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A: Yes – a 9V battery keeps the alarm set time frozen during power outages. It does not power the flip motor.
A: The flip cards are custom-sized. Some owners 3D-print new numerals, but original replacements are impossible to find.
Searching for the "Proxxon LU-6868 Wecker manual" is the first step every owner takes when they unearth this classic device from an attic, a garage sale, or a relative’s estate. If you have landed here, you likely own the Proxxon LU-6868 —a hybrid device that is part flip-digit clock (Wecker), part analog AM/FM radio. This machine is a beautiful piece of late-20th-century German engineering, but without the original instruction booklet, setting its notoriously complex mechanical-digital interface can feel like deciphering an Enigma code.
A: Most likely the FM antenna wire has broken internally. Solder a 75cm copper wire to the internal antenna pad.
The (German for "alarm clock" or "waker") stands out for its flip-digit mechanism . Unlike modern LED or LCD clocks, the LU-6868 uses physical plastic cards that "flip" via a synchronous motor. The radio side features an analog tuner with a mechanical needle. This device is sought after by vintage audio enthusiasts and Kleincomputer fans because of its robust build—often outlasting three generations of cheap plastic digital clocks.
A: Yes – a 9V battery keeps the alarm set time frozen during power outages. It does not power the flip motor.
A: The flip cards are custom-sized. Some owners 3D-print new numerals, but original replacements are impossible to find. proxxon lu-6868 wecker manual
Searching for the "Proxxon LU-6868 Wecker manual" is the first step every owner takes when they unearth this classic device from an attic, a garage sale, or a relative’s estate. If you have landed here, you likely own the Proxxon LU-6868 —a hybrid device that is part flip-digit clock (Wecker), part analog AM/FM radio. This machine is a beautiful piece of late-20th-century German engineering, but without the original instruction booklet, setting its notoriously complex mechanical-digital interface can feel like deciphering an Enigma code. A: Yes – a 9V battery keeps the
A: Most likely the FM antenna wire has broken internally. Solder a 75cm copper wire to the internal antenna pad. Some owners 3D-print new numerals, but original replacements
The (German for "alarm clock" or "waker") stands out for its flip-digit mechanism . Unlike modern LED or LCD clocks, the LU-6868 uses physical plastic cards that "flip" via a synchronous motor. The radio side features an analog tuner with a mechanical needle. This device is sought after by vintage audio enthusiasts and Kleincomputer fans because of its robust build—often outlasting three generations of cheap plastic digital clocks.