Kincaid Radio Controlled Clock Instruction Manual __hot__

Setting up a Kincaid radio-controlled clock (often branded under Howard Miller or similar quartz movements) follows a specific "atomic" synchronization process. Since these clocks rely on radio signals from Fort Collins, Colorado (WWVB), the setup is mostly hands-off but requires correct initial positioning. The Clock Depot Initial Setup & Automatic Setting Select Your Time Zone:

PART 1: First Awakening (Initial Setup)

  1. Insert 2x AA batteries (lithium recommended for cold climates or existential dread). The second hand will twitch. Do not be alarmed. This is the “listening phase.”
  2. Do not touch the clock for the next 3–12 minutes. It is not broken. It is, in fact, performing its most sacred task: triangulating the ghost of time from the radio waves passing through your walls.
  3. Place the clock near a window between midnight and 5 AM for the initial sync. Radio signals travel best when the world is asleep and the electromagnetic noise of humanity recedes.

: The clock will typically exit manual mode automatically if no buttons are pressed for 6–10 seconds. www.american-time.com Troubleshooting and Tips kincaid radio controlled clock instruction manual

The clock receives this signal automatically every night. If the clock loses the signal for a few days, it will continue to run on its internal quartz mechanism but may drift slightly until it reconnects with the radio signal. Setting up a Kincaid radio-controlled clock (often branded

Part 1: Unboxing and Initial Setup

Before your Kincaid clock can receive the radio signal, you must perform a basic manual setup to establish the hands' reference position. Insert 2x AA batteries (lithium recommended for cold