TFA_No. 60.2521_Anleitung
Radio-controlled alarm clock with vibrating wristband
Important information on product safety!
• Do not place your product near extreme temperatures, vibrations or
shocks.
5. Elements
5.1 Radio-controlled alarm clock
A: Display (Fig. 1):
A 1: Battery symbol
A 2: Snooze symbol
A 3: DCF signal
A 4: AM or PM (12-hours system)
A 5: Time with seconds or day-of-the-week / Date
A 6: Indoor temperature
A 7: Alarm 1 / Alarm 2
A 8: Alarm symbol
B: Buttons (Fig. 1):
B 1: ALARM button
B 2: ▲ button
B 3: MODE button
B 4: ▼ button
B 5: SNOOZE/LIGHT button
C: Housing (Fig. 2):
C 1: Battery compartment
5.2 Radio-controlled vibrating wristband (Fig. 2)
D 1: Switch CH1/OFF/CH2
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Radio-controlled alarm clock with vibrating wristband
D 2: Switch for the vibration intensity
D 3: SNOOZE button
D 4: USB output
D 5: LED LED signal lamp
6. Start-up of the radio-controlled alarm clock
• Open the battery compartment and insert three new batteries 1,5 V
AAA. Make sure the polarity is correct.
• The backlight turns on for a few seconds.
• A short beep tone will sound and all LCD segments will light up for a
short moment.
• The indoor temperature appears on the display.
• The clock will now scan the DCF frequency signal and the DCF sym-
bol flashes on the LCD. When the time code is received successfully
after 3-5 minutes, the radio-controlled time is displayed 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 distur-
bances, transmitting distance, etc.), the time can be set manually.
The DCF symbol disappears and the clock will then work as a normal
quartz clock. (see: Manual settings).
• It is possible to start the initialization manually. Press ▲ button for 3
seconds and the DCF signal starts to flash.
• Press the ▲ button again and the current reception will be deacti-
vated.
• The DCF symbol for "very weak" stays on the display.
• Reception status:
very weak
weak
good
very good
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