Not sure how old this G Shock is, but it was one of their first Solar powered Wave Ceptor watches. Not an expensive watch when introduced. I think Wal Mart sold them for $59.95. I picked this one up for less than half of that. Great watch when working. You always have the correct time and no battery to worry about. I used it to set all my Zodiacs. Problem is, mine is not working. It won't hold a charge even when exposed to bright sun light all day long. I was wondering if this is an easy cheap fix or should I just chunk it.
Best to all,
dmh
Hey DMH. Every G Shock that I have worked on had a capacitor, and if the watch will work otherwise (besides keeping a charge that is), then it should just need a capacitor replacement. I can still get the correct capacitors for many of the Casios, it would just depend on which one your watch takes. The last time I bought one the price was less than $20.
:sici
Quote from: Ultra-Vintage on January 09, 2014, 02:48:06 PM
Hey DMH. Every G Shock that I have worked on had a capacitor, and if the watch will work otherwise (besides keeping a charge that is), then it should just need a capacitor replacement. I can still get the correct capacitors for many of the Casios, it would just depend on which one your watch takes. The last time I bought one the price was less than $20.
The module # is 2608. The model # is GW-300. It was all working until it quit charging. Glad to hear my Atomic Solar G-Shock my be saved.
Best to all,
dmh :ur
It takes a CTL 1616 accumulator.
We sell 'em for A$15 - http://watchbitz.com.au/shop/index.php?_a=viewProd&productId=165 (http://watchbitz.com.au/shop/index.php?_a=viewProd&productId=165)
Less for forum members.
Offshore
I did the same to my G-Shock GW-300
I bought mine over 7 years ago. Fixed it (also reset it too) after replacing the "battery" *accumulator*. Still works fine now.
:woohoo;