🕰️ Time to Shine: Elevate Your Space with Effortless Elegance!
The WallarGe Atomic Wall Clock is a 12-inch, battery-operated analog clock that automatically synchronizes with WWVB radio signals for accurate timekeeping. Featuring a smart light sensor for automatic brightness adjustment, this silent clock enhances any room's ambiance while ensuring you never miss a beat. Its modern design and large, clear display make it a perfect addition to your home or office.
Item Weight | 2.47 Pounds |
Item Dimensions W x H | 12"W x 12"H |
Theme | Modern |
Shape | Round |
Dial Color | Silver |
Style | Modern |
Room Type | Living Room |
Color | Silver |
Frame Material | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene |
Material | Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS) |
Mounting Type | Wall Mount |
Watch Movement | Quartz |
Operation Mode | Atomic |
Alarm Clock | No |
Power Source | Battery Powered |
Batteries are Included | No |
Display Type | Analog |
Special Features | atomic wall clock |
E**R
Greatest Customer Service!
Clock does not work properly. The hour hand is always between two numbers on the hour. Meaning you can never tell what time it is. This is a follow up. Sometimes customer service is the best recommendation for a seller. After I wrote the first review I was contacted by the seller, GallarGe Direct. The clock was past the return time to Amazon. The seller , however, replaced the clock for me. Love the fact that this clock lights up at night. When I wake up in the middle of the night, like many of us old guys do, I can see the time. Thank you, GallarGe Dirrect!
A**N
It Works Great!
When I received my first clock, the minute hand was drooping; flopping all around with no resistance in it at all. I contacted customer services and they immediate {I mean, I got the clock the next day!] sent me a new one.Thank you, Carrie!Looks very nice above the fireplace and offers a great night light for early morning raids to the ice box.Do folks still have "ice boxes"?
C**N
Buyer Beware
BUYER BEWAREI bought this clock and have had it for several days trying to get it to operate correctly...no success.This is not OK. Its an atomic clock. People buy it to keep accurate time and not have to constantly fiddle with it.I should have seen this item is returned frequently... its terrible. Gets 1 star because the nightlight looks greatEDIT: well...I noticed the clock would always run 2 hrs ahead. So I changed the time zone to be the one 2 hrs behind me...and boom it worked. But I gotta say that kind of defect...is NOT acceptable. I will keep the clock but the 1 star remains because what ELSE is wrong with it if such a simple thing is screwed up?
N**K
Automatically sets your local time
I liked this clock so much that I ended up buying 2! When the time came to change the clocks, I didn’t have to because they changed automatically. When the light gets too dim, I just install new batteries. It is easy to read time at night because of the light. But I wear glasses, so I don’t read the time from a distance. I usually glance at the time as I walk by on my way to the bathroom. TMI.
A**T
Good clock with one flaw
Like many reviews, I agree - the the clock is great, except for one (fixable) flaw.As others mentioned, when the clock resets to 12, sometimes the hands are not actually aligned to 12 (mine, for instance, had an hour hand pointed closer to 1). After resetting a few times, I realized it was the calibration of the hands that was off.The back of the clock has six very small (need a mini screwdriver set) screws. Here's how I fixed it:1) With the clock face down on a table, I removed the screws. I set them aside.2) I lifted the black part of the clock away from the rest of the clock. There were three parts: the outer clock ring (to which the main clock was connected), a round piece of glass (be careful), and a white ring that sits between the black plastic and the inner face.3) I reset the clock (using the back buttons) and let the hands move until they got to what the clock thought was "midnight" position.4) Remove the battery for the clock.5) Align the hands to midnight.6) Replace the white ring inside the clock.7) Put the outer plastic ring face down on the table and insert the glass, aligning the glass to avoid the screw holes.8) Replace the clock body and reattach the screws.9) Insert the battery and set as instructed.The clock should have a manual calibration or calibration button. Absent that, this is a viable workaround that prevents another return for a product that works well.(Note - if you're worried about it happening again, reassemble without the glass.)Now it works great and shows the time correctly. If you are comfortable with a screwdriver, this is a low-risk purchase.
H**E
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
I was looking for a clock with a night light. Seeing the atomic option, I thought, "I'm in!" Goodness gracias this clock is pretty at night. By day it's somewhat institutional looking, like you might see in a classroom. But at night this clock takes on a personality that you would never dream of. The white, pinched face becomes a glowing blue, and the bold numbers are no longer the blotches of the day. They are shadows, winking at you in a subtle, but obvious way. They have put on their party clothes and gone dancing. If anything, they seem more visible in the dark with the teasing way they attract attention. Oh, I can see the time alright. I'm mesmerized by it. This clock has some sort of spirit in it, living, breathing, cunning, Is it friend or foe? Well, it's a little bit spooky anyway. Without reading the instructions, I installed the batteries, then turned the clock over to see if the second hand was moving. To my horror, the whole clock had taken off. All the hands were moving in a mad dash to get somewhere. Where, oh where would it end? Of course it ended at midnight. Where else? That was spooky too. I turned it over to attempt to set the current time. No way. There were strange, alluring little buttons with the letters "P M C E" above them. Could that possibly be the time zone? Let's just press C. Oh, the clock wasn't done. There was another row of letters "D S L" with a toggle switch underneath. Yes no maybe? From the core of my being the words welled up, "Day Light Savings." I played with the toggle switch and turned the clock over to see if it was still telling me it was midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. It was still midnight in the Garden. It would be midnight forever. And so I decided to set the clock aside until midnight, when I might be able to talk sense into it. And then, unseen by me, the spirit of the clock took over and set the clock to the exact correct time after being left alone for around 10 minutes. There is something invisible in the air that whispers to the clock in a secret voice and language known only to the clock and its invisible companion. "Who are you?!" I cried. But there was no answer. I gazed fondly at the clock's white face, all sulky in the daylight. The second hand moved, as second hands are supposed to do. But this one didn't tick. It glided ever so smoothly. So the whole clock had unnerved me, yet I put it on the wall. And guess what? When the dreaded time change arrives for day light savings time, this clock automatically adjusts.
TrustPilot
2 周前
1 个月前