L
Lawrence San
Guest
I have a Casio watch that has two simultaneous displays: a large,
analog display (with physical hour and minute hands, but no seconds
hand); and a smaller LCD window with a digital display that can be
switched to various modes.
Since I normally keep the LCD in "show today's date" mode, and there's
no seconds hand, there's usually no visible movement. But sometimes I
switch the LCD to the Timer (stopwatch) mode, and then the hundredths
of seconds and seconds flash past in a continuous moving display. I can
keep the timer running in the background while switching back to a
static display (such as the date), but I prefer to keep the timer
visible when it's running.
Here's my question: Is the drain on the watch battery greater when
there's visible movement in the LCD portion of the display? Or does an
LCD displaying a static image consume the same amount of power as that
same LCD when displaying a moving image? (I suppose there might even be
an additional question as to whether the watch's microprocessor
consumes more power when keeping the stopwatch-timer running, in
addition to the regular time function that must always be running.)
Thanks much for any enlightenment.
--
Lawrence San
Cartoon Stories for Thoughtful People:
<http://www.sanstudio.com>
email: san@sanstudio.com
analog display (with physical hour and minute hands, but no seconds
hand); and a smaller LCD window with a digital display that can be
switched to various modes.
Since I normally keep the LCD in "show today's date" mode, and there's
no seconds hand, there's usually no visible movement. But sometimes I
switch the LCD to the Timer (stopwatch) mode, and then the hundredths
of seconds and seconds flash past in a continuous moving display. I can
keep the timer running in the background while switching back to a
static display (such as the date), but I prefer to keep the timer
visible when it's running.
Here's my question: Is the drain on the watch battery greater when
there's visible movement in the LCD portion of the display? Or does an
LCD displaying a static image consume the same amount of power as that
same LCD when displaying a moving image? (I suppose there might even be
an additional question as to whether the watch's microprocessor
consumes more power when keeping the stopwatch-timer running, in
addition to the regular time function that must always be running.)
Thanks much for any enlightenment.
--
Lawrence San
Cartoon Stories for Thoughtful People:
<http://www.sanstudio.com>
email: san@sanstudio.com