GB
P.2
GB
P.3
GB
P.4
GB
P.5
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Topic
Page
Inventory of Contents
4
About WWVB
5
Quick Set-Up Guide
6
Detailed Set-Up Guide
Battery Installation
7
Program Mode
Programming Sequence
10
Function Buttons
11
Time Zone Setting
11
Time Setting
12
Date Setting
13
12/24-Hour Mode
14
DST (Daylight Saving Time) Setting
15
Features & Operations
Features
16
Radio-Controlled Time and Date
16
Projection
18
EL. Back light
19
Time Alarm
20
Changing Display Mode
22
Maintenance & Care
23
Troubleshooting
24
Specifications
25
Warranty and Contact Information
26
INVENTORY OF CONTENTS
1) WT-5350 Alarm Clock
2) AC adapter/transformer
3) Instruction manual and warranty card.
ADDITIONAL EQUIPMENT (not included)
1) Two fresh 1.5V AA batteries (optional for alarm clock)
FEATURES OF PROJECTION ALARM
1. Radio-controlled time and date
2. Projection of time
3. EL. Back light
4. Three modes of date/second display
5. Alarm
ABOUT WWVB (Radio Controlled Time)
The NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology-Time and Frequency
Division) WWVB radio station is located in Ft. Collins, Colorado, and transmits the
exact time signal continuously throughout the United States at 60 kHz. The signal
can be received up to 2,000 miles away through the internal antenna in the Projection
alarm. However, 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.
The WWVB Projection alarm 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 Cesium-133 atom in a vacuum. For more detail, visit http://www.boulder.
nist.gov/timefreq.htm. To listen to the NIST time, call (303)499-7111. This number
will connect you to an automated time, announced at the top of the minute in
"Coordinated Universal Time", which is also known as Greenwich Mean Time (GMT).
This time does not follow Daylight Saving Time changes. After the top of the minute,