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Old December 31st 04, 04:25 PM
Mike Terry
 
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Default U S A. The Voice of WWV becomes a silient key

The Voice of time signal station WWV has passed away. Marty Edwards, a
newscaster who doubled as the voice of WWV, died on Friday, December 10th.
Edwards did the speech transcripts for the time checks provided by the U.S.
Navy Bureau of Standards and broadcast on WWV from Ft. Collins, Colorado.

(Published news reports via ARNewsline December 31 via John Norfolk, dxldyg)


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Old December 31st 04, 05:02 PM
m II
 
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Default

Mike Terry wrote:

The Voice of time signal station WWV has passed away. Marty Edwards, a
newscaster who doubled as the voice of WWV, died on Friday, December 10th.
Edwards did the speech transcripts for the time checks provided by the U.S.
Navy Bureau of Standards and broadcast on WWV from Ft. Collins, Colorado.

(Published news reports via ARNewsline December 31 via John Norfolk, dxldyg)



The job obviously killed him. Twenty four hours a day for decades..A
lesser man would have snapped. I wonder what kind of coffee kept him
going.

A monument to his vocal chords and determination should be erected NOW.

He must have done his newscasting *in between* the minute
announcements, cleverly disguising his breaks every sixty seconds as
'breathing intervals'.

There are rumours his identical twin has already taken over, without
missing a beat.



mike

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Old December 31st 04, 05:26 PM
Brian Hill
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"m II" wrote in message
news:KCfBd.35801$KO5.18237@clgrps13...
Mike Terry wrote:

The Voice of time signal station WWV has passed away. Marty Edwards, a
newscaster who doubled as the voice of WWV, died on Friday, December

10th.
Edwards did the speech transcripts for the time checks provided by the

U.S.
Navy Bureau of Standards and broadcast on WWV from Ft. Collins,

Colorado.

(Published news reports via ARNewsline December 31 via John Norfolk,

dxldyg)



The job obviously killed him. Twenty four hours a day for decades..A
lesser man would have snapped. I wonder what kind of coffee kept him
going.

A monument to his vocal chords and determination should be erected NOW.

He must have done his newscasting *in between* the minute
announcements, cleverly disguising his breaks every sixty seconds as
'breathing intervals'.

There are rumours his identical twin has already taken over, without
missing a beat.



mike


Penance!!! Penance!!!



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Old January 1st 05, 05:55 AM
Radioman390
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Mike Terry wrote:

The Voice of time signal station WWV has passed away. Marty Edwards, a
newscaster who doubled as the voice of WWV, died on Friday, December 10th.
Edwards did the speech transcripts for the time checks provided by the U.S.
Navy Bureau of Standards and broadcast on WWV from Ft. Collins, Colorado.

(Published news reports via ARNewsline December 31 via John Norfolk,

dxldyg)



The job obviously killed him. Twenty four hours a day for decades..A
lesser man would have snapped. I wonder what kind of coffee kept him
going.

A monument to his vocal chords and determination should be erected NOW.

He must have done his newscasting *in between* the minute
announcements, cleverly disguising his breaks every sixty seconds as
'breathing intervals'.

There are rumours his identical twin has already taken over, without
missing a beat.


Actually, there were seven on air announcers to cover the 168 hours a week WWV
broadcasts.

I was told this by someone who worked at WWV when it was in Greenbelt, MD
(outside Washington, DC). The shifts varied in length, but lasted about 3 or 4
hours. Since there was an overlap, they could break for lunch. The occasional
5-minute breaks (which had no tone or voice) allowed an extended visit to the
potty.
Literally, it was potty, a porta-potty placed right outside the studio door,
and vented to the outside. WWV had the first US prototypes of these in the
mid-50s, and the experiment was closely watched by the military and the Park
service.

In addition to the announcers, there were two engineers (really, technicians),
one to turn the mike on and off, the other to take transmitter readings. There
were actually fifteen engineers on staff, plus supervisors, office staff, and
an accountant to handle payroll and billings. "Billings?," you ask. Yes. The
Bureau of Standards billed other government agencies for "using" WWV, whether
or not they actually did. Us civilians got a free ride. There was also an
advisory board which met monthly to oversee operations and to guide WWV into
the 21st century. Their meetings were held at the WWVH site, although most
lived in Washington. The WWV budget was about $25 million (in 1953 dollars)
which is equivalent to $2.7 Billion today.

The move to Boulder Colorado was a problem, since propagation would be
affected. The station would be far away from the population center of the
mid-Atlantic states.

Of course, a change of call-sign was required, since "W" was for
East-of-the-Mississippi stations, and "K" for Western stations. The next
available call sign with "K" was "KKK" but it was decided not to use it. KKL
didn't sound right either, and KWV was nixxed. Senator Dirksen introduced a
bill in Congress to allow the continued use of WWV in Colorado.

Anyway to get back to the announcers. They were hired to sound alike, and
because of the repetitive precision needed , ex-military types were given
preference. I thought that everything was taped, but they were live!

To test this out I closely monitored WWV for a total of 65 hours over a one
week period, in sessions lasting up to 8 hours. Sure enough, I heard
differences in delivery,. Sometimes the voice sounded a little gruffier, other
times a little hurried, and at times the announcer sounded bored. After a while
I could hear the forced authority in the voice. The shift changes occured on
the hour, during the last five minutes (when there's no tone, only clicks). The
longer I listened the more I heard differences in inflection and rhythm.
Several times I could detect the change of announcers, but those guys were
good!! You could hardly tell them apart.

Several still draw pensions from AFTRA, the announcer's union. They were in the
Baltimore-Washington local of AFTRA, but had a no-strike contract, and were
paid Civil service GS-12 pay. Several turnovers occured as people quit or were
institutionalized. One guy actually defected to Cuba and became the voice of
Radio Reloj in Havana.

Today WWV is undergoing even more changes. See this site, and click on the
"clock" to hear audio.

http://www.grantassoc.net/wwv.html
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Old January 1st 05, 06:38 AM
Brenda Ann
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Radioman390" wrote in message
...
Mike Terry wrote:

The Voice of time signal station WWV has passed away. Marty Edwards, a
newscaster who doubled as the voice of WWV, died on Friday, December

10th.
Edwards did the speech transcripts for the time checks provided by the

U.S.
Navy Bureau of Standards and broadcast on WWV from Ft. Collins,

Colorado.

(Published news reports via ARNewsline December 31 via John Norfolk,

dxldyg)



The job obviously killed him. Twenty four hours a day for decades..A
lesser man would have snapped. I wonder what kind of coffee kept him
going.

A monument to his vocal chords and determination should be erected NOW.

He must have done his newscasting *in between* the minute
announcements, cleverly disguising his breaks every sixty seconds as
'breathing intervals'.

There are rumours his identical twin has already taken over, without
missing a beat.


Actually, there were seven on air announcers to cover the 168 hours a week

WWV
broadcasts.

I was told this by someone who worked at WWV when it was in Greenbelt, MD
(outside Washington, DC). The shifts varied in length, but lasted about 3

or 4
hours. Since there was an overlap, they could break for lunch. The

occasional
5-minute breaks (which had no tone or voice) allowed an extended visit to

the
potty.
Literally, it was potty, a porta-potty placed right outside the studio

door,
and vented to the outside. WWV had the first US prototypes of these in the
mid-50s, and the experiment was closely watched by the military and the

Park
service.

In addition to the announcers, there were two engineers (really,

technicians),
one to turn the mike on and off, the other to take transmitter readings.

There
were actually fifteen engineers on staff, plus supervisors, office staff,

and
an accountant to handle payroll and billings. "Billings?," you ask. Yes.

The
Bureau of Standards billed other government agencies for "using" WWV,

whether
or not they actually did. Us civilians got a free ride. There was also an
advisory board which met monthly to oversee operations and to guide WWV

into
the 21st century. Their meetings were held at the WWVH site, although most
lived in Washington. The WWV budget was about $25 million (in 1953

dollars)
which is equivalent to $2.7 Billion today.

The move to Boulder Colorado was a problem, since propagation would be
affected. The station would be far away from the population center of the
mid-Atlantic states.

Of course, a change of call-sign was required, since "W" was for
East-of-the-Mississippi stations, and "K" for Western stations. The next
available call sign with "K" was "KKK" but it was decided not to use it.

KKL
didn't sound right either, and KWV was nixxed. Senator Dirksen introduced

a
bill in Congress to allow the continued use of WWV in Colorado.

Anyway to get back to the announcers. They were hired to sound alike, and
because of the repetitive precision needed , ex-military types were given
preference. I thought that everything was taped, but they were live!

To test this out I closely monitored WWV for a total of 65 hours over a

one
week period, in sessions lasting up to 8 hours. Sure enough, I heard
differences in delivery,. Sometimes the voice sounded a little gruffier,

other
times a little hurried, and at times the announcer sounded bored. After a

while
I could hear the forced authority in the voice. The shift changes occured

on
the hour, during the last five minutes (when there's no tone, only

clicks). The
longer I listened the more I heard differences in inflection and rhythm.
Several times I could detect the change of announcers, but those guys were
good!! You could hardly tell them apart.

Several still draw pensions from AFTRA, the announcer's union. They were

in the
Baltimore-Washington local of AFTRA, but had a no-strike contract, and

were
paid Civil service GS-12 pay. Several turnovers occured as people quit or

were
institutionalized. One guy actually defected to Cuba and became the voice

of
Radio Reloj in Havana.

Today WWV is undergoing even more changes. See this site, and click on the
"clock" to hear audio.

http://www.grantassoc.net/wwv.html


Good story, but that's all it is. See the NIST website for the history of
WWV he

http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq...wwvhistory.htm

There is a lot of other information on the website, including a list of all
employees.

I found this in addition:

2.6.2 Voice Time Announcement, once per minute

(1) The internally generated voice time announcements should
consist of appropriate words and phrases which have been
digitized and stored in ROM chips within the time code
generators. Professional announcers (male for WWV;
female for WWVH) should be used as the sources for these
digitized recordings in ROM. The digitizing and other
related processes must provide broadcast-quality in the
output announcements.

http://www.nic.funet.fi/index/unix/p...xntp/radio.txt

And this as well:

About the announcers

The station identification and time-of-day announcements are
pre-recorded --- not "live." The regular announcer for WWV is Mr. Don
Elliot of Atlanta, Georgia. Mrs. Jane Barbe, also of Atlanta, is the
announcer for WWVH.

(qoute from page 23 of 23 of the following pdf document from the NIST
website)

http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq...l/pdf/1600.pdf





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Old January 1st 05, 07:58 AM
m II
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Brenda Ann wrote:

Today WWV is undergoing even more changes. See this site, and click on the
"clock" to hear audio.

http://www.grantassoc.net/wwv.html



Good story, but that's all it is. See the NIST website for the history of
WWV he

http://www.boulder.nist.gov/timefreq...wwvhistory.htm



All Lies and prevarications. Radioman had it right, but I was very
close to the truth.

Pre recorded SEGMENTS of time announcements. Ha!



mike
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Old January 2nd 05, 03:12 AM
Stephen M.H. Lawrence
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"elg110254" wrote in message
...
| Another source for WWV archival audio is the original Star Trek episode
"All
| Our Yesterdays", where the late 60s-era WWV atomic clock provides the
"voice"
| of Sarapeidon librarian Mr. Atoz' Atavachron. Even though it's been 35
years, I
| can still remember watching that N.B.C. episode on my bud Mel's RCA color
tv
| console. Whilst Kirk, Spock, & McCoy expressed interest in Atoz' library
time
| transportation device, Mel & I both exclaimed "WWV" in unison upon hearing
the
| Atavachron's oscillations! This second to last original series episode is
also
| remembered fondly for Mariette Hartley's character, Zarabeth, coercing
vegan
| Spock into eating meat!!!

Audio from CHU can be heard in one of the Star Wars flicks,
though I forget which episode.

73,

Steve Lawrence
KAØPMD
Burnsville, Minnesota

"If a man wants his dreams to come true then he must wake up."
- Anonymous


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Old January 2nd 05, 06:08 AM
starman
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Stephen M.H. Lawrence" wrote:

"elg110254" wrote in message
...
| Another source for WWV archival audio is the original Star Trek episode
"All
| Our Yesterdays", where the late 60s-era WWV atomic clock provides the
"voice"
| of Sarapeidon librarian Mr. Atoz' Atavachron. Even though it's been 35
years, I
| can still remember watching that N.B.C. episode on my bud Mel's RCA color
tv
| console. Whilst Kirk, Spock, & McCoy expressed interest in Atoz' library
time
| transportation device, Mel & I both exclaimed "WWV" in unison upon hearing
the
| Atavachron's oscillations! This second to last original series episode is
also
| remembered fondly for Mariette Hartley's character, Zarabeth, coercing
vegan
| Spock into eating meat!!!

Audio from CHU can be heard in one of the Star Wars flicks,
though I forget which episode.

73,

Steve Lawrence


I did the same thing when I heard the WWV sound effect on the old Star
Trek episode back then. They used a sample of the WWV binary code which
was transmitted during the third minute of every five minute interval.
It was used to syncronize special clocks which had the capability of
decoding it.

BTW- Did your friend's RCA color TV have the 21" round picture tube
(21FP22) which was masked at the top and bottom to make it look more
rectangular? It was used with the CTC-16 chassis, circa 1966.
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