OK Noam, I think you have the answer! I always have the CM15A connected to the PC with the USB cable. I turn the PC off at about nine PM. I mean I turn it all the way off, not just into power save. The batteries are supposed to keep the clock running in the CM right? If they don't and the clock goes off time, It won't start to adjust back until I turn the PC back on at around 8:30 AM. By the time the next timer activates (around 8:PM) the time is adjusted back to nearly correct. Is there a way to see the actual time that the CM has at any chosen moment? Could I look at it first thing in the morning to see? Wayne
You can't see the CM15A's time, but you should be able to figure it out yourself, with a little testing.
You already know that by 7:00 AM, the time is an hour fast.
Set up an "indicator" module (you can use a lamp, or a chime module, or even listen for the "click" of an appliance module).
Set up timers to turn it on and/or off every hour or so. Since you know what time it SHOULD be happening, keep an eye on it through the night, and compare when the timer runs to when it SHOULD run.
The "clock drift" is (reportedly) due to a design flaw in the CM15A. Instead of using a clock chip, the designers decided to same money and count the 60Hz power cycles, and use those to track the time. Since power fluctuations can happen, the time can get off sync.
Unfortunately, the only solution I know of is to keep the Pc running 24/7.