rosefert.blogg.se

Wwvb radio controlled clocks
Wwvb radio controlled clocks






wwvb radio controlled clocks

They pretty much made it so it was near impossible for a person working days to use the library. The local “public” library here had their budget cut, so they made the best out of it. It created public outrage and the true story gets buried in the noise, and if all goes well they get the same funding that they used to or even more. Putting the most public services at the front of the chopping block is common fare for bureaucrats being pissey. Posted in clock hacks, Radio Hacks Tagged nist, radio, time, wwvb Post navigation What say the good readers of Hackaday? Do you think NIST is going to take down the relatively popular WWVB? Are you still using devices that sync to WWVB, or have they all moved over to pulling their time down over the Internet? If WWVB does go off the air, are you prepared to setup your own pirate time station?

wwvb radio controlled clocks

Especially since WWVB and WWV are both broadcast from Ft. That the older and largely obsolete stations will be shuttered is really no surprise, but because the NIST budget doesn’t specifically state whether or not the more modern WWVB is also included, there’s room for interpretation. The problem lies with the ambiguity of the statement. Therein lies the debate: many simply don’t believe that NIST is going to shut down a service that’s still actively being used by so many average Americans. By NIST’s own estimates, over 50 million timepieces of some form or another automatically synchronize their time using the digital signal that’s been broadcast since 1963. Today they’re primarily used as frequency standards for calibration purposes, but in recent years have been largely supplanted by low-cost oscillators.īut WWVB on the other hand is used by millions of Americans every day. In fact, most people probably don’t know they even exist. What does that mean for those who don’t live and breathe radio? The loss of WWV and WWVH is probably a non-event for anyone outside of the amateur radio world. Yet in order to save approximately $6.3 million, these time and frequency standard stations are potentially on the chopping block. The oldest of these stations, WWV, has been broadcasting in some form or another since 1920 making it the longest continually operating radio station in the United States. The NIST stations in Hawaii and Colorado are the home of WWV, WWVH, and WWVB. These radio stations transmit signals that are used to synchronize consumer electronic products like wall clocks, clock radios, and wristwatches, and may be used in other applications like appliances, cameras, and irrigation controllers. time and frequency via the NIST radio stations in Hawaii and Ft. NIST will discontinue the dissemination of the U.S. Buried on page 25 of the 2019 budget proposal for the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), under the heading “Fundamental Measurement, Quantum Science, and Measurement Dissemination”, there’s a short entry that has caused plenty of debate and even a fair deal of anger among those in the amateur radio scene:








Wwvb radio controlled clocks