
23
22
CUBO - Radio-controlled alarm clock with thermometer
A 6:
Date / Alarm 1 / Alarm 2
A 7:
Indoor temperature
B: Buttons (Fig 2):
B 1:
ALARM button
B 2:
▲
button
B 3:
MODE button
B 4:
▼
button
B 5:
SNOOZE/LIGHT button
C: Housing (Fig 3):
C 1:
Battery compartment
6. Getting started
• Pull off the protection foil on the display.
• Open the battery compartment and insert the attached batteries,
making sure the polarity is correct.
• A short beep tone will sound and all LCD segments will light up for
a short moment.
• The indoor temperature appears on the display.
CUBO - Radio-controlled alarm clock with thermometer
• The clock will now scan the DCF frequency signal and the DCF
symbol
flashes on the LCD. When the time code is received
successfully after 3-5 minutes, the radio-controlled time is dis-
played and the date and the DCF symbol is displayed steadily in the
LCD.
• If the clock cannot detect the DCF-signal (for example due to dis-
turbances, transmitting distance, etc.), the time can be set manual-
ly. The DCF symbol disappears and the clock will then work as a
normal quartz clock. (see: Manual setting).
• Manual initialization can be helpful. Press
▲
button for 3 seconds
and the DCF signal starts to flash.
• Press
▲
button again and the reception will be deactivated.
• Reception status:
Radio-controlled time reception
The time base for the radio-controlled time is a caesium atomic clock
operated by the Physikalisch Technische Bundesanstalt Braunschweig.
It has a time deviation of less than one second in one million years.
very weak
weak
medium
strong
TFA_No_60.2517_Anl_D_GB_F_10_16 11.10.2016 18:42 Uhr Seite 12