It looks like there may be a couple of different models of the 2010; from the DGT site, there is a manual for just the 2010 and one with blue buttons. Which one do you have?
Either way, it doesn't appear that either model allows for the time controls you want while using Bronstein delay; they don't support a certain number of moves in a time control. The one with the blue buttons apparently allows up to 4 periods in delay though where the other model only supports one custom period.
So, you could set the the first time control to 120 and the second one to 30 but the clock won't flag if 40 moves weren't made; I believe that is actually how the USCF suggests clocks to handle the situation, as the players should be calling it if enough moves haven't been made in the time control and they shouldn't rely on the clock's move counter to be accurate. Not sure what the FIDE stance is on that.
Both manuals show the custom setting as option 25.
It appears that ony the Fischer (increment) time controls will do it by move counts.
So, after digging around in the internet a while and not finding much to answer my questions, here is my issue.
Recently, I purchased a DGT 2010 clock. Granted, I live in North America, so maybe the DGT NA would have been a better go, but nonetheless, it seemed the 2010 would do everything the NA does with the benefit of being FIDE approved. So after waiting around a week for shipping, I recently got it in the mail.
The first thing I noticed is the Bronstein time controls (the common option for most tournament games in NA), display a little funky by adding the delay time instead of simply pausing the clock. The end result is the same (see http://youtu.be/Hpj7wLY6olA for an example), so I could easily get around this (while possibly confusing some of my opponents
) if there was an easier way to program the multiple periods. For example, if I want to play a tournament where the time controls are 40/120, then SD/30, with a delay of 10 seconds for both periods, it does not seem like there is a way to do this. There doesn't seem to be a "move limit" to each period, unless I'm missing something obvious in the programming? For those who own the clock, it is option 25-28 for the Bronstein (manual setting) time controls.
Any help would be greatly appreciated (have a tournament this weekend I do not want to bring a sticky Gametimer clock to). Thanks!