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Shirley Thebaglady October 31st 05 12:17 PM

Time change chaos
 
How we remember- FALL back
SPRING ahead, as to which way we turn our clocks.
We always change ours the night before we go to bed.

If you do not change them at all you will be late for work or any
appointments that you have.

shirley


Carpenter October 31st 05 12:51 PM

Time change chaos
 

Shirley Thebaglady wrote:
How we remember- FALL back
SPRING ahead, as to which way we turn our clocks.
We always change ours the night before we go to bed.

If you do not change them at all you will be late for work or any
appointments that you have.

shirley


You're right Shirley, but don't fall for these shameless trolls...


Beachcomber October 31st 05 02:00 PM

Time change chaos
 
On 31 Oct 2005 04:51:59 -0800, "Carpenter" wrote:


Shirley Thebaglady wrote:
How we remember- FALL back
SPRING ahead, as to which way we turn our clocks.
We always change ours the night before we go to bed.



First of all, its not the government that is the cause of the
Phenomenon. It is basic physics and the laws of the universe.
Specifically, God or Mother Nature (if you prefer) messed up a bit
when they tilted the axis of rotation of the earth 23.5 degrees
relative to the plane of the earth's orbit around the sun.

Before we had Daylight Savings Time, there was year-round Standard
Time, an invention (by man) to keep the countries railroad schedules
in sync. The four time zones in the continental US were roughly
divided along the lines of the 15 degree meridians that extend from
pole to pole and start at the prime Meridian in Greenwich, England as
the 0 degree reference point.

At the time, France fought bitterly to have the prime meridian begin
in Paris, but the English prevailed and Greenwich is where it stayed.

To get the Meridians in synch, local noon was defined as the time a
point equidistant between the 15 degree meridians experienced sun
transit (the time when the sun crossed the meridian). If you lived
near the eastern edge of the time zone boundary, the sun would rise
(and set) a few minutes early relative to your zone. Conversely, if
you lived near the western edge of your time zone boundary, the sun
would rise (and set) a few minutes later. The continental US had 4
major time zones spaced 5, 6, 7, and 8 hours ahead of Greenwich time
(Eastern, Central, Mountain, and Pacific time respectively).

Some countries, Iran for example, say "to hell with standard time" and
are 30 minutes offset from the world's time zones.

This worked great for years and kept the railroads and telegraph
operators happy. (Western Union kept the whole thing in sync).
Farmers still awoke with the sun and the rooster though, and didn't
pay much attention to man's invention of applied standards.

Our society became more complex and Daylight Savings Time (now called
Daylight Time) was invented originally to save coal for the war
effort. (More light in the evening = less electricity needed = less
coal consumption).

Historically, Congress has sometimes tinkered with the start and stop
dates for DT. Sometimes this messes up a lot of electronic equipment
like VCR's and computers whose designers assumed the dates were
"carved in stone,

Those that advocate year round DST are trying to bend the laws of
nature in a way that doesn't fit with the activities of man. It will
never fit the activities of man because that extra hour of daylight in
the evening will always be "stolen" from those schoolchildren waiting
for the buses in the morning.

You can't have it both ways as there is simply less daylight in the
northern hemisphere during the winter months. Hence it becomes a
political debate as to whose ox is gored.

Beachcomber


Bill Reynolds October 31st 05 04:07 PM

Time change chaos
 
The continental US had 4 major time zones spaced 5, 6, 7, and 8 hours
ahead of Greenwich time (Eastern, Central, Mountain, and Pacific time
respectively).

I believe that should be behind Greenwich time...

Dr. Hardcrab October 31st 05 04:11 PM

Time change chaos
 

"Shirley Thebaglady" wrote

How we remember- FALL back
SPRING ahead, as to which way we turn our clocks.
We always change ours the night before we go to bed.


Not trying to do a stand-up routin here, but that saying has always confused
me. Think about it:

Picture a spring. Pull on a spring. When you let go, it springs BACK. Not
forward! When a spring is BEING a spring, it springs back.

When you are walking, if you were to fall, 99 times out of 100, you fall
FORWARD. Whether walking down the street or off a cliff. You don't fall
backwards, do you???



larry October 31st 05 05:20 PM

Time change chaos
 

Dr. Hardcrab wrote:

"Shirley Thebaglady" wrote


How we remember- FALL back
SPRING ahead, as to which way we turn our clocks.
We always change ours the night before we go to bed.



Not trying to do a stand-up routin here, but that saying has always confused
me. Think about it:

Picture a spring. Pull on a spring. When you let go, it springs BACK. Not
forward! When a spring is BEING a spring, it springs back.

When you are walking, if you were to fall, 99 times out of 100, you fall
FORWARD. Whether walking down the street or off a cliff. You don't fall
backwards, do you???



at least the other 99% get it ;-)

stock hint- sell jackhammer futures
dallas is getting rain today!
(last was 1" aug 15, and 1" sep 15)

-larry

Larry Bud October 31st 05 08:07 PM

Time change chaos
 

Dr. Hardcrab wrote:
"Shirley Thebaglady" wrote

How we remember- FALL back
SPRING ahead, as to which way we turn our clocks.
We always change ours the night before we go to bed.


Not trying to do a stand-up routin here, but that saying has always confused
me. Think about it:

Picture a spring. Pull on a spring. When you let go, it springs BACK. Not
forward! When a spring is BEING a spring, it springs back.


Not all springs are created equal. Some are designed for COMPRESSION,
you don't pull on those springs, but you push on them.


Jim Yanik November 1st 05 01:42 AM

Time change chaos
 
"Larry Bud" wrote in
ups.com:


Dr. Hardcrab wrote:
"Shirley Thebaglady" wrote

How we remember- FALL back
SPRING ahead, as to which way we turn our clocks.
We always change ours the night before we go to bed.


Not trying to do a stand-up routin here, but that saying has always
confused me. Think about it:

Picture a spring. Pull on a spring. When you let go, it springs BACK.
Not forward! When a spring is BEING a spring, it springs back.


Not all springs are created equal. Some are designed for COMPRESSION,
you don't pull on those springs, but you push on them.


Like the springs on one's car.

--
Jim Yanik
jyanik
at
kua.net

mm November 1st 05 04:54 AM

Time change chaos
 
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 16:11:55 GMT, "Dr. Hardcrab"
wrote:


"Shirley Thebaglady" wrote

How we remember- FALL back
SPRING ahead, as to which way we turn our clocks.
We always change ours the night before we go to bed.


Not trying to do a stand-up routin here, but that saying has always confused
me. Think about it:

Picture a spring. Pull on a spring. When you let go, it springs BACK. Not
forward! When a spring is BEING a spring, it springs back.


I can see why you feel this way. There is something I can't remember
now that always seems backwards from the way it should be.

Pretend the spring is part of a pogo stick and you're springing ahead.

When you are walking, if you were to fall, 99 times out of 100, you fall
FORWARD. Whether walking down the street or off a cliff. You don't fall
backwards, do you???


Pretend you're losing the battle and your commanding officer tells you
to fall back.


Remove NOPSAM to email me. Please let
me know if you have posted also.


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