The clock can be made to go faster or slower by means of the nut at the bottom of the pendulum. Turning the front of the nut to the right speeds up the clock, and turning it to the left slows it down (in other words move the nut up to speed up, or down to slow down). Turn the nut only a small amount each time.
To slow down the clock, loosen the adjustment nut (turn it toward your left). The bob will settle lower, making the effective length of the pendulum longer. The clock will run slower. To speed up the clock, tighten the nut (turn it toward your right).
If your clock is running slow, hands could be touching and will need to be adjusted in order to function properly. Another reason for this could be that the hex nut in the center is too tight, so try loosening it a quarter turn to allow the hands to move with ease.
if my watch is one hour late, it means my watch will show 13:00 when the actual time is 14:00. Thus when I arrive at a meeting scheduled for 13:00, I will be an hour late. You are right, 1 hr late means 1 hr slower, and 1 hr early means 1 hr faster.
The clock can be made to go faster or slower by means of the nut at the bottom of the pendulum. Turning the front of the nut to the right speeds up the clock, and turning it to the left slows it down (in other words move the nut up to speed up, or down to slow down). Turn the nut only a small amount each time.
A clock minute hand that touches the glass will stop your clock. To repair, bend the minute hand towards the dial and away from the glass. The reason a clock pendulum often stops swinging, after being moved, is because the clock case now leans at a slightly different angle then it did at its former location.
The center hex nut could be too tight - if your clock is running slowly you can loosen this about a quarter turn. If the second hand is not moving, give it a flick it in the right direction. If it doesn't start moving again on its own, put the battery in backwards for a few seconds and then return it to normal.
Look for a small screw at the bottom tip of the pendulum. This screw regulates the speed of the clock. Use the fingers of your dominant hand to gently turn the regulation screw. Turning the screw to the left will lower the pendulum slightly and slow down the clock.
If you are using alkaline batteries in your wall clocks then this is the likely cause. It is something to do with the frequency of the electricity in the battery that causes them to discharge very quickly. That sound like it could be paranormal but could also just be an interference with the levels of EMF in that area.
Most digital clocks in microwaves are frequency based. North America is on a 60 cycle frequency, it keeps time based on that, if the frequency of the AC increases, the clock will run faster, and if the frequency decreases, it will run slower.
Please note that your clock might run faster than design just because of electric interference such as spikes that get counted as oscillations on top of those from quartz. This is the reason why quartz clocks might go faster but they will never slow down.
Go to the Settings of the mobile. Scroll down the display, and find the options Date and Time under the tag of System. Go to that option. Here, you can see that the Automatic Timezone option is enabled.