Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Electric clock a bit off? It’s just a matter of time

- By Seth Borenstein

WASHINGTON — Running late for work or just miss that bus? You could have a good excuse: Your electric clock might be running a bit cuckoo.

Because of a change in federal energy regulation­s, some scientists say your trusty, older plug-in clock may be losing or gaining a few ticks over time.

Electric clocks keep time based on the usually stable and precise pulses of the electric current that powers them. In the U.S., that’s 60 hertz (cycles per second). In the past, regulators required power companies to immediatel­y correct the rate if it slipped off the mark. But that precision is expensive to maintain, so last year, the correction part was quietly eliminated by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.

Energy officials insist other standards will keep the time in check, and so far the problem has not amounted to more than a few seconds here and there. But some scientists looked at what could happen without the time correction rule and concluded clocks could gradually go off-kilter if the grid’s power was delivered consistent­ly at higher or lower rates than 60 hertz. That can happen when power demand surges or slows because of weather and the grid can’t adjust right away.

This would affect clocks that get their power from a wall socket, such as alarm clocks and those on microwaves and coffeemake­rs. Cellphones, newer clocks with GPS, those connected to cable TV and ones that don’t rely on the grid aren’t affected, experts said.

The changes could be just matters of seconds and all but unnoticeab­le, but the time could drift by as much as seven and a half minutes between time changes in March and November, when people reset their clocks, according to a study conducted by researcher­s at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and the U.S. Naval Observator­y.

In some extreme cases, Americans might miss their bus or parts of television shows, said Demetrios Matsakis, co-author of the study and chief time scientist at the Naval Observator­y.

“They’ll think something is wrong with their clock but they won’t know what,” said Matsakis.

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