Discussion:
Setting Clock Cateye Micro Wireless
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c***@resnickventures.com
2006-06-06 15:12:51 UTC
Permalink
Hi all,

I have my Cateye Micro Wireless cc-mc100w all set up except for the
clock. I have tried to decipher the manual, and I've tried every
possibility I can think of.

Can anyone walk me through the clock setting procedure? Thanks much,
Adam
mrbubl
2006-06-06 15:34:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@resnickventures.com
Hi all,
I have my Cateye Micro Wireless cc-mc100w all set up except for the
clock. I have tried to decipher the manual, and I've tried every
possibility I can think of.
Can anyone walk me through the clock setting procedure? Thanks much,
Adam
cateye.com download PDF manual and you will always have it
c***@resnickventures.com
2006-06-06 18:44:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by mrbubl
Post by c***@resnickventures.com
Hi all,
I have my Cateye Micro Wireless cc-mc100w all set up except for the
clock. I have tried to decipher the manual, and I've tried every
possibility I can think of.
Can anyone walk me through the clock setting procedure? Thanks much,
Adam
cateye.com download PDF manual and you will always have it
Hey everyone, I have the manual. My problem is that I am unable to
figure out what it is telling me to do regarding setting the clock.
Maybe someone could take a look at the pdf and clue me in? Thanks
again, Adam
d***@yahoo.com
2006-06-06 17:05:44 UTC
Permalink
A. its in japanese graphics
have you visited the japanese historic map sites?
ion the enduro - when the number blinks - you press anothert button to
advance - then a third button to move the blinking on to the next
number: as hours minutes seconds year month day

Q. how can you tell that you're actually in the correct rolling
diameter?
mrbubl
2006-06-06 17:17:37 UTC
Permalink
Post by d***@yahoo.com
A. its in japanese graphics
have you visited the japanese historic map sites?
ion the enduro - when the number blinks - you press anothert button to
advance - then a third button to move the blinking on to the next
number: as hours minutes seconds year month day
Q. how can you tell that you're actually in the correct rolling
diameter?
http://www.cateye.com/en/pdfs/MC100Wv2ENG.pdf
d***@yahoo.com
2006-06-06 17:54:46 UTC
Permalink
Post by mrbubl
http://www.cateye.com/en/pdfs/MC100Wv2ENG.pdf
you know, when i do that everyone north of the international dateline
starts bitching and mikaning
Crescentius Vespasianus
2006-06-07 17:33:00 UTC
Permalink
Post by d***@yahoo.com
A. its in japanese graphics
have you visited the japanese historic map sites?
ion the enduro - when the number blinks - you press anothert button to
advance - then a third button to move the blinking on to the next
number: as hours minutes seconds year month day
Q. how can you tell that you're actually in the correct rolling
diameter?
Have you been getting errant max speed readings. About 50% of the time,
after my ride I get like a 87 mph number. It could be some electrical field
near my house or something, or a flaw in the computer. It's really not that
important, but it is odd.
d***@yahoo.com
2006-06-07 19:44:51 UTC
Permalink
no - my problem is i'm not smart enough to remember how or write the
porocedure down!
so far, my procedure to check on rolling distance eliminates the
rolling distance number which then - its repetitive!
bernmart
2006-06-08 10:45:14 UTC
Permalink
Post by Crescentius Vespasianus
Post by d***@yahoo.com
A. its in japanese graphics
have you visited the japanese historic map sites?
ion the enduro - when the number blinks - you press anothert button to
advance - then a third button to move the blinking on to the next
number: as hours minutes seconds year month day
Q. how can you tell that you're actually in the correct rolling
diameter?
Have you been getting errant max speed readings. About 50% of the time,
after my ride I get like a 87 mph number. It could be some electrical field
near my house or something, or a flaw in the computer. It's really not that
important, but it is odd.
Same problem, with same computer. I e-mailed Cateye about it, and
their reply is that it's electrical interference, and that there's
nothing to be done.
Dave Larrington
2006-06-07 11:22:35 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@resnickventures.com
Hi all,
I have my Cateye Micro Wireless cc-mc100w all set up except for the
clock. I have tried to decipher the manual, and I've tried every
possibility I can think of.
Can anyone walk me through the clock setting procedure? Thanks much,
The manual does indeed look like utter gibberish, but if it's anything
like other Cateye computers, you need to get it into time mode (I.e.
riding time) and press the "Set button". At which point one of the main
buttons advances the numbers and the other switches between hours and
minutes. Press "set" again to fix the time.

If my experience is in any way typical, however, the accuracy of said
clock is not high, and as I never use the clock function anyway, I
probably wouldn't bother.
--
Dave Larrington - <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/>
Apparently Guy has now got a Brompton. I'd never have guessed.
d***@yahoo.com
2006-06-07 16:36:03 UTC
Permalink
Post by c***@resnickventures.com
Hi all,
you need to get it into time mode (I.e.
riding time) and press the "Set button". At which point one of the main ...
say---if one presses the set button, does not the entire memory go
blank?
Roger Sacilotto
2006-06-07 22:26:36 UTC
Permalink
Post by Dave Larrington
Post by c***@resnickventures.com
Hi all,
you need to get it into time mode (I.e.
riding time) and press the "Set button". At which point one of the main ...
say---if one presses the set button, does not the entire memory go
blank?
I just did this and had similar difficulty...

press mode repeatedly until its in Time (Tm) mode
press set once (quickly, not holding)
press mode repeatedly until in Clock mode (mine shows "24h")
press start/stop to cycle through the settings (24hr, hours, minutes)
to change, press mode to cycle through the digits
press set to finish.


Hope this helps,

Roger
Dave Larrington
2006-06-08 10:59:55 UTC
Permalink
I wrote.
Post by Dave Larrington
The manual does indeed look like utter gibberish, but if it's anything
like other Cateye computers, you need to get it into time mode (I.e.
riding time) and press the "Set button". At which point one of the main
buttons advances the numbers and the other switches between hours and
minutes. Press "set" again to fix the time.
Which is, of course, horse. You need to get it into "clock" mode before
pressing "set".

Soz.
--
Dave Larrington - <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk/>
I started out with nothing and I still have most of it left.
Pete Biggs
2006-06-09 01:59:07 UTC
Permalink
Post by Dave Larrington
I wrote.
Post by Dave Larrington
The manual does indeed look like utter gibberish, but if it's
anything like other Cateye computers, you need to get it into time
mode (I.e. riding time) and press the "Set button". At which point
one of the main buttons advances the numbers and the other switches
between hours and minutes. Press "set" again to fix the time.
Which is, of course, horse. You need to get it into "clock" mode
before pressing "set".
That's right except the Set button (on back of computer) won't do anything
if the computer is asleep in Clock mode. Wake it up by pressing Mode and
repeat until back round to Clock again, then press Set.

~PB

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