The wristwatches and clocks that advertise accurate “atomic time” rely on the 60 kHz signal from WWVB in Boulder Colo. to synchronize them to official U.S. time. In the days of analog TV, some ...
NIST radio station WWVB(AM) is trying to improve its signal penetration. The station near Fort Collins, Colo. continuously broadcasts time and frequency signals at 60 kHz. The carrier frequency ...
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is changing the way it broadcasts time signals that synchronize radio-controlled "atomic" clocks and watches to official U.S. time in ways ...
The project utilizes a PIC16F628 microcontroller in order to create radio controlled clock that originates from NIST Radio Station WWVB that broadcasts on a frequency of 60kHz. The project utilizes a ...
This Atomic Nixie Clock came from the concept of building a simple Nixie clock but it turned out that a WWVB receiver and decoder chip were also employed. This Atomic Nixie Clock came from the concept ...
In the long ago, pre-internet days when your clock project wasn’t an ESP32 getting its timing via NTP over WiFi, it was still ...
Fort Collins received a mention in the new Apple TV sci-fi show "Pluribus." The show references the city's time signal radio station, WWVB, operated by the National Institute of Standards and ...
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