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2007-03-11 05:45:23 · 4 answers · asked by tooqerq 6 in Consumer Electronics Other - Electronics

It always used to reset itself before I woke up Sunday morning.

2007-03-11 05:55:43 · update #1

4 answers

Does your atomic clock have a calendar mode, where you set the month, day and year as well as hr:min?

Maybe your atomic clock's daylight saving time rule is coded into the clock, which means it will spring forward and fall back according to the old rule (1st Sunday in April, last Sunday in October). If you can, disable the automatic DST rule and remember to move the clock forward/backward as needed, and let the atomic clock lock onto the signal for min:sec accuracy.

2007-03-12 02:59:17 · answer #1 · answered by CMass Stan 6 · 0 0

in case you bypass to mattress the night till now the replace and set your clock you would be placing it one hour back. no count if it particularly is 10pm once you bypass to mattress the clock will now think of it particularly is 9pm. If the alarm is desperate for 8am then the clock will alarm 11 hrs later. If the alarm became into set back prematurly then whilst the alarm went off at 8am something of the international might have faith it became into 9am and you'd be previous due. The clocks are set back this twelve months at 2am on Nov 4, 2007.

2017-01-04 07:11:00 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

We have two atomic clocks. Both take days, maybe weeks, to reset themselves. The easiest thing is just to change the time yourself, or remove the battery and put it back in.

2007-03-11 05:54:30 · answer #3 · answered by Larry 6 · 1 0

I really don't know. It should. The atomic place is in Colorado so maybe they forgot to set the time.

2007-03-11 05:53:41 · answer #4 · answered by blazek35 5 · 0 0

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