Here is the output in the order of commands you mentioned:
<2019-03-11 ¬P´Á¤@>

For the other commands, there is no output in the actual buffer) but on the 
bottom it says....
3076 (#o6004, #xc04)
"?? (??,???????)"
1033 (#o2011, #x409)
3076 (#o6004, #xc04)
["???" "???" "???" "???" "???" "???" "???"]    

-----Original Message-----
From: Eli Zaretskii <[email protected]> 
Sent: Monday, March 11, 2019 5:30 PM
To: Wong, Philip <[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: bug#34684: 26.1; Strange characters when inserting date

> From: "Wong, Philip" <[email protected]>
> CC: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]"
>       <[email protected]>
> Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2019 16:55:42 +0000
> 
> Thanks Eli, you're right.
> 
> I still get '<2019-03-11 ¶g¤@>'

OK, as expected.  This means Org is indeed off the hook, the problem is with 
format-time-string and/or the Windows implementation of the strftime function.

Does the below produce correct  results, or does it also produce garbled 
strings:

  M-: (insert (format-time-string "<%Y-%m-%d %A>" (current-time))) RET

This is the same as what you tried, but with capital %A instead of lower-case 
%a.  %A should produce the full name of the weekday.

Also, please evaluate each of the following expressions with
M-: ... RET (replace the "..." with each expression below), and please tell 
what each of them produced:

    (w32-get-current-locale-id)
    (w32-get-locale-info (w32-get-current-locale-id) t)
    (w32-get-default-locale-id)
    (w32-get-default-locale-id t)
    (locale-info 'days)

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