My orignal post that 60hz light flicker received at citizen ecodrive solarcells 
is used to 
 discipline the watchs rate, needs a little correction to my post as brought to 
my attention by the replies.
Yes it is actually 120hz flicker 60 positive cycle flickers and 60 negative 
cycle flickers per 
second thus 120 flickers per second.
 
But I will suggest the idea that positive cycle flicker and negative cycle 
flicker probably presents different voltage levels for positive and negative 
cycles at the solarcell? Not to mention probable phase changes in the light 
itself caused by the positive and negative cycles?

Anywhy let me continue to reference 60hz disciplineing rather 120hz 
disciplineing.

Now imagine an algorithm for disciplineing the watchs reference (32767 xtal), 
which simply looks for stable 60hz.
Lets say for example 120 stable consecutive cycles of 60hz (2 seconds) occur 
consecutively. The watch could easily detect this stable instance and deposit 
its sample 
in a high quality storage bin.

Conversly the watch with its inexpensive reference oscillator could also detect 
unstable 60hz samples at its solarcell and deposit those samples in a trash bin 
for disposal.

My estimate of the citizen ecodrives automatic rate adjustment occures at 10 
day intervals.

How many consecutive cycles of precise 60hz ac occur in 10 day of 
sampleing....no one knows.
maybe it happens thousands of times(in 10 days) but each time only for 1 second 
duration or 60 consecutive cyles... who knows. One would assume this happens 
sometime.

Maybe in 10 days of 60hz sampling from the watches solarcell there are 
instances where 600 consecutive precise cycles occur ?
And what if the watch could store those longer consecutive cycles in a higher 
quality storage bin (for latter averageing).

Eventually the watch says I've observed many instances of (short duration) 
precise rate flickers. But none at exactly  60.0000? hz.
Then the watch says its my reference that is off frequency not the precision 
instances of 60hz that I've observed.

So the watch corrects its reference, empties its storage bins and starts a new 
10 day cycle.

No one could be more amazed than myself to discover that my citizen stainless 
skyhawk holding time within 13 milliseconds
 day by day for weeks (measurements taken approximately at 11am +- 2hours).
I noted handling this watch with my hot hands caused a 1 milisecond per minute 
(estimated) additional error as the watch temperature increased.
Thus during all subsequent measurements I handled the watch by its band as 
briefly as possible to eliminate temperature errors.

The only thing citizen watch company could do to make me more happy is a 60hz 
frequency alarm feature to alert me of disturbances on the power grid ! 

 

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