Eurobrit Motorbikes - Stay Away!!! SCUMBAG RIPOFFS

Discussion in 'Australian Motorcycles' started by J Bennett, Feb 26, 2010.

  1. J Bennett

    theo Guest

    I bought a Timex in the US in 1969 because it was cheap. Too cheap, it
    lasted a whole year. I already knew when I bought it that it was a
    clock, but it was so cheap. Too cheap.

    OK, so you're anal about time. What was the time when you celebrated
    last New Year? :)

    Theo
     
    theo, Mar 5, 2010
    #21
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  2. J Bennett

    theo Guest

    To put a nice face on it.

    Theo
     
    theo, Mar 5, 2010
    #22
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  3. J Bennett

    theo Guest

    Almost all pocket watches are clocks.

    Theo
     
    theo, Mar 5, 2010
    #23
  4. I bought a Timex in the US in 1969 because it was cheap. Too cheap, it
    lasted a whole year. I already knew when I bought it that it was a
    clock, but it was so cheap. Too cheap.

    OK, so you're anal about time. What was the time when you celebrated
    last New Year? :)

    Theo


    **********************

    I bought a Seiko self-winding watch in 1964, along with some other taxi
    drivers who were the target of the street seller.
    Mine was still going in 1985 when I stopped wearing a watch, I threw it in
    the drawer and there it stays with all the other watches I have owned.
    Unlike most of the other dsrivers watches, which stopped working within a
    year.
    I guess that I would have an antique watch collection in the drawer.
     
    George W Frost, Mar 5, 2010
    #24
  5. Almost all pocket watches are clocks.

    Theo


    ***********************************

    Got a gold pocket watch in the drawer as well, ll embossed and engraved
    with all the engraving on it, the discarded engraving shavings would be
    worth a fair packet now.
     
    George W Frost, Mar 5, 2010
    #25
  6. To put a nice face on it.

    Theo

    *********************

    Better looking than your ugly dial
     
    George W Frost, Mar 5, 2010
    #26
  7. I'd always picked you as more a Psycho Watch-type (pronounced Seiko).

    *******************

    Actually got one of those in the drawer, a self winding watch which I
    haven't worn for 25 years
     
    George W Frost, Mar 5, 2010
    #27
  8. J Bennett

    G-S Guest

    Timex have been making watches as long as I can remember (ok I know
    you're older than me) but do you remember when they started? [1]


    G-S

    [1] My father had a Timex brand watch when I was a little kid...
     
    G-S, Mar 5, 2010
    #28
  9. J Bennett

    G-S Guest

    I would...

    Theo does that mean you don't class digital 'watches' as 'watches'
    because they don't have a classic watch movement mechanism?


    G-S
     
    G-S, Mar 5, 2010
    #29
  10. J Bennett

    G-S Guest

    Digital watches aren't clocks (they don't have a 'clock' mechanism) :)


    G-S
     
    G-S, Mar 5, 2010
    #30
  11. J Bennett

    theo Guest

    They don't have a watch mechanism either.

    Look this whole watch side-thread was aimed at George's comment on his
    Timex I chucked out the bait, based on knowlegde I didn't expect
    George (or most people) to have, and expected George to bite at it. No
    need for everyone else to get on the line. It's getting too hard to
    pull in.

    Theo
     
    theo, Mar 5, 2010
    #31
  12. J Bennett

    theo Guest

    No Idea. I bought my Timex in 1967.

    Theo
     
    theo, Mar 5, 2010
    #32
  13. J Bennett

    theo Guest

    Wiki says
    Waterbury Clock’s Sister company Waterbury Watch Company manufactured
    the first inexpensive mechanical pocket watch in 1880. During World
    War I, Waterbury Clock began making wristwatches, which had only just
    become popular, and in 1933 it made history by creating the first
    Mickey Mouse clock under license from Walt Disney, with Mickey's hands
    pointing the time. This was made under the Ingersoll brand.[1]
    Watches with the Timex brand name were first used in 1946 with a small
    shipment of nurses' watches.[8][1] The "X" suffix "was used to envoke
    a sense of technological advancement.[8][1] Watches were not sold
    under the name Timex in the U.S until 1950.[1]

    So they made their first "wristwatch" in WWI, but not under the Timex
    name till 1946.
    Also see http://www.timexgroup.com/heritage/timeline.html

    Theo
     
    theo, Mar 5, 2010
    #33
  14. rOn Fri, 05 Mar 2010 06:33:36 GMT, "George W Frost"
    I was in bed asleep :p
    (Seriously)

    But all my computers check atomic servers every half hour. Just
    working in live TV where you had to synchronise crosses to external
    sources to times under a second, editing for 30 years where 1/25th of
    a second makes a heap of difference to how an edit feels, and going
    back further where, to cross to a microwave feed from the mainland,
    the whole station had to have its power source genlocked to within
    milliseconds to the incoming feed has just left me wanting to know
    accurately what the bloody time is :)

    Kev
     
    Kevin Gleeson, Mar 5, 2010
    #34
  15. J Bennett

    theo Guest

    Yes that is a bit anal. When I was working with very sensitive main-
    frames in the sixties and seventies I would be aware of a 1/2 cycle
    power outage in the computer room that no-one else would notice. "The
    computer stopped". "Yes, there was a power outage just now". "Huh?".
    Switch-mode power supplies only made that worse.

    On Wednesday this week I noticed that my watch showed that is was Feb
    31. That level of time error seems to happen every couple of months. I
    haven't checked the actual time on my watch against anything since I
    bought it last August. I used to work with a bloke whose watch lost
    its minute hand. He didn't care. The hour hand told him all the time
    he needed.

    Theo
     
    theo, Mar 5, 2010
    #35
  16. Yes that is a bit anal. When I was working with very sensitive main-
    frames in the sixties and seventies I would be aware of a 1/2 cycle
    power outage in the computer room that no-one else would notice. "The
    computer stopped". "Yes, there was a power outage just now". "Huh?".
    Switch-mode power supplies only made that worse.

    On Wednesday this week I noticed that my watch showed that is was Feb
    31. That level of time error seems to happen every couple of months. I
    haven't checked the actual time on my watch against anything since I
    bought it last August. I used to work with a bloke whose watch lost
    its minute hand. He didn't care. The hour hand told him all the time
    he needed.

    Theo

    ****************

    Why is it called the second hand when in fact it is the third hand?
     
    George W Frost, Mar 6, 2010
    #36
  17. I know that was a rhetorical tongue in cheek question, but it also
    made me wonder why the duplication of the word "second". Had a bit of
    a poke around but couldn't find the roots of the word.

    It's got me intrigued now as if you think about it from historical
    terms, the most obvious one would start with day, then would head out
    in two directions from there. One towards seasons and years and the
    other inwards towards hours, then minutes, then seconds. So it should
    be fourths.

    I tried finding some latin roots (secundus?) but nothing seems to
    explain why it coincides with the 2nd bit of something.

    Ideas anyone?

    Kev
     
    Kevin Gleeson, Mar 6, 2010
    #37
  18. J Bennett

    Andrew Guest

    Probably helps to have studied Latin. To come *second*, to be *second*
    best, to sell damaged goods as *seconds* and so on, along with a second
    in a duel etc. all stem from the Latin 'secundus' meaning following,
    next, second, etc., and it's the male form. The sixtieth part of a minute
    in time = a sixtieth part of a minute in angular measure = second,
    derived from thge Latin 'secunda' which is the feminine form, used like
    'secunda minuta' (second minute).

    So girls are more accurate and boys follow.

    Strangely, a *second* in music derives from secundus,not secunda.
     
    Andrew, Mar 6, 2010
    #38
  19. I wouldn't like to come second in a duel
     
    George W Frost, Mar 6, 2010
    #39
  20. That still doesn't ring well for me though. And yes, I've only been
    playing music for 40 years now :p

    I still think as language developed the initial critical time period
    would be the day. But reading into what you are saying, I guess by the
    time (boom-boom) we were able to define time to that accuracy, then
    the slicing of a minute into other parts could lead to that. It still
    seems to me it should be called a sexond or something like that
    though. A second minute to me sounds like the "following" definition.
    I guess they were just being lazy. Mind you, who knows with the
    English language? Which witch is which?

    Kev
     
    Kevin Gleeson, Mar 7, 2010
    #40
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