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Why Edinburgh's Clock is Almost Never on Time (bbc.com) 96

Arrive in Edinburgh on any given day and there are certain things you can guarantee. One of which is, the time on the turret clock atop The Balmoral Hotel is always wrong. By three minutes, to be exact. From a report: While the clock tower's story is legendary in Edinburgh, it remains a riddle for many first-timers. To the untrained eye, the 58m-high landmark is simply part of the grand finale when surveyed from Calton Hill, Edinburgh's go-to city-centre viewpoint. There it sits to the left of the Dugald Stewart Monument, like a giant exclamation mark above the glazed roof of Waverley Train Station. Likewise, the sandstone baronial tower looks equally glorious when eyed from the commanding northern ramparts of Edinburgh Castle while peering out over the battlements. It is placed at the city's very centre of gravity, between the Old Town and the New Town, at the confluence of all business and life. Except, of course, that the dial's big hand and little hand are out of sync with Greenwich Mean Time.

This bold irregularity is, in fact, a historical quirk first introduced in 1902 when the Edwardian-era building opened as the North British Station Hotel. Then, as now, it overlooked the platforms and signal boxes of Waverley Train Station, and just as porters in red jackets met guests off the train, whisking them from the station booking hall to the interconnected reception desk in the hotel's basement, the North British Railway Company owners wanted to make sure their passengers -- and Edinburgh's hurrying public -- wouldn't miss their trains. Given an extra three minutes, they reasoned, these travellers would have more time on the clock to collect their tickets, to reach their corridor carriages and to unload their luggage before the stationmaster's whistle blew. Still today, it is a calculated miscalculation that helps keep the city on time.

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Why Edinburgh's Clock is Almost Never on Time

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  • Time has become irrelevant. You just do what your smart phone and apps tell you to do.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 16, 2018 @10:18AM (#57323060)
    She was always fashionably late, so I started telling her we had to be somewhere an hour earlier. It's worked for 30 years.
    • Sad but effective (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      She was always fashionably late, so I started telling her we had to be somewhere an hour earlier. It's worked for 30 years.

      This sad technique also works for PhBs who's style is management by crisis. I once had a boss who had an "unexpected" crisis every couple of weeks - usually the big cheese was coming to review or such. Two week's work had to be done in the next week. Having been warned by previous burned-out victims, my progress report was always at least a week behind as actual productivity didn't seem to matter.

      There was much moaning and pissing about impossibilities when his next "unexpected" crisis arose even though

    • Nah, everyone else is fashionably early. If you are running the event then it starts when you get there.

      The fact different cultures disagree on this is somewhat of a challenge and I always wonder how mixed background couples manage this? Just imagining this must be frustrating, for example, when one person in a couple is German and the other Brazilian.

  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Sunday September 16, 2018 @10:36AM (#57323126)

    Stuff that mattered in 1902.

    • Not nerdy enough to find interest in the history of clock accuracy, eh?

      Get off my lawn.

      Now where are my meds, I have a feeling I'm within 3 minutes of needing them.

  • by CODiNE ( 27417 ) on Sunday September 16, 2018 @10:43AM (#57323144) Homepage

    Some people I know set their car clocks a few minutes ahead to help them arrive on time. Every now and then I'll forget the quirk and think I'm late somewhere with them.

    Stop setting your clocks incorrectly and leave when you need to like an adult.

    • by swilver ( 617741 )

      Good idea, people drive better when in a hurry...

    • There was even a Sniglet for this back in the days of Not Necessarily the News. It is called timefoolery.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Sunday September 16, 2018 @01:10PM (#57323668)

      Some people I know set their car clocks a few minutes ahead to help them arrive on time.

      Our office wall clock was set about 8 minutes out as it takes that long to walk to the building where all the meetings are held. Unfortunately that lead to the inevitable conversation "That clock is 8min fast, we still have time" and then would arrive late anyway.

      Lots of past tense in this post since we got a new team member who while on night shift on his first week set the clock to the correct time and screwed us all over. Then he asked why we don't just leave 8min early and it appears it took someone to say it out aloud for everyone to realise how dumb the original idea was.

      • he asked why we don't just leave 8min early and it appears it took someone to say it out aloud for everyone to realise how dumb the original idea was.

        Maybe he should be talking to governments about DST.

        • No I should not. Given that DST is about bringing different groups together on a common time while changing their relationship with solar time. One department changing the clock is the exact opposite thing of a government defined timezone to suit an economic area. It's more akin to an employer offering flex time and a company deciding then to unilaterally work from 7 to 3 instead of 9 to 5.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I tried the off-set clock trick for a little while and eventually it stops working because deep down I know the clock's wrong and I can let it slide a little bit.
      My current system, for when I have a schedule I must meet, is two alarms: one that gives me plenty of time to get ready / finish what I'm doing, and the other is when I absolutely must start walking out the door to my car to still make it on time.

    • Stop setting your clocks incorrectly and leave when you need to like an adult.

      There are so many problems I have, that if this suboptimal one solves my problem of being late, that's good enough and I'll worry about much more serious problems instead.

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Some people I know set their car clocks a few minutes ahead to help them arrive on time. Every now and then I'll forget the quirk and think I'm late somewhere with them.

      Stop setting your clocks incorrectly and leave when you need to like an adult.

      I set my clocks 8 and 1/2 minutes late so that I can get to my train on time.

  • Why the "Almost" then? If the time is intentionally fudged, is it ever accurate?
  • by alternative_right ( 4678499 ) on Sunday September 16, 2018 @10:46AM (#57323154) Homepage Journal

    If you formalize the system, in this case having an accurate clock, people attempt to game the system by thinking they have more time than they do, because people are perpetual optimists.

    If you deformalize the system, and have the clock represent an approximate value, they become concerned that they do not have enough time, and rush to get there early so that they will be on time.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 16, 2018 @10:49AM (#57323180)

    Another world famous clock to attract Russian tourists on day trips from Moscow. :P

  • by Anonymous Coward

    This is a non story. It is known to the people that matter, those who live and work in 'Old Reekie'.

    Oh, and it is "Waverley Railway Station". Mention "Train Station" to most people in the City and they'll wonder what planet you are from.
    Yours, a resident of Leith.

    • Why am I not surprised to find some lowlander so backwards they think anything not as backwards as themselves must be from another planet?!

      The only reason you're not in England is that people came south from another planet to save you.

      If you don't know that Scottish people know about train stations, perhaps you're actually English but nobody told you?
      https://www.scotslanguage.com/... [scotslanguage.com]

  • with the clock in my car. Works great.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      with the clock in my car. Works great.

      Only a moron could possible think that this "works" in any way.
      You fucking set the clock, and you know how far off it is. This doesn't fool anyone.

      If it works at all, it's because you know you need to be there by such-and-such time... just like a normal clock that wasn't set by a dipshit.

  • Should be 12 minutes differential; on September 21st, solar "noon" will be at 1:05 PM in Edinburgh, and at 12:53 PM in London. So there should be a 12 minute offset, not 3.
  • Oh, excellent. Not only are the trains now running on time, they’re running on metric time. Remember this moment, people, eighty past two on April 47th, it’s the dawn of an enlightened Springfield.
  • So, '3 minutes' to give people extra time? Is that 3 minutes slow for the traindrivers also to see, so that people have extra time to run for their train? (train leaves late), or 3 minutes fast so that people who think they have already missed it can still run along? (people hurry more than they need to). Should we read the text again?
    • If you don't know which way to set the clock to prevent missing public transit, you probably don't need to know and can go back to your life of kicking rocks, or else get back on your horse, as the case may be.

    • Is that 3 minutes slow for the traindrivers also to see

      Waverley is roofed over, almost to the tunnels to the west and to the line curves to the east. The time window in which the train drivers could see the clock (on a tower, far above line level) is going to be fractions of a second, during which the drivers would have to be watching for jumpers, checking signal status, etc. I'm by no means sure that you can actually see the tower from anywhere at train level.

  • If the clock is always 3 minutes off, then how is it "almost never" on time? It should be "never" on time.

    • Someone further up mentioned it gets set to the correct time for New Years Eve, and apparently reset to fools time after.
      So once a year it's correct.
      Hence 'almost never.'
  • by cellocgw ( 617879 ) <cellocgw.gmail@com> on Sunday September 16, 2018 @03:31PM (#57324198) Journal

    To all you unhappy grouches:

    This story leads into what could be a bit of interesting neuro-psych research. I know for a fact (Trigger Warning: Anecdotal Evidence Alert) that, even though my alarm clock has been 10 minutes ahead for at least 10 years, I still react to it by behaving as though it were correct time -- even while I consciously understand that it isn't.

    I'm willing to (Trigger Warning Two) extrapolate and guess there are other folks like me.

    • Anyone who uses trigger warning as some kind of joke instead of as a description of a PTSD trigger is a garbage person.
      • If you assume that nobody can be triggered by ridiculous things, then you really don't understand PTSD, do you?
  • It's a strange reference because the Dugald Stewart Monument is actually on Calton Hill. I suppose you could position yourself on the hill such that the Balmoral tower appears left of the monument but at that point you would be pretty much beside the monument. Now if you're on the hill looking down toward Princes Street then the thing that the Balmoral tower will actually appear to be left of is the better known Walter Scott Monument.

  • I've always hated that name change. "The North British Hotel" had a certain majesty to it, whilst "The Balmoral" sounds like a twee, semi-detached B&B in the suburbs with lace doilies under the jam jars.

    • where i grew up in upper michigan we used to have the hotel northland - driving a certain street it read "hot north" - funny to locals
  • They set the clock 3 minutes ahead which ruins all the jokes about the clock being 5.4E+10 meters away from town.

"Look! There! Evil!.. pure and simple, total evil from the Eighth Dimension!" -- Buckaroo Banzai

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