Hi

Back in high school, one of the radio club members figured out that the “clock 
adjustment” took place 
locally between 4:30 and 5:00 PM. Needless to say, pretty much everybody spent 
the next week listening 
to WWV and watching the clock’s second hand go out of sync with the beeps. This 
was back in the  late 1960’s 
and the idea of a grid was a bit looser than it is today. Indeed it was post 
1964 so there *were* grids big 
enough to take out the whole north east section of the US. Since we were very 
much in that area the 
topic of grid sync came up. Nobody ever really had a good answer to that 
question. That included the 
guys who ran the local power company. 

Bob

> On Apr 5, 2017, at 3:05 PM, Hal Murray <hmur...@megapathdsl.net> wrote:
> 
> 
> preilley_...@comcast.net said:
>> When I installed power plants in the 1970's they has a special "clock"  that
>> showed the cumulative error in terms of clock time.
> 
> How big were the grids back then?
> 
> What was the typical range of error over a day or month?
> 
> 
>> If the generator ran a little too fast the clock would move forward.    As
>> the operator observed the clock moving away from zero he would reduce the
>> plant's  power and the clock would move backward toward zero.  ...
> 
> Does that operator control a single generator or a whole grid?
> 
> Does having a human in the loop help the control loop stability?
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> These are my opinions.  I hate spam.
> 
> 
> 
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