Features:
- Accurate to 1second per million years
- Sets automatically to WWVB radio signal
- Pushbutton selection of all four U.S. mainland time zones
- Automatically adjusts for daylight savings time
- Manual time-set capability for use anywhere outside the
WWVB signal range
- White face,
bold, modern numerals and hands in black, and a
surround of brushed steel that fits flush to the wall
- Low battery indication via 2-second steps of second hand
- Powered by one AA alkaline battery, with normal life of
over 1 year
Dimensions:
- Diameter:
16 inches overall
- Depth:
2 inches
Radio-controlled Time:
The NIST (National Institute of
Standards and Technology, Time and Frequency Division) maintains
a radio station, WWVB, in Ft. Collins, Colorado. 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.
WWVB (the station’s
identification just like any other radio station) continuously
broadcasts time and frequency signals at 60 kHz. The carrier
frequency provides a stable frequency reference traceable to the
national standard. There are no voice announcements on the
station, but a time code is synchronized with the 60 kHz carrier
and is broadcast continuously at a rate of 1 bit per second
using pulse width modulation. The time code contains the year,
day of year, hour, minute, second, and flags that indicate the
status of Daylight Saving Time, leap years, and leap seconds.
The La Crosse Technology
WT-3161WH
Atomic Clock:
The La Crosse Technology
Radio-Controlled Clock maintains its incredible accuracy by automatically
tuning into the WWVB radio signal. The built-in
antenna ensures reliable signal reception up to 2000 miles
(3200km) from the WWVB transmitter. As a result, the La Crosse
Technology clock will calibrate to the atomic clock not only
throughout the mainland U.S. but also in much of Canada. You
need only insert the battery, press the appropriate time zone
button, and wait until the signal is received (overnight). In
all other locations worldwide, the La Crosse clock can be
manually set and will provide the high degree of accuracy of any
quality quartz clock.
In a nutshell, here's how the the
La Crosse clock works: The clock's antenna is specifically tuned for optimal
reception of the 60 kHz time signal. The time signal received on the
antenna is demodulated by an onboard receiver, which sends
the information to the clock's CMOS
microprocessor for decoding. Once your clock has automatically
set its time for the first time, it ensures continuing accuracy
by automatically tuning into the WWVB radio signal once per day
after midnight. As long as your clock is kept within
transmitter range, it will continue to display
the absolutely precise time, even automatically adjusting for summer time/winter time changeovers. Should you
move your clock out of transmitter range for an extended period
of time, the clock will continue to operate as a
highly accurate quartz-controlled clock. Upon re-entering the
transmitter range, your clock will correct itself again to the
precise WWVB time signal.
This
unit does not come with batteries. It requires 1 AA
battery. |