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La Crosse WS-8318U
Atomic Wall Clock
with Indoor/Outdoor Temperature
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The
La Crosse WS-8318U Atomic Wall Clock shows indoor temperature, outdoor temperature, month, date,
day and moon phase. This clock
shows the
hour and minutes in numbers a full 2 inches tall. Seconds can be
optionally displayed in the lower section of the LCD panel. Depending on
the selected display mode, digital seconds are about 3/4 inch or 1/2
inch tall. A flashing colon (:)
between hour and minutes indicates seconds. The indoor temperature, and
outdoor temperature are about
3/4 inch tall, and the month, and weekday are about 1/2 inch tall. The
moon phase icon which is displayed on the lower LCD, measures about
1-1/3 inch tall. This digital atomic clock
with alarm and snooze is ideal for medium size rooms and also for those whose vision is less than perfect.
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The La Crosse WS-8318U is medium-large at
about 10 inches wide by 9-3/4 inches tall. Most of the clock's front is taken up by its
big 2-section LCD panel. The upper section is about 5 inches wide
by 2-1/2 inches high, and the lower section is about 5 inches
wide by 1-1/2 inches high. The daily alarm has a 10-minute snooze function.
Mount this clock on a wall, or extend the integral foldout stand on the back and place it on a table or a shelf. |
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The WS-8318U has
four user-selectable display modes. Information shown in the
initial display mode (pictured) includes hour and minutes, month
and date, weekday, indoor temperature, outdoor temperature, and
moon phase. The three other display modes let you display clock
seconds digitally in place of indoor temperature, outdoor
temperature, or weekday. A tower and waves icon appears in the
upper middle portion of the LCD, above the flashing colon (:)
to indicate successful reception of the atomic clock
time-synchronization radio signal.
This clock's LCD panel has 8
user-selectable contrast levels for optimum
viewing under a variety of lighting conditions.
On this clock, the four
control pushbuttons are located on the back panel to give the
front of the clock a clean, contemporary look. When
you set the alarm time on the WS-8318U,
it appears in the upper LCD panel where the
hour and minutes are shown in the initial
display mode during normal operation. The alarm is automatically
switched on when the alarm time is set, and the alarm-on
state is indicated by an alarm icon to the right of the minutes.
After the alarm time is set, you can turn the alarm on or off
during normal operation by pressing the ALM (alarm) button.
We
should mention that the outdoor temperature is transmitted
to the clock by an included TX6U wireless remote thermo
sensor/transmitter. Maximum transmission range in open areas is
330 feet (100 meters) when the TX6U is used with the WS-8318U.
Although the TX6U is splash-resistant, be sure to mount it where
it is sheltered from direct precipitation and also from direct
sunlight.
Please have a
look at the Features list below. We think that the display and
the modern styling of the WS-8318U
digital atomic wall clock with moon phase make this clock ideal
for both home and workplace use, especially in applications
where people must be able to see the time clearly from across a
room.
Note: As is typical of
Digital LCD Clocks, this one does not have a backlight for its
displays.
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Features:
- Sets
automatically to WWVB (60 kHz) radio signal from U.S. atomic
clock in Colorado. Manual setting is also
possible.
- Radio tower
and waves icon indicates WWVB signal reception.
- Giant time display
in 12-hour format:
- Hour
and minutes digits
are
2 inches tall and separated by a
flashing colon (:) that indicates
the passage of seconds.
- PM is displayed along with time
from noon to midnight.
- Hour, minutes, month, date,
and weekday are continuously displayed (as is the moon
phase).
- Four
user-selectable display modes let you display digital
seconds in place of
indoor temperature, outdoor temperature, or weekday.
- Any of 13
time zones can be set. Select Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) or -1 to
-12 hours.
- Time
zones from -4 to -10 hours and GMT (0) are displayed with 3-letter
abbreviations: ATL (Atlantic), EST (Eastern, the default
setting), CST (Central), MST (Mountain), PAC (Pacific),
ALA (Alaska), HAW (Hawaii), and GMT.
- Daylight
Saving Time (DST) on/off option.
- Full
auto-calendar for year 2003 to 2029 (default setting is
2004).
- Three-letter
month and weekday abbreviations are user-selectable for any
of 3 languages: English, French, or Spanish.
- One daily
alarm. Pressing SNZ (snooze) button suspends
alarm for 10 minutes.
- Temperature displays are in °F.
- LCD panel contrast is
user-adjustable for 8 levels for optimum viewing.
- Maximum transmission range for
remote temperature is 330 feet (100 meters).
- Clock can be wall mounted, or
integral foldout stand can be extended for placement on a
table or shelf.
- TX6U remote transmitter is
wall mounted via an included bracket into which transmitter
snaps.
- Clock is powered by three AA
(1.5V) alkaline batteries (not included), with normal life
of about 1 year.
- TX6U is powered by two AA
(1.5V) alkaline batteries (not included), with normal life
of about 1 year.
For use in sub-freezing
temperatures, AA lithium batteries are recommended instead
of alkaline.
WS-8318U
Clock Specifications:
- Time source and frequency: WWVB,
60
kHz
- Indoor temperature measuring range:
+14.1°F to +99.8°F with 0.2°F resolution
("OFL" is displayed if outside this range)
- Outdoor temperature measuring range:
-21.8° to 157.8°F with 0.2°F resolution
("OFL" is displayed if outside this range)
- Temperature checking interval:
- Indoor: every 10 seconds
- Outdoor: every 5 minutes
- Dimensions:
9.76 inches wide
10.53 inches high
1.18 inches deep
TX6U Remote Temperature
Transmitter Specifications:
- Remote
transmission of outdoor temperature to station
via 433.92 MHz signals
- Temperature
checking interval: every 1 minute, with reception by WS-8318U
clock every 5 minutes
- Splash-resistant case
- Wall
mounting
(remote unit snaps into its own wall-mounted bracket)
- Dimensions:
1.57 inches (40 mm) wide
5.04 inches (128 mm) high
0.9 inch (23 mm) deep
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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 WS-8318U
Radio Controlled Digital Clock:
The La Crosse Technology Radio
Controlled Digital 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, wait until the signal is received,
and program the desired additional settings. In locations
outside of WWVB range, 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
at midnight. (If no signal is detected, the clock performs its
WWVB check hourly until the signal is found.) As long as your clock is kept within
transmitter range, it will continue to display
the absolutely precise time, automatically adjusting for summer time/winter time
changeovers if the Daylight Saving Time option is ON. 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.
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If the order
button is there, but the shopping cart page indicates that there
are no units available, then we are temporarily out of stock.
The item should be available in a day or two. Our
inventory control system tries it's best to keep us from
allowing the sale of something we don't have on the shelf.
If there is no
order button, most likely there are bigger problems with
availability. We may be out of stock for more than a few
days.
For shipping time estimates, please see the Fedex web site at www.fedex.com.
Your package will be shipped from zip code 60544. Keep in mind, Fedex travel days do not include
weekends or holidays.
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