Hello, I was wondering may I bring a silent stop watch to the testing center? I have accommodations that give me more time and to use an analog watch or the Perfect Lsat watch wouldnt be of any use, so I was wondering if it is possible?
@Matthew524 said: like the 180 watch but I have 53 minutes per section
1. me too and I wish I had a 180 watch too! 2. I just bought an analogue watch and scratched a mark into the face at the 53 minute mark. and another scratch at the 48 minute mark ("5 minute warning"). It works ok. I just reset it to 12 between sections. Always open to new ideas though
It has a rotating bezzle and you can set it up so that you know exactly how much time you have left. I started using it and it is a very great timing tool
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This is the one I was thinking of purchasing
The only thing resembling a stop watch that is allowed is the 180 watch because it is not a stop watch but a customized analog watch.
2. I just bought an analogue watch and scratched a mark into the face at the 53 minute mark. and another scratch at the 48 minute mark ("5 minute warning"). It works ok. I just reset it to 12 between sections. Always open to new ideas though
http://www.amazon.com/Toptiertimer-Custom-Bezel-Approved-Analog/dp/B00T6Y5TOS?ie=UTF8&psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00
It has a rotating bezzle and you can set it up so that you know exactly how much time you have left. I started using it and it is a very great timing tool
http://www.amazon.com/Casio-Sport-Yellow-Analog-MRW-200H-9BVDF/dp/B00BRMYHFE
I usually leave the bezel alone and just move the minute/second hands to 12 o'clock, then start time by pressing in the crown.