> I am seriously considering involved as I am a bit of a weather nut too.

I suspect this is quite common. You don't have to get into precise time very 
deep before you realize that all your timing gear is just pile of environmental 
sensors in disguise. Before time-nuts began, the first timing guy I met was 
Doug Hogarth (www.niceties.com) and he was seriously into weather measurement. 
He later got into the world of ultra-precise weight (mass) measurement. So I 
guess time-nuts is just a subset of measurement nuts.

A quartz oscillator makes a good thermometer and sometimes a hygrometer and 
barometer too. An OCXO is a sensitive anemometer (just ask anyone who uses a 
PWM fan for TBolt temperature control). Quartz also makes an excellent 
accelerometer, gravimeter, tiltmeter, or even seismometer. An OCXO with EFC is 
a good voltmeter. Atomic clocks are superb magnetometers. And as Einstein 
predicted, atomic clocks make good altimeters and speedometers too.

So everything we play with is a sensor. It's no wonder we are preoccupied with 
environmental sensing. Maybe Time is just what's left over after you shield or 
attenuate or compensate for everything else.

/tvb

See also:

Quartz Resonators vs Their Environment: Time Base or Sensor?
http://dev.quartzdyne.com/pdfs/quartzresonators.pdf
http://www.paroscientific.com/


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