La Crosse Technology WT-2191A, WT-2191 User Manual

WT-2191
Radio-controlled Travel Alarm Clock
Table of Contents
Topic Page
Inventory of Contents 2 Quick Setup 2 Detailed Setup Guide
Battery Installation 2 About WWVB 3 Programming 3 Time zone 3 Daylight on/off 3 Snooze setting 4
Time setting 4 Setting Alarms 4 Operating Screens 5 Traveling 5 Troubleshooting 6 Maintenance, Warranty, Contact information 6-7
INVENTORY OF CONTENTS
1. Radio controlled clock (figure 1)
2. Instruction Manual and Warranty Card.
Figure 1: Open
QUICK SETUP
1. The alarm clock is packed in the closed position. To open, flip open the cover.
2. The alarm clock requires one AA Alkaline battery. Open up the compartment insert
the battery to activate. It will start searching for a signal and set to the correct time and date, usually not until overnight. After the time and date are set, set to the correct time zone.
DETAILED SETUP GUIDE
I. BATTERY INSTALLATION
A. The alarm clock requires one AA Alkaline battery. Open up the compartment insert
the battery to activate. It will start searching for a signal and set to the correct time and date, usually not until overnight.
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II. PROGRAMMING
A. SETTING THE TIME
There are two methods by which the time and date can be set: 1) Automatically via WWVB reception, or 2) Manually.
B. WWVB (Radio-Controlled Time)
This method requires you to do nothing, except wait for the signal to be received, and to select a time zone. Reception usually takes approximately 6-10 minutes during optimal conditions. The best conditions for reception is at night, between midnight and 6:00 am—when there is less atmospheric interference. To keep your time as accurate as possible, the alarm clock conducts a WWVB search every night between these hours, and overrides any manually set time. The WWVB tower icon (appearing in the TIME LCD) will flash when a signal-search is in progress and a signal is being received, and will remain steady when the signal has been received. If the WWVB time has not been received after 10 minutes of battery installation, you may manually set the time or leave the time function alone (reception will occur regardless).
About Radio Controlled Time signal, WWVB: 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 and date 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 alarm clock. However, due to the nature of the Earth’s Ionosphere, reception is very limited during daylight hours. The alarm clock will search for a signal every night when reception is best. The WWVB radio station derives its signal 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.
C. PROGRAMMING
(includes manual time setting)
**To end the programming mode at any time, simply press the SNOOZE button
a) Press the SET button. The US map and time zone will flash (“-5” is the default). The
time zone is displayed according to “GMT”; please see below table for explanation. Press the “+” key to move the time zone West one hour until it reaches the your time zone, then press the SET key to set the time zone and move to the next programming step.
b) “DST On” will flash. Press the “+” key to toggle between the Daylight Saving Time
ON or OFF (for places that do not follow Daylight Saving Time changes). Press the SET key.
-4: Atlantic, =-5: Eastern
-6: Central, -7: Mountain
-8: Pacific, -9: Alaska
-10: Hawaii GMT: Greenwich
Mean Time
Eastern time zone shown
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