Radio clock Dedicated time signal broadcasts The telegraphic distribution of time signals was made obsolete by the use of AM, FM,
shortwave radio, Internet
Network Time Protocol servers as well as
atomic clocks in
satellite navigation systems. Time signals have been transmitted by radio since 1905. There are dedicated
radio time signal stations around the world. Time stations operating in the
longwave radio band have highly predictable
radio propagation characteristics, which gives low uncertainty in the received time signals. Stations operating in the
shortwave band can cover wider areas with relatively low-power transmitters, but the varying distance that the signal travels increases the uncertainty of the time signal on a scale of milliseconds. Radio time signal stations broadcast the time in both audible and machine-readable
time code form that can be used as references for
radio clocks and
radio-controlled watches. Typically, they use a national or regional
longwave digital signal; for example, station
WWVB in the U.S. . to delay their analog broadcast by about eight seconds, so it remains in sync with the digital stream. Thus, network-generated time signals and service cues will also be delayed by about eight seconds. (Because of the delay, when
WBEN-AM in
Buffalo, New York was broadcasting time markers, and was simulcast on an FM station that broadcast in HD; the FM signal did not carry the time signal. WBEN does not broadcast in HD.) Local signals may also be delayed. The
all-news radio stations of the
CBS Radio Network, of which WCBS is the flagship, air a "bong" (at a frequency of 440 Hz – the international standard for the
musical note) that immediately precedes each top-of-the-hour network newscast. (The same bong could be heard on the
CBS Television Network, at the top of the hour immediately before the beginning of any televised program, in the 1960s and 1970s.) An automated "chirp" at one second before the hour signals a switch to the radio network broadcast. As an example,
KNX, the CBS Radio Network all-news station in Los Angeles, broadcasts this "bong" sound on the hour. However, due to buffering of the digital broadcast on some computers, this signal may be delayed as much as 20 seconds from the actual start of the hour (this is presumably the same situation for all CBS Radio stations, as each station's digital stream is produced and distributed in a similar manner), though unlike program content which is on a
broadcast delay for content concerns, the time signal airs as-is over-the-air, meaning it can sometimes be talked over during a live news event or sports play-by-play.
KYW-AM in Philadelphia broadcasts a time signal at the top of the hour along with its
jingle.
Bonneville International-owned news/talk station
KSL (AM-FM) in Salt Lake City uses a "clang" that originates from the Nauvoo Bell on Temple Square, in Salt Lake City, which has been a staple on the station since the early 1960s. In Canada, the national English-language non-commercial
CBC Radio One network broadcast the daily
National Research Council Time Signal from 5 November 1939 until 9 October 2023. The simulcast would occur daily at 1pm
Eastern Time. Its French-language counterpart,
Radio-Canada, broadcasts a similar signal at noon.
Vancouver radio station
CKNW also broadcasts time signals, using a chime every half-hour. Time signals on CBC broadcasts may be delayed up to 3 seconds due to network processing delays between the local radio transmitter and the time signal origin in Ottawa. The CBC's predecessor, the
Canadian National Railways Radio network, broadcast the time signal over its
Ottawa station, CNRO (originally CKCH), at 9 pm daily and also on its Moncton station, CNRA, beginning in 1923. CNRA closed in 1931 but the broadcasts continued on CNRO when the station was acquired by the
Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission in 1933 and by the CBC in 1936 before going national in 1939. In Australia, many information-based radio stations broadcast time signals at the beginning of the hour, and a
speaking clock service was also available until October 2019. However, the
VNG dedicated time signal service has been discontinued. In Cuba,
Radio Reloj is a radio station which has a time signal over news. Radio Reloj translates to Clock Radio.
Digital delay Program material, including time signals, that is transmitted digitally (e.g.
DAB,
Internet radio) can be delayed by tens of seconds due to buffering and error correction, making time signals received on a digital radio unreliable when accuracy is needed. ==See also==