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Communications Government The Almighty Buck United States Technology

WWV Shortwave Time Broadcasts May Be Slashed In 2019 (qrz.com) 305

New submitter SteveSgt writes: A forum thread on QRZ.com indicates that the shortwave time broadcasts by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) from stations WWV (Colorado) and WWVH (Hawaii) may be slashed in budget year 2019. [One of the proposed reductions includes "$6.3 million supporting fundamental measurement dissemination, including the shutdown of NIST radio stations in Colorado and Hawaii."] While the WWV broadcasts may seem like an anachronism to some Slashdotters, they remain a crucial component in many unexpected services, from over-the-air broadcasters and traffic signals, to medical devices, wall clocks, and wrist watches. The signals serve as standard beacons for radio propagation, and as a frequency reference for alignment of a broad range of communications equipment. It's easy to imagine that not even the NIST knows every service and device that could be impacted by this decision.
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WWV Shortwave Time Broadcasts May Be Slashed In 2019

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  • WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by asackett ( 161377 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @08:31PM (#57127778) Homepage

    This, coincident with a $717B Defense Authorization?

    We need to have a very serious conversation with the god who blessed America. Fucker's high on something.

    • Re: WTF? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      American politics is no longer about big government vs. small government. Both parties like big government and increase spending. The primary disagreement is what type of big government to support. The Democrats favor entitlement spending while Republicans favor defense spending.

      We also have an obsession with worshiping the military and pretending they can do wrong. It's a form of excessive political correctness, with particularly strong support from Republicans. I assume it's partly an overreaction to the

      • Re: WTF? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by asackett ( 161377 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @09:08PM (#57128010) Homepage

        Be of good cheer, the military-industrial state will soon collapse.
        Meanwhile, we must do all in our power to oppose, resist, and subvert
        its desperate aggrandizements. As a matter of course. As a matter of
        honor.
                -- Edward Abbey, _Down The River_

      • Re: WTF? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by youngone ( 975102 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @09:25PM (#57128104)

        I assume it's partly an overreaction to the awful treatment of troops returning from Vietnam.

        I assume it's because the US military learned a lesson from Vietnam, which was that they needed to control the narrative.
        That is why reporters were "embedded" during the Gulf Wars, and also why the US military pays the NFL so much money every year for those very strange "salute to service" games which look an awful lot like Nuremberg rallies to those of us who live outside the US.

        It's called propaganda and the US has the most effective propaganda machine the world has ever known.

        • by CRC'99 ( 96526 )

          You mean like the 'nazi salute' that everyone knows was actually an American thing?

          It was called the Bellamy salute - which was adopted by the nazi's for being so effective. Of course, after this, the American version became that you put your hand over your heart.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

          How quickly we forget...

        • Re: WTF? (Score:5, Interesting)

          by dcw3 ( 649211 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @06:29AM (#57129444) Journal

          It's called propaganda and the US has the most effective propaganda machine the world has ever known.

          That's quite a stretch. It's really nothing more than the DoD marketing campaign. I'll agree with you, in that the pendulum has swung from one extreme to the other, but I'm also just starting to see signs of a turn back toward the middle. Calling every veteran a hero, and all the "thank you for your service" stuff is a bit much for me, and I'm a veteran...one day a year is enough for me, thank you very much.

        • and also why the US military pays the NFL so much money every year for those very strange "salute to service" games which look an awful lot like Nuremberg rallies to those of us who live outside the US.

          Right.

          Remember when NFL games were just that. A quick SSB at the beginning and then "get ready for some football". Since 9/11 its turned into this masturbation of faux patriotism that the vast majority of fans could give two fucks about. They just want to see the game.

    • We need to have a very serious conversation with the god who blessed America. Fucker's high on something.

      I'm sure he has been smoking weed ever since he created the universe. I call it The Big Bong Theory.

      • I'm sure he has been smoking weed ever since he created the universe. I call it The Big Bong Theory.

        That could be a new Netflix show.
        Cheech and Chong, along with the Trailer Park Boys, would play a comical version of Greek Gods, meddling with mortals and having a good time.

  • While WWV is a useful service, I have to question a cost of $6.3 MM/year. A rough calc says it costs less than $250K/yr in electrical power for both sites. I'll grant another $1MM for equipment maintenance and personnel. They already have to maintain time and frequency standards, by law.

    As far as time and frequency dissemination goes, GPS does a vastly better job, with better coverage in almost all cases.
    • Re: Economy? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by jetole ( 1242490 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @08:53PM (#57127922)
      GPS tend to be more expensive but I'd really like to see a $50 wall clock that's always accurate to milliseconds and, on the other hand, I can place that clock in areas that can't receive a GPS signal. Sure fewer people are wearing watches but it seems to be the norm on all emergency services and military personnel as well as some of us who just enjoy to easily tell the time from a durable device that doesn't need to charge every night. Sure GPS may be better in many situations but there are a lot of valid use cases where WWV still is the best solution, in my opinion.
      • Re: Economy? (Score:4, Informative)

        by msauve ( 701917 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @09:19PM (#57128074)
        Not sure where you live, buy my WWV clock in the midwest is very "iffy" for reception. A $25 GPS receiver is much more reliable (and accurate). But I'd like to see a $50 wall clock which uses WiFi and NTP - really only needs to connect once a day like the WWV ones, so power requirements would be minimal. If it needs C cells instead of AA, so be it. (Looks.like those might exist now!, via alibaba)
        • by adolf ( 21054 )

          That'd be as easy as hanging a cheap pre-paid Android phone on the wall...if Android supported NTP.

          (Sadly, it does not.)

          • That'd be as easy as hanging a cheap pre-paid Android phone on the wall...if Android supported NTP.
            (Sadly, it does not.)

            Are [stackoverflow.com] you sure [xda-developers.com] about that?

      • Re: Economy? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @09:31PM (#57128134)

        I'd really like to see a $50 wall clock that's always accurate to milliseconds

        They used to be, back when clocks were powered from an AC wall socket. Their gears were synchronized with the AC motor, and the power company worked really really hard to make sure the long-term average AC cycle was exactly 60 Hz. If equipment problems caused the frequency to drop slightly below 60 Hz, they'd run at slightly above 60 Hz for long enough to get the clocks back on the correct time.

        Then we switched to clocks running off batteries with built-in quartz timing mechanisms. In theory they're better, but in practice they're never calibrated well enough or their calibration drifts with age and temperature, making them less accurate than the old AC powered clocks. The best quartz watch I had lost a little less than a second a month. Then I got too greedy and killed the golden goose - tried adjusting the quartz timing mechanism myself. After that I could never get it below 2 seconds of drift per month. What I didn't realize until it was too late was that as the error gets smaller, you have to wait longer between each adjustment (weeks) to determine if you had improved it or overshot. With the 60 Hz power line method, only a single clock has to be calibrated to be super-accurate; and all the other clocks powered by AC synchronize off it.

        • by adolf ( 21054 )

          Just about all plug-in clocks that do not have a wall-wart, like the cheap LED bedside alarm clocks or the clock on your stove, still are timed from the utility. The chips that do this are wickedly inexpensive and *just work*.

          My grandfather worked in rural electrification back in the day. He told me that they tracked variations in frequency during the day and intentionally caught up on any errors at night when load was (relatively) low, just to keep the clocks accurate.

          • Just about all plug-in clocks that do not have a wall-wart, like the cheap LED bedside alarm clocks or the clock on your stove, still are timed from the utility. The chips that do this are wickedly inexpensive and *just work*.

            Unless you live somewhere with frequent power outages... clock on my last stove would lose time in that scenario. That house burned up in a recent fire in lake county, though, so that stove is now gone :p

        • making them less accurate than the old AC powered clocks.

          Define your accuracy requirements. Quartz clocks have orders of magnitude better short term accuracy than anything grid synchronized. The grid has far greater accuracy over the long term.

          The GP said millisecond accuracy, the fact is that wall synchronized clocks never achieved this. On a given day they could be all over the place. In fact their accuracy can often be out by many seconds before producers take action to get the frequency back in sync with the clock, and that is hardly surprising when you think

      • by Ellis D. Tripp ( 755736 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @09:46PM (#57128198) Homepage

        on 60 kHz. The WWV/WWVH services being cut are on HF (2.5-25 MHz).

        The loss of those frequencies will obsolete the older HF clocks, like the Heathkit GC-1000 "Most Accurate Clock" I have in my ham shack. As well as removing the other functions they provided besides time, such as precision frequency reference (zero beat a signal generator or receiver VFO against WWV's carrier, and you know it is exactly on frequency), and the various frequencies throughout the HF band provide useful propagation checks, as well.

        Oh well, the $6M they save can pay off a lot of porn stars, or cover the security detail for a couple rounds of golf in Bedminster...

        • by adolf ( 21054 )

          But why does it cost $6M?

          It's just a few transmitters and some awesome clocks, very carefully intertwined.

          I know that engineers aren't cheap and power isn't free, but $6M buys a lot of transmitter/clock/tower maintenance and electricity every year.

      • I have wanted a POE NTP wall clock for a while, but that doesn't abrogate the utility of WWV. It is useful to have a terrestrial time reference in case things go to shit in orbit. It is good to have a variety of independent time references.

        But, my clocks are wwvb, which someone else pointed out is apparently not impacted.

      • NTP will give you accurate time sync across your network of about 1 millisecond. Ntpd on your ntp server ( will keep your local network time to within a few milliseconds of worldwide network time. Frequently your DNS server or router will also serve as your DNS server.

        You can of course connect a single GPS receiver to your NTP server and thereby keep your whole network within a millisecond or so of perfect time using just one GPS server.

        Precision Time Protocol (PTP) provides much greater precision.

        NTP is f

      • GPS time is currently off UTC by (iirc) about 15 seconds. Granted, it's a fixed offset that could be easily fixed (simply do a -15 seconds) but that's not part of GPS yet. Until GPS time can't be a replacement for any other UTC time signal.

    • Re:Economy? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by slyborg ( 524607 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @10:09PM (#57128304)

      This may surprise you, but GPS in-building penetration is zero. Whereas the longwave signals from WWV keep a clock I have in my basement synchronized. So yeah, GPS does a vastly better job at providing location, because that's what it's for, and pretty much is shit for providing cheap time sync.
      Oh, and as of the 2012 budget, GPS operating costs were $2M ... *a day*.

      The real issue here is that this is something that primarily provides a useful service for the little guy and doesn't have armies of lobbyists shilling it, so even if it cost $1.50/yr, let's cut it, because it's SOCIALISM.

      • by adolf ( 21054 )

        The first GPS receiver I ever had was a Garmin Nuvi. It took a long time for it to cold start in my living room when I first got it, but it *did* work.

        My current cell phone, an S7, gets GPS coverage inside most buildings with windows, with large positional errors -- but good enough for (most) time stuff. It does this far better than the OG Motorola Droid did, but even that would find a fix on at least one bird indoors.

        The $6 clone GPS receiver I have on my RPi works a treat indoors, too: All kinds of cha

    • I have to question a cost of $6.3 MM/year.

      Gimme your PayPal and I'll transfer you $2. That will cover your personal contribution to this endeavor for the next century, plus change.

  • by jetole ( 1242490 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @08:45PM (#57127870)
    As long as I find plans to create a short-range broadcaster / emulator out of a raspberry pi for my watch and clocks as well as one for all of my relatives and friends that I bought wall clocks for. ...but I'd rather it just stay.
    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      Problem is, you can't legally broadcast on any of the WWV frequencies. And rightly so - it's not like WiFi, where you lock to a particular AP, it would be useless with multiple signals in an area.
      • Problem is, you can't legally broadcast on any of the WWV frequencies. And rightly so

        Agree. Broadcasting on frequencies 2.5Mh, 5Mh, 10Mh, etc would bring the wrath of the FCC down on you. They're not for general public use.

        HOWEVER: if those frequencies are suddenly unused by the government, I wouldn't mind having a small transmitter in the house on those freqs that would feed time to all of the radio clocks I currently have. A raspberry Pi, a GPS receiver module, and a pirate radio broadcasting signal sounds just about right. I'm not trying to reach the other side of the world or the

      • This is why I said short-range. I was already aware of the legalities. If the signal is unused and my transmission doesn't extend past the perimeter of my home then, while I may be violating certain restrictions, I would be doing so in a manner that will not be observable outside my home and will not be overlapping with other signal on that frequency. Ultimately my goal is to allow me to continue to sync my watch and wall clocks. Furthermore, if need be, I can limit this to a precise window since most atomi
  • Make no mistake (Score:5, Insightful)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @08:59PM (#57127954) Journal

    "$6.3 million supporting fundamental measurement dissemination, including the shutdown of NIST radio stations in Colorado and Hawaii."]

    The NIST is under the Secretary of Commerce, Wilbur Ross, who is a cryptkeeper who only stays alive through daily applications of graft and corruption. Here's an article about just how corrupt this ancient swamp thing really is.

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/d... [forbes.com]

    The $6,3 million saved will pay for a lot of KFC Gravy Bowls on Air Force One. Plus, Colorado and Hawaii voted for Hillary, so fuck them libs, amirite? Trump is just that kind of petty degenerate..

    • I think that is offensive to cryptkeepers everywhere.

    • As much as I dislike Trump, the specific line items in the budget are decided by Congress. The President only gets to sign or veto the whole thing as a single package.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by PopeRatzo ( 965947 )

        As much as I dislike Trump, the specific line items in the budget are decided by Congress.

        Wrong. Not with a department within a department. Do you believe Congress approved the spending for Trump's Space Force?

        You really think every time Wilbur Ross decides to take a private plane instead of a commercial airliner that Congress has to approve that?

        Plus, if you go to the NIST's own website, this is what they say on the matter:

        " The FY 2019 request is a net decrease of $49.0 million from FY 2018 levels. The

    • Re:Make no mistake (Score:4, Insightful)

      by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @09:39PM (#57128168)

      >"The $6,3 million saved will pay for a lot of KFC Gravy Bowls on Air Force One. Plus, Colorado and Hawaii voted for Hillary, so fuck them libs, amirite? Trump is just that kind of petty degenerate.."

      I don't want to see the WWV dismantled. I have lots of equipment that use it both at home and work. But I really would like someone to explain to me how it can possibly cost 6.3 million dollars a year for such an incredibly simple function/technology. THAT should be the uptake here- not that we don't need or shouldn't have the service, but why does it need cost so much?

      • But I really would like someone to explain to me how it can possibly cost 6.3 million dollars a year for such an incredibly simple function/technology.

        The explanation is as simple as reading TFS:

        "$6.3 million supporting fundamental measurement dissemination, including the shutdown of NIST radio stations in Colorado and Hawaii."

        WWV is only one small part of the $6.3 million. The rest is probably metrology standards of various kinds, which is an even more frightening loss than WWV. In theory, WWV could even

      • Re:Make no mistake (Score:5, Interesting)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday August 15, 2018 @03:08AM (#57129030) Homepage Journal

        It's not that simple.

        First it needs an accurate source of time. These days that could be GPS, but it needs to keep working when GPS is not available so you need an atomic clock at each site.

        Then you need some equipment to generate the signal. Yeah, a Raspberry Pi could do it, but have you certified that Python script to be correct and to produce a signal that is synchronized within nanoseconds of the atomic clock?

        Finally you need a high power transmitter to broadcast it. Actually you need five because it broadcasts on five different frequencies.

        Oh, and you need to keep monitoring it, not just at the transmitter but around the country to ensure propagation and accuracy. Conditions change, if you are relying on it for anything important you have to keep checking.

        $6.3m actually sounds quite reasonable for such a system.

  • WWV[H][B[ (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 14, 2018 @09:01PM (#57127966)

    NIST is taking a gigantic budget hit. WWV/etc is just one victim. We are headed back to the scientific dark ages...

    From what I've read, there was no mention of WWV-B, the VLF broadcast that such gadgets as people's clocks depend on. Is that on the chopping block too? (probably. grr)

  • i have two radio controlled clocks i will have to throw out, both set their time by WWVB at 60_KHz, i can understand the need to cut back but dont eliminate WWV completely, get rid of 15 & 20 MHz, and just keep WWVB on 60_KHz, and WWV 2.5, 5 & 10 MHZ because 15 & 20 is rarely heard since propagation rarely favors those higher frequencies, and possibly switch to SSB because AM requires more power output so it could save a little on the electric bill, canada uses SSB on their time frequencies on
    • by Megane ( 129182 )

      i have two radio controlled clocks i will have to throw out, both set their time by WWVB at 60_KHz

      Or you could RTFS and see no mention of WWVB.

  • Some nation attacks US in the crypto battlefield: sats and .ip driven life stop.
    With my battery driven sw I could at least know the time, important? Importand during that kind of crisis?
    I remember a time when wwv had a strong signal, world wide - is it just me or have they really reduced powered? Last I checked while in Costa Rica 2.5 wasn't there 5 was weak 10 was weak and 15 didn't exist.

  • It's easy to imagine that not even the NIST knows every service and device that could be impacted by this decision.

    It's easy to imagine that we'll find out in very short order what was impacted, when they turn off the service; and that the resulting lawsuits will end up costing them well over the amount they hoped to save.

    Ready, fire, aim!

  • It's easy to imagine that not even the NIST knows every service and device that could be impacted by this decision.

    There's no fucking way the NIST knows half the shit that could be impacted by this decision. [FIFY]

  • WWV and WWVH are different from WWVB. WWV and WWVH are voice, WWVB is what the clocks are automatically set to. Still cancelling the voice service seems a little ridiculous to save 0000.1% of the federal budget, maybe what they should do is overlay the time signal on news and more informational broadcasts, i know there is already some informational broadcasting but it certainly could be expanded to justify the expense, however.

    • by SteveSgt ( 3465 )

      The budget proposal says:

      ...including the shutdown of NIST radio stations in Colorado and Hawaii

      So perhaps all broadcast operations in Colorado will be shut down.
      According to this page, WWVB is also in Colorado:
      [ https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-... [nist.gov] ]

      NIST radio station WWVB is located on the same site as NIST HF radio station WWV near Fort Collins, Colorado.

      So it looks to me like WWVB could also be on the chopping block.

  • There are 2 services
    WWV + WWVH - which the NIST cut from their own budget. This is mostly the classic "At the tone, the time will be XXX", but includes some electromagnetic propagation reports etc. There are some tones with phase shift data

    WWVB - The BINARY format version, which is NOT on the chopping block, and IS widely used!!

  • WWV/WWVH are outdated and were replaced by WWVB... so nothing of value seems lost.

  • It's all part of the process...

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

Working...