What do you set your watches to?

What do you set your watches to?

Author
Discussion

Tall_martin

Original Poster:

54 posts

77 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
Just curious.

As a wee kid occasionally I was allowed to phone 123 and set my watch to that.

Then it was the beeps on radio 4.

Now all my radios are on dab mostly I use the time on the work computers and don't bother with the seconds.

What do you use?

Mazinbrum

992 posts

185 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
Time.is

toasty

7,775 posts

227 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
Synch them with my phone.


Doofus

28,427 posts

180 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
timeanddate.com

snuffy

10,459 posts

291 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
The Greenwich observatory ball.

vixen1700

24,158 posts

277 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
Atomic clock app on my phone.

Ranger 6

7,182 posts

256 months

Zaichik

284 posts

43 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
As this is PH, you will have a high performance Ubiquiti/Unifi network at home.
The right solution is the addition of a Precision Time Protocol Grandmaster clock system with a roof mounted GNSS antenna.
This will provide the kind of precision needed at the relevant cost/performance level expected on these boards.

https://edgenetworks.uk/synchronisation/sync-produ...


Frankychops

981 posts

16 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
Zaichik said:
As this is PH, you will have a high performance Ubiquiti/Unifi network at home.
The right solution is the addition of a Precision Time Protocol Grandmaster clock system with a roof mounted GNSS antenna.
This will provide the kind of precision needed at the relevant cost/performance level expected on these boards.

https://edgenetworks.uk/synchronisation/sync-produ...
you'll also know that GNSS is off by a few seconds compared to UK time.

Lotobear

7,140 posts

135 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
I always rely on my deadbeat longcase regulator with its mercury pendulum bob suspended on an invar rod - either that or the town hall clock.

Soleith

527 posts

96 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
PTP signal in LD4

Zaichik

284 posts

43 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
Frankychops said:
you'll also know that GNSS is off by a few seconds compared to UK time.
I would be very surprised - there are at least four GNSS constellations available from the UK (GPS, Galileo, GLONASS and BeiDou) as well as several augmentation systems that improve accuracy and/or allow for error removal.
Which is why powerfully built director types also ensure they have a multi frequency, multi constellation GNSS receiver.


Tall_martin

Original Poster:

54 posts

77 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
These are an excellent mix of Piss taking and helpful answers

blue_haddock

3,864 posts

74 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
The sun dial in the garden.

Collectingbrass

2,391 posts

202 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
I check mine against the station clock. I've heard that the station master checks the station clock against the clock on my east tower but I couldn't possibly comment.

thebraketester

14,704 posts

145 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
I have my watch butler set all mine for me.

RustyMX5

8,250 posts

224 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
I use the new optical atomic clock at JILA (which takes into account gravimetric variances observed through General Relativity) and set the hands on my Benson accordingly.

Usually though I just look at my phone and set the hands on my watch to say the same thing. By the end of the day it's only drifted a bit. The Seagull on the other hand can drift by up to 2 minutes in 24 hours which is probably why I always seem to miss the 17:28 tube back home although that could also be TFL making stuff up as they go along.

The Dictator

1,410 posts

147 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
I used to use Time.is as mentioned already, to set my Explorer, but I now have a G Shock with Multiband 6 and Bluetooth connectivity, which updates itself up to 4 times within a 24hr period.

Seems excessive, but I enjoy the technology nonetheless.

Frankychops

981 posts

16 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
Zaichik said:
I would be very surprised - there are at least four GNSS constellations available from the UK (GPS, Galileo, GLONASS and BeiDou) as well as several augmentation systems that improve accuracy and/or allow for error removal.
Which is why powerfully built director types also ensure they have a multi frequency, multi constellation GNSS receiver.
I use it with a delay offset with a rubidium oscillator, I don't want to get the launch time of my nukes wrong.

The Big G

998 posts

175 months

Monday 8th July
quotequote all
The simple solution I have is a radio controlled wall clock in my study which updates itself once a day overnight. The drift of the quartz movement over the following 24 hours is negligible. Then if I wish to be accurate I use this. Or if close enough, then the time on my phone or news channel and restart when the minute changes. Some clocks only need to be approximately good enough!