DISPLAY
Your watch displays the time as Hours, on the bottom dial in black and Minutes, on the top dial in red.
INITIAL OPERATION
1. Locate the crown on your Stauer watch (diagram). There are two crown positions (0-1).
2. Before the watch is worn for the first time, wind the crown 15 to 20 cycles by turning in a clockwise motion (away
from you) while in the "0" (zero) position.
TIMESETTING
1. Pull the crown out to position "1." Turn the crown clockwise to set the hour (bottom black dial).
2. Once the hour is set, rotate the crown counter-clockwise (toward you) to set the minutes (top red dial).
3. Once time is set, push the crown back to "0"
IMPORTANT
Wear your Stauer watch every day to ensure lifelong accuracy and dependability.
Wearing your Stauer watch daily takes full advantage of its state of the art automatic winding feature which allows
the watch to function on kinetic power (simple body movement). This kinetic movement means your Stauer watch
will never require batteries and rarely require winding.
Keep in mind that your Stauer watch will stop running if it is not properly kept in motion by daily wear. If your watch
stops, simply wind the crown 3-5 times (in the zero position). If your watch is completely stopped, you may need to
wind it 15-20 times. NOTE: Stop winding your crown if you feel resistance.
When not wearing the watch, rest it on its side with the crown facing the ceiling to ensure more accurate time.
Need a Watch Winder? Visit us online at
Stauer Watch Winder!
Minute Display
Hour display
Crown
www.stauer.com
to learn more about the fantastic benefits of owning a
Stauer 1930's Dashtronic Watch
WARNING: Rare Automatic Watch
The 1930s brought unprecedented innovation in
machine-age technology and materials. Industrial
designers from the auto industry translated the
principals of aerodynamics and streamlining into
everyday objects like radios and toasters. It was
also a decade when an unequaled variety of watch
cases and movements came into being.
In lieu of hands to tell time, one such
complication, called a jumping mechanism, utilized
numerals on a disc viewed through a window. With
its striking resemblance to the dashboard gauges
and radio dials of the decade, the jump hour watch
was indeed "in tune" with the times!
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