5.Six modes of date/seconds/temperature display
6.Indoor temperature
7.Remote outdoor temperature
8.Dual alarms
9.Adjustable snooze
B.Radio-Controlled Time and Date
1.The projection alarm will automatically search for the time signal upon initial
2.When the signal is being received, there will be a “tower” icon flashing to the left of the time display.
3.When the time signal has been received successfully, the tower icon will remain steady until midnight.
4.The NIST (National Institute of Standards and
5.Due to the nature of the Earth’s Ionosphere, reception is very limited during daylight hours. The projection alarm will search for a signal every night when reception is best.
6.The WWVB radio station receives the time data from the NIST Atomic clock in Boulder, Colorado. A team of atomic physicists is continually measuring every second, of every day, to an accuracy of ten billionths of a second per day. These physicists have created an international standard, measuring a second as 9,192,631,770 vibrations of a
7.For more detail, visit http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq.htm. To listen to the NIST time, call (303)
8.It is possible that your projection alarm may not be exactly on the second due to the variance in the quartz. However, the clock will adjust the quartz timing over the course of several days to be very accurate; under 0.10 seconds per day.
Projection of Time and/or Remote Temperature
When plugged into an AC outlet the projection alarm can continuously project the time and/or remote temperature.
9.When operating on batteries alone the projection alarm will only project when a button is pressed.
10.The projection will
11.The default is projecting time (Hour and Minutes). The projection alarm can be se to project the time (M0), remote temperature (M1), or alternating
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