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  1. reemas Apr 10, 2021

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    I’d be interested in seeing the METAS results you can download from Omega for your watches. Just curious on how the timing differs across watches and models. Here’s mine for the new 3861 Speedmaster.
     
    D405512F-F36D-4FEC-8BE5-B73CBD050BEC.jpeg
  2. gnuyork Apr 10, 2021

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    I don't have mine handy, but the average daily was 3.3 spd. Not bad, you have me beat my 1/10th of a second ;)
     
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  3. YY77 Apr 10, 2021

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    Apollo11 3861 Screenshot_20210410-223904.png

    AT cal 8900

    Screenshot_20210410-223355.png
     
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  4. reemas Apr 11, 2021

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    Are your average daily chronometric precisions accurate? Mine says +3.2 sec/day but it seems to be running around +4-5 sec/day.
     
  5. YY77 Apr 11, 2021

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    This is my average for the last full period, not worried about the losses as that avoided having to hack. Screenshot_20210411-100119.png
     
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  6. reemas Apr 11, 2021

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    Didn’t realize positions matter so much. Very helpful, thanks for sharing.
     
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  7. sgav8r Apr 11, 2021

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    Here’s mine from my August 2020 SMP 300 (cal. 8800).

    [​IMG]
     
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  8. DanishDynamiteUS Apr 12, 2021

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    Honestly was a bit disappointed by my Omega Seamaster NTTD, they really took it to the limit. It seems worse than my Tudor BB58s.

    Here are the results:
     
    METAS.JPG
  9. DanishDynamiteUS Apr 12, 2021

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    How come the range goes up to 5 seconds on your 3861 while it's 6 seconds for the NTTD? Thought they were under same rating, might be wrong.
     
  10. reemas Apr 12, 2021

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    I’m not sure. Good question, perhaps newer tighter standards?
     
  11. YY77 Apr 12, 2021

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  12. KirkN Apr 13, 2021

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    Here are the results for my NTTD. I was a little surprised/disappointed too. Same movement (8800) as my Seamaster Diver and Aqua Terra, but slightly less accurate for some reason. Bookmarks.png
     
  13. DanishDynamiteUS Apr 13, 2021

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    Thanks for sharing!

    Think Omega is doing a bit misleading marketing here to be honest. Their homepage states clearly METAS requires a maximum deviation of 0-5 seconds, yet when I researched on METAS homepage there’s three classifications of which the second one fits exactly the requirements shown under the NTTD movements.

    It’s no big deal however as when I wrote the boutique politely earlier that I felt my watch was too fast (wasn’t just because of the measured results) they immediately offered to calibrate it free of charge.

    As always I’m highly surprised and satisfied with their service support!
     
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  14. reemas Apr 13, 2021

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    I’ve been using an app to check actual daily deviation and I’m at 2.3 SPD over a couple days of normal use. A little better than the 3.2 SPD from METAS. Obviously a lot of factors and variation but feel good about it and it’s a good margin to not run slow.