All the Pulsar, Hamilton, and Omega TC modules came off the same production line (at the Time Computer facility in Lancaster, PA), and so have identical operational characteristics. The early P2 (201-1) modules (which were also used to retrofit most of the P1s) had only a single trimmer of limited adjustment, and many of the timing crystals have now drifted beyond the range of their ability to keep the frequency within specified accuracy (which is why most P1s don't keep very good time any more

). The second-generation P2 modules (201-2, with the horizontal light sensor), had a second, wider-range ("coarse") trimmer on the front of the circuit board, and most of these can still be adjusted back to within the original 60sec/year tolerance. The smaller ("fine") trimmer on the back of the module above the battery compartments can be used to accurately bring the frequency error to near-zero. Extreme frequency drift (I have seen 200+ sec/month) would require replacing the quartz crystal itself...fortunately, not a complicated repair, except, of course, the P1, which would require seperating the case halves (not a job for the inexperienced!). Roughly 75% of the known P1s have the earlier 201-1 module; a few probably even left Lancaster with the later 201-2. All modules were subjected to a week-long "burn-in" at the factory before being assembled into complete watches. This was intended to catch early failures (the so-called "infant mortality" factor), and identify modules that were drifting in frequency at an excessive rate (in either direction), so as to keep failures "in the field" at a minimum.