Every now and then, a small, unassuming watch ends up becoming a satisfying project on the bench. This vintage Cronoalarm digital watch—which I picked up for exactly $1 with the classic seller line “not working, maybe needs a new battery”—is the perfect example.
It’s the type of piece most people would ignore…
But for a restoration tinkerer, it’s a little time capsule begging for a second life.
First Impressions: A Retro Survivor
The watch features everything you’d expect from late-70s to early-90s digital wristwear:
- ALARM & CHRONOGRAPH functions printed proudly on the dial
- Day-of-week display (Su–Sa) on a classic segmented LCD
- Date and stopwatch modes activated by the right-side buttons
- A simple, bold black display window
- A stainless-steel expansion bracelet that, despite the years, is still surprisingly solid
These watches weren’t luxury pieces—they were everyday companions. Used at work, school, and everywhere in between. That’s why finding one intact, even if non-functional, feels like rescuing a tiny piece of lived history.
The Restoration Goal: Keep It Simple
My hope for this project is that it will be one of the easy wins:
A fresh battery, a quick clean, and maybe some contact refresh should bring it back.
Digital modules like this usually fail for only a handful of reasons:
Dead battery
The most common and the best-case scenario.
Oxidized battery contacts
A quick scrape or alcohol clean often revives them.
Loose internal connection
Rare, but a gentle press or reseating the module can fix it.
Damaged LCD segments
Sometimes faded, but many revive once proper power is restored.
And looking at this particular example, the display doesn’t seem cracked or badly heat-damaged—so there’s a solid chance this will be one of those satisfying five-minute restorations.
Restoring Digital Watches
Mechanical watches get all the romance, but restoring vintage digital pieces has its own charm:
- They’re straightforward
- They’re forgiving
- And when the screen suddenly lights up—after who knows how many years—it feels like reviving a tiny vintage computer
Plus, these budget digital watches represent a fun slice of watchmaking history. They weren’t trying to be luxury. They were trying to be useful.
What’s Next for This Project
Step one: open the case and check the battery. (Done)
Step two: test voltage on the existing cell—if it’s flat, replace it.
Step three: clean any corrosion and ensure the module is making proper contact. (In Progress)
If all goes well, the LCD should flicker back to life, bringing back that unmistakable old-school digital glow.
For a $1 find, that’s a restoration win in my book.










