plus they are all more difficult and expensive than just starting with a 25,600 Hz crystal.
So, how is this done, and why?
thanks,
The most common frequency for the quartz crystals in digital watches seems to be 32,768 Hz, which is 2 to the 15th power (2**15.) This makes sense for a timepiece that measures in seconds because dividing by 2 is the simplest/cheapest digital division you can do.
For a watch that keeps time to the nearest second, all I have to do is divide by 2 fifteen times and I get one pulse per second.
For a watch that times to 1/100 th of a second, however, I need a 100 Hz signal, but there's no way to get that from a 32,768 signal. Yet on my desk I have 2 watches with timers to 1/100 second, each with 32,768 Hz crystals. How is this done?
I had assumed that such watches must use 25,600 Hz crystals, which would be 100 x 2**10 Hz. I find such crystals to be readily available, but that does not seem to be what's actually used.
I can imagine 2 ways to approximate the hundredths of a second, but both require "fudging" the time slices.
You could have a free running oscillator that ran at about 100 Hz, and let that do the timing under 1 second, but that would not have the same accuracy as the main clock.
Or:
You could pick off the 1024 Hz (2**10) signal and use that to approximate 1 kHz, possibly dropping one count 24 times within each second, then divide by 10 to get 100 Hz. That would work, but 24 of our hundredths would be slightly longer than the others.
None of this seems like the kind of thing an actual watch company would do, plus they are all more difficult and expensive than just starting with a 25,600 Hz crystal.
So, how is this done, and why?
thanks,
--
Jim Adney
Madison, WI
Jim Adney
Madison, WI