this post was submitted on 22 Aug 2025
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Hello all. I've always been a digital clock user, but I am trying to get myself used to reading an analog watch.

For the most part it's fine, taking me several extra seconds over digital so far.

But one thing I am struggling with is discerning the exact minute. Because the minute hand slowly moves over time as opposed to ticking, I have trouble telling whether or not it's say...9:22 or 9:23 for example.

Because when the time is say...9:22 and 5 seconds, the hand will clearly be on the 9:22 mark. But when it's 9:22 and 45 seconds, it looks like it's actually 9:23 when it isn't yet.

Is this just always a limitation that I'm stuck with using analog? How precise are you all with analog clocks? Is there a way I can more quickly determine the exact minute?

Thanks!

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[–] BCsven@lemmy.ca 6 points 3 weeks ago (11 children)

Growing up with only Analog, it just was a quick glance. You didn't even have to stop and read it, because you glance and have a mental image of the hand positions that you could compare in your head.

Does your watch have clearly marked minutes and a second hand? If its not quite at the minute mark you know its before 9:23, but if its so close you can't tell then the seconds hand will show you if its before or after the 60seconds spot.

But also, that's how Analog is, and unless you have a very precise watch, a regular watch will gain or lose time daily and so the preciseness of 9:23 will be invalid anyway.

[–] dingus@lemmy.world 2 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (10 children)

It does have a second hand, but I don't really look at it much to tell the time.

It's not that I can't tell the minutes when it is between numbers, it's that it will already look like it's 9:23 because the minute hand has effectively nearly covered the 9:23 minute mark despite it being 9:22:45 or something. Seems to be a limitation of analog clocks unless I am just not great at discerning these things. Unless people also generally look at the second hand when reading them??

Tbh it's actually a smartwatch and not technically an actual analog watch, so I'm assuming the exact time is pretty accurate. I just want to start using analog watch faces more on it to make it look nicer haha. Plus brushing up on my skill!

[–] lovely_reader@lemmy.world 2 points 3 weeks ago

It's not a limitation but a matter of precision. The position of the minute hand tells you how far into that minute you are. You don't need that information, of course. You can just say whatever mark it's closest to. At 1:00:58, although a digital clock would still read 1:00, it is by all accounts much more accurate to round the minute to 1:01.

So if you just call the time by the minute your minute hand appears closest to, you'll often be more accurate than a digital clock. It won't matter. But you'll know it's true.

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