Well, the time still seems accurate this morning. I am comparing it to my Casio atomic watch. I will keep an eye on it over the next few days. Unfortunately I dont' have a quartz monitor if the accuracy does end up being off. :) It will be interesting to see how it starts up after it is reassembled from cleaning up.
I don't think this watch has had fresh batteries in it for quite a while. When I bought it it had been described as "non-working" and it came with some 355s. When were 355s discontinued?
Hopefully it will keep running for many years with some TLC. I still need to clean up some minor oxidation from the battery compartment and the back cover. Other than that the rest of the module looks very clean. The rest of the watch also needs a re-brushing and crystal polishing.
The digits are nice and bright. I noticed that they are fairly visible even in daylight (indoors). I was a little surprised when my NOS Compu Chron was quite washed out under the same conditions... not because I thought the Compu Chron is anywhere near the quality of the Pulsar, but because I just didn't realize how bright the Pulsar LEDs really are.
On a cosmetic note, the bracelet with this watch is a little worn and dull with darker brown oxidation near the edges of the links. I'm sure I can clean up the gold just fine and I don't think that the gold has worn through anywhere. But I am wary of breaking through the gold fill if I were to re-brush it. I am thinking of cleaning the bracelet and then leaving it off the watch (for the next owner). I will probably put a nice brown alligator band with a satin clasp on it. I think that would look great.
The funny thing is, I was originally planning to clean up this watch and then sell it to fund other watch purchases. But the gold, which I generally don't like, is really growing on me. I still need to get a stainless P3 or P4 so I can have one of each to fit my mood and attire.
