City code table, Operation guide 2752 – G-Shock GW-1000BDJ-8A User Manual

Page 6

Advertising
background image

Operation Guide 2752

6

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 day of the week is automatically displayed in accordance with the date (year,

month, and day) settings.

• The year can be set in the range of 2000 to 2099.

• The watch’s built-in full automatic calendar 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 4.

• The current time for all city codes in the Timekeeping Mode and World Time Mode is

calculated in accordance with the Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) differential for each
city, based on your Home City time setting.

• GMT differential is calculated by this watch based on Universal Time Coordinated

(UTC*) data.

* UTC is the world-wide scientific standard of timekeeping. It is based upon carefully

maintained atomic (cesium) clocks that keep time accurately to within microseconds. Leap
seconds are added or subtracted as necessary to keep UTC in sync with the Earth’s rotation.
The reference point for UTC is Greenwich, England.

12-hour/24-hour Timekeeping Formats
The 12-hour/24-hour timekeeping format you select in the Timekeeping Mode is also
applied in all other modes.

• 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 no 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.

Illumination Precautions

• The electro-luminescent panel that provides illumination loses power after very long

use.

• Display illumination may be hard to see when viewed under direct sunlight.

• Illumination automatically turns off whenever an alarm sounds.

• 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.

• Frequent use of illumination runs down the battery.
Auto light switch precautions

• Wearing the watch on the inside of your wrist, movement of your arm, or vibration of

your arm can cause frequent activation of the auto light switch and illumination of 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.

• Note that wearing the watch under your sleeve while the auto light switch is turned

on can cause frequent illumination of the display and can run down the battery.

• Illumination may not turn on 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.

• Illumination turns off in about one second, even if you

keep the watch pointed towards your face.

• Static electricity or magnetic force can interfere with

proper operation of the auto light switch. If illumination
does not turn on, try moving the watch back to the
starting position (parallel with the ground) and then tilt it
back towards 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, illumination may not turn on until about one second after

you turn the face of the watch towards you. This does not necessarily indicate
malfunction of the auto light switch.

• You may notice a very faint clicking sound coming from the watch when it is shaken

back and forth. This sound is caused by mechanical operation of the auto light
switch, and does not indicate a problem with the watch.

More than 15 degrees
too high

Honolulu

Anchorage

Los Angeles

Denver

Chicago

New York

Caracas

Rio De Janeiro

London

Paris

Berlin

City

City

GMT

Other major cities in same time zone

Code

Differential

City Code Table

– – –

HNL

ANC

LAX

DEN

CHI

NYC

CCS

RIO

– – –
– – –
GMT

LON

PAR

BER

–11.0
–10.0
–09.0

–08.0

–07.0

–06.0

–05.0

–04.0
–03.0
–02.0
–01.0

+00.0

+01.0

Pago Pago
Papeete
Nome
San Francisco, Las Vegas, Vancouver,
Seattle/Tacoma, Dawson City, Tijuana
El Paso, Edmonton, Culiacan
Houston, Dallas/Ft. Worth,
New Orleans, Mexico City, Winnipeg
Montreal, Detroit, Miami, Boston,
Panama City, Havana, Lima, Bogota
La Paz, Santiago, Pt. Of Spain
Sao Paulo, Buenos Aires, Brasilia, Montevideo

Praia
Dublin, Lisbon, Casablanca, Dakar, Abidjan

Milan, Rome, Madrid, Amsterdam, Algiers, Hamburg,
Frankfurt, Vienna, Stockholm

Athens

Cairo

Jerusalem

Jeddah

Tehran

Dubai
Kabul

Karachi

Delhi

Dhaka

Yangon

Bangkok

Hong Kong

Seoul
Tokyo

Adelaide

Sydney

Noumea

Wellington

+02.0

+03.0
+03.5
+04.0
+04.5
+05.0
+05.5
+06.0
+06.5
+07.0

+08.0

+09.0

+09.5
+10.0
+11.0
+12.0

Helsinki, Istanbul, Beirut, Damascus,
Cape Town

Kuwait, Riyadh, Aden, Addis Ababa, Nairobi, Moscow
Shiraz
Abu Dhabi, Muscat

Male
Mumbai, Kolkata
Colombo

Jakarta, Phnom Penh, Hanoi, Vientiane
Singapore, Kuala Lumpur, Beijing, Taipei, Manila, Perth,
Ulaanbaatar
Pyongyang

Darwin
Melbourne, Guam, Rabaul
Pt. Vila
Christchurch, Nadi, Nauru Is.

ATH

CAI

JRS
JED

THR
DXB

KBL

KHI

DEL
DAC

RGN

BKK

HKG

SEL
TYO
ADL

SYD

NOU
WLG

• Based on data as of June 2003.

Advertising
This manual is related to the following products: