Is it possible for a clock that has been dead for 3 years with the same battery to randomly start ticking?
yes. the electromagnetism in the battery are very active when it's "dead" sometimes they pull enough energy to make the thing they're on work again depending on magnetic pulls. It just became winter, this disturbance in the force pushed the electromagnetisms just enough to make your clock tick.
>>18468484
get pwnd OP
Of course it is, dum dum. It's called Residual Transference. Either it has been in stasis due to Greenslade's Law (which refers to the transitive properties of fuel stasis vis a vis a change in potential energy), or the more likely reason it's due to Mardešić Constant (which pretty much accounts for the misalignment of stored energy).
Either way, this is about as haunted as the deleted thread from yesterday that supposedly had actual footage from an unearthing in Rennes-le-Château which turned out to be deleted scenes from an unreleased Jackie Chan movie from the late 90s (would have been the one that teamed up Chan, Andy Lau, Oliver Platt, and a young Christian Bale).
>>18468484
We have a winner
>>18468505
I swear to God that if I hear "Residual Transference" "Greenslade's Law" or "Mardesic Constant" IRL, I'm going to IP track you, find where you live and flay you alive.
>>18468875
Why though?
I've had my analog clock stop at 3:15:15 one time. Pretty freaky because all the hands were pointing at the 3. So, 333.
We own an old digitial Alarm clock, it runs on the same battery since the mid 90's. it survived a 2 story fall, a few days outside in the rain and was stashed between stones and rubble for a while. It still does its job and wakes me up every morning.
>>18468875
Not him but that's very irrational
>>18468505
That sounds like a really good jackie chan movie.
oh shit, you got the ghost of correct time. wiki/ghostofcorrecttime.com