(steering the topic back to steps, smears, and leap seconds)

Tony, Rob,

It's not surprising if the Corpus Clock is disciplined against MSF. This trick 
is used more often than you think. John C Taylor presented at the Caltech "Time 
for Everyone" symposium in 2013:

http://saving-time.org/timeforeveryone/speakers/dr-john-c-taylor
http://saving-time.org/timeforeveryone/program/

While there he revealed another of his inventions, the "intelligent pendulum", 
which you can see in the top third of this image from his web site:

http://www.johnctaylor.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/montage-myvision-science.jpg

A more detailed set of photos and description of the prototype is found here:

http://www.marbleproductdesign.co.uk/projects/intelligent-pendulum.php

It's a battery operated device that functions both as a cosmetically 
appropriate pendulum bob (of sufficient mass) and an accurate quartz clock (of 
superior accuracy). The trick is to use an embedded accelerometer and 
microcontroller to detect and measure the periodic swinging motion and compute 
the mean period of the pendulum using the quartz oscillator as a time 
reference. Then, if the pendulum rate is found to be inaccurate, that is, if 
the pendulum is drifting in time, the device activates a geared-down stepper 
motor to climb up or down the pendulum rod some fraction of a mm in order to 
correct the rate. No different than NTP, really.

For a standard seconds pendulum (length ~1 meter, period ~2 seconds) changing 
the location of the mass by 1 mm results in a 500 ppm change in rate, 
equivalent to ~40 seconds/day. To make a one second per day change one only 
needs to move the bob by 20 microns. Don't laugh. This is done. Precision 
pendulum clocks are a world where microns and microseconds matter a lot. And 
leap seconds are a pain for them too.

There's a wonderful BBC video showing how Big Ben is adjusted for leap seconds:

"Leap second: Slowing down Big Ben" [1]
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/7792436.stm

In this case they do not literally move the massive weight up or down, but 
instead, by adding tiny weights (usually penny coins) they change the effective 
center of gravity of the bob, which is all that matters. This is an unexpected 
application of the saying that "time is money".

/tvb

[1] If someone (UK only?) can capture this short video as mp4 I'd appreciate it.

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