ctclark1
Member
- Location
- Western New York
- Occupation
- Electronics Technician
Timeclocks. Digital, Analog, Astronomic, Basic, Single Channel, 4 Channel. You name it, I deal with it at work. I have close to 100 timeclocks strewn across a myriad of buildings on a large multi-building facility. Some of them are in a central point in a building. Some of the buildings have 5 different timeclocks in a bunch of different rooms. Some places the timeclocks aren't even in a building.
So my frustration is.... Why on earth has no one made a timeclock that can at least set its time by GPS? I know the "easy" answer would be one central system, and while I'd love to be able to control all of the lights around the property from my desk, the budget is not currently viable for the costs of any system like that, especially considering we'd need a wireless mesh system to do so, and that's not the point of the discussion.
It seems like it could be done fairly inexpensively. "GPS LightLock" makes photocells with all of the extra electronics to set their time and location from GPS, and follow an astronomic timetable to control lights, all for not a whole lot more than their basic photocell counterparts. A device like an Intermatic Astronomic Timeclock already has all the sunrise/sunset tables, so why wouldn't it be possible to add a GPS unit to it, or even a radio controlled clock for the NIST signals? It's just silly to me, the only way I could have an autoset time is the highest end networked models. That's something that just isn't possible here, and I can't imagine it's that uncommon of a desire out there.
And yes, the "GPS LightLock" I mentioned could be an option for some of these locations, but in a lot of these buildings the timeclocks control interior lights or fans that would have to be on during the day, not at night. Others turn exterior lights off around midnight instead of running all night. And the times I need set is variable from year to year, sometimes month to month - not something I can do with the LightLock devices because they're pre-configured at the factory, and I would apparently have to send them back to the factory to change the times.
So again, I rant... Why haven't Intermatic or Tork done anything to keep their timeclocks more accurate over the past decade?
Excuse my rant. Carry on.
So my frustration is.... Why on earth has no one made a timeclock that can at least set its time by GPS? I know the "easy" answer would be one central system, and while I'd love to be able to control all of the lights around the property from my desk, the budget is not currently viable for the costs of any system like that, especially considering we'd need a wireless mesh system to do so, and that's not the point of the discussion.
It seems like it could be done fairly inexpensively. "GPS LightLock" makes photocells with all of the extra electronics to set their time and location from GPS, and follow an astronomic timetable to control lights, all for not a whole lot more than their basic photocell counterparts. A device like an Intermatic Astronomic Timeclock already has all the sunrise/sunset tables, so why wouldn't it be possible to add a GPS unit to it, or even a radio controlled clock for the NIST signals? It's just silly to me, the only way I could have an autoset time is the highest end networked models. That's something that just isn't possible here, and I can't imagine it's that uncommon of a desire out there.
And yes, the "GPS LightLock" I mentioned could be an option for some of these locations, but in a lot of these buildings the timeclocks control interior lights or fans that would have to be on during the day, not at night. Others turn exterior lights off around midnight instead of running all night. And the times I need set is variable from year to year, sometimes month to month - not something I can do with the LightLock devices because they're pre-configured at the factory, and I would apparently have to send them back to the factory to change the times.
So again, I rant... Why haven't Intermatic or Tork done anything to keep their timeclocks more accurate over the past decade?
Excuse my rant. Carry on.