I used to live in Miami and now 80 miles north in homes made of steel  
reinforced concrete blocks. Junghans considered Miami worse case in the US and 
came there before introduction of their wrist watch with antenna in the arm 
band.. The Junghans clocks have worked flawless since then with multiple walls 
between WWVB and any location in my home. Same goes for a no name wall clock I 
got three years ago.
Watches the leather armbands deteriorated over time.
An external ferite rod worked great for frequency along a Tracor Omega receiver 
for 42 years.
Bert Kehren
 
 
In a message dated 8/13/2018 8:08:39 AM Eastern Standard Time, 
[email protected] writes:

 
 While consumer WWVB clocks are widespread today, almost all (or all) 
professional clock displays have shifted to NTP over copper or over sometimes 
WIFI in the past decade.

WWVB or WWV, without an external antenna, was never a good choice for a clock 
in a steel building to begin with. 30 years ago you would put an HF or GOES 
antenna on the roof. As the paperwork for putting up an antenna has multiplied 
exponentially and Ethernet has become completely and totally ubiquitous in 
commercial buildings, it becomes a no brainer to choose a POE NTP clock display.

While NTP works super well for locations with 120VAC or POE power, it is not so 
obvious for a wallclock that is traditionally powered by a battery that only 
has to be changed every few years. For battery powered wallclocks in wood 
buiildings WWVB is still a great solution maybe even the only solution. But I 
could imagine a consumer product that just turned on its WIFI for a minute each 
day to resync and was battery powered.

Tim N3QE

> On Aug 13, 2018, at 12:28 AM, Richard (Rick) Karlquist 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
>> On 8/12/2018 6:55 PM, John C. Westmoreland, P.E. wrote:
>> I hope this does not happen. I get questions from new Hams that ask, 'How
>> can I check my antenna easily?' - the quick reply is to check for WWV on
>> 2.5, 5,0, 10.0, 15.0 and 20.0 MHz.
> 
> W1AW is far more useful to check ham antennas, since it broadcasts
> on ham bands, so that isn't a useful argument.
> 
> OTOH, the argument that it is OK to obsolete millions of "atomic"
> clocks because of NTP is also weak. The present WWVB solution
> is "just right" for the problem; the vast majority of users
> don't need more accuracy.
> 
> Rick N6RK
> 
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