I don’t understand why, in some Relativity experiments, a clock slowing down is interpreted as being time per se slowing down (time dilation). We use clocks to measure time, but clocks aren’t time. What has a clock slowing down got to do with time slowing down? All clocks are mechanical and function on some form of predictable and repetitively consistent movement of their components, and they function most accurately in a controlled, stable environment. A clock subjected to external forces, such as inertia or temperature change, is virtually assured to malfunction to some degree. I could take an hourglass skydiving and observe that, during the acceleration of freefall, it slows down and stops. A mechanical clock can be made to slow down and stop by subjecting it to inertial forces that bind its moving parts. This effect can be replicated by holding a magnet close to a mechanical wristwatch. Obviously neither of these examples are proof that time per se has slowed or stopped, just malfunctioned. Why can’t the inertial forces of acceleration and deceleration that are incurred when an atomic clock is taken for a ride in an airplane, cause the clock to malfunction rather than be time dilated?