Many radio broadcasters around the world use the Greenwich Time Signal, or a variant thereof, as a means to mark the start of the hour. The pips are used in both domestic and international commercial and public broadcasting. Many radio stations use six tones similar to those used by the BBC World Service; some shorten it to five, four, or three tones. On some broadcasters the final pip is of a different pitch. •
Australia – Pips are used on
ABC Radio National and
ABC Local Radio at the top of every hour, as well as on
Fairfax Media talkback stations-
2UE,
3AW,
4BC and
6PR. In Australia, the news pips are closer to 735 Hz and each of the six pips lasts for half a second. After each pip, there is half a second of silence. The pips were discontinued on
ABC Radio Sydney on 23 November 2023 to coincide with the station's 100th anniversary. •
Brazil – Some news stations, such as the national station
Radio Bandeirantes, and the regional stations
Radio Guaíba and
Radio Gaúcha broadcasts a similar time signal every 15 minutes. In Radio Bandeirantes, there is a 5-pip signal (called "fifth signal"), broadcast every 15 minutes. In Radio Gaúcha, a four-pip signal with three tones in 920 Hz and the last in 1360 Hz is broadcast every 15 minutes. The musical radio network Atlântida FM, which broadcasts to the states of
Rio Grande do Sul and
Santa Catarina transmits an audible signal every 15 minutes, composed by the first four notes of the song "
Here Comes the Sun". •
Bulgaria – On all
BNR radio stations, the pips are broadcast on the hour. Five short pips and a long pip is broadcast between :55 and :00. The time signal broadcast at 15:00 EET is from Bulgarian Institute of Metrology. •
Canada – The
National Research Council Time Signal was broadcast daily on
Ici Radio-Canada Première at 12:00 EST/EDT and on
CBC Radio One at 13:00 EST/EDT. It was Canada's longest running radio feature and had been broadcast every day from 5 November 1939 until 10 October 2023. •
Egypt –
Nile FM broadcasts pips similar to the BBC on the hour at 07:00hrs daily at the start of the Big Breakfast show with Rob Stevens and Nadine. •
Finland – On
Yle's radio services the pips are broadcast on the hour. •
Hong Kong – A six-pip time signal is used on
RTHK's radio channels. The signals, which are provided by the
Hong Kong Observatory, are broadcast every half-hour during the day and on the hour at night, immediately before the news headline reports. •
Israel – On Israeli Public Broadcasting Corporation hourly radio news, five tones (part of a recording of Kol Israel's original beeps) play counting down to the hour. Right as the hour starts, a jingle starts playing, the end of which includes the IPBC's
sonic ident and an a cappella singing the name of the broadcaster "Kan". This jingle replaced the original six tones that played on
Kol Israel's hourly newscasts; these pips were 1.05
kHz tones, the first five of which lasted a quarter of a second each, and the final pip lasted 0.85 s. As of 2017 (when public broadcaster
IBA was shut down and replaced by the IPBC or "
Kan"), the intro was changed and added a jingle. In 2023, this jingle was replaced with a new one. This jingle is played twice, before the headlines, which are now read at 30 seconds to the hour, and then immediately following. The second iteration includes the tones counting down to the hour, which were left as a "memorial to the historical soundtrack". •
Japan –
NHK Television formerly used three short pips played at :57 to :59 of the clock ident and a longer three-second pip from :00 to :03 just before the start of news programmes. The longer three-second pip can however be crashed shortly after the :00 mark on certain special events or if there were time constraints. •
Netherlands – In the NPO (Netherlands Public Broadcasting), the signals have been around since 1948, when six pips were used. In 1991 they went down to three. Broadcast of the traditional pips stopped with the last transmission at 7:00 on 2 October 2018, leading way to a new design with three pips that count down to exactly the full hour and make way for a short tune. Other radio stations may still use the traditional beeps at every hour. •
New Zealand –
RNZ National plays the six pips at the top of every hour. Additionally, a
bird call is played before the 7:00 and 9:00 news on Morning Report. •
Russia – Russia's state radio channels broadcast six tones (five little pips and one short beep). The duration of the sixth pip depends on the current hour: it is 100 ms at midnight Moscow time (
UTC+3) and increases by 20 ms every hour, up to 560 ms at 23:00 UTC+3 (the first five pips always are 100 ms long). Russia's state television
Channel One broadcasts six tones too (at the end of a short melody) before newscasts and
Vremya (the primetime news programme). •
Spain –
Cadena SER, the country's largest private radio network, plays a time signal with six pips at the top of every hour. •
United States –
NIST operates a
speaking clock audio-only station,
WWV. •
Vietnam – The
Voice of Vietnam broadcasts six tones (five short pips and one long pip) before 6:00am, 12:00pm, 6:00pm and 9:00pm everyday on two flagship channels VOV1 and VOV2. ==See also==