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Your Junghans Mega 1000 radio-controlled watch is able to automati-
cally receive the radio signals of the following time signal transmitter
stations:
– DCF77 in Mainflingen (24km south-east of Frankfurt am Main) for
Europe,
– WWVB in Fort Collins, Colorado (USA) for North America
– JJY40 on Mount Ohtakadoya (near Tokyo in north-east Japan) for
Japan
– JJY60 on Mount Hagane (in south-west Japan) for Japan,
the East coast of China (Beijing, Shanghai),
for South Korea and parts of Taiwan.
We are delighted that you have chosen the Junghans Mega1000.
Please read all of the following information, which explains the general
operating principles of radio-controlled watches and the instructions for
operating your Junghans Mega 1000, so that you can take advantage all
of the functions of your watch.
We hope that you will derive much enjoyment from this very special watch.
1. Radio technology
Cutting edge chronography.
5,000 years have now passed since the advent of chronography. Start-
ing with sundials and water clocks, advancing to mechanical clocks in
the 13th century and then followed by quartz watches, chronography
has now culminated in the radio-controlled watches by Junghans.
Radio-controlled watches by Junghans are always accurate and never
require adjustment if reception conditions are adequate. Junghans
radio-controlled watches are perfectly accurate because they are linked
to the most accurate clocks in the world by radio signals.
In Europe, this is the caesium clock of the German National Metrology
Institute (Physikalisch-Technischen Bundesanstalt, PTB) in
Braunschweig.
In North America, this is the caesium clock of the U.S. Department of
Commerce, the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
in Boulder, Colorado.
In Japan this is the caesium clock of the National Institute for
Information and Communication Technology, an association of the
government office.
GB