On Fri, 26 Oct 2012, in the Usenet newsgroup comp.dcom.lans.ethernet, in article
<k6f06t$et7$
1...@dont-email.me>, glen herrmannsfeldt wrote:
>Are you distinguishing it by frequency? Consider that RF goes down to
>60kHz (used to be 20kHz but I think that one shut down).
Huh? I suppose you are referring to the frequency standard stations
WWVL (was on 20 KHz), WWVB (on 60 KHz) from Fort Collins, Colorado
(USA) and GBR and/or MSF (was Rugby, England, now moved to Anthorn,
England), but these are not the only very low frequency stations still
in regular use. GQD (Anthorn, England) is operating on 19.6 KHz, and
there are several US Navy transmitters (NAA in Cutler, Maine, NLK in
Jim Creek, Washington among others) in the range 17 to 23 KHz.
Not withstanding the above, the International Telecommunications Union
defines radio services down to 9 KHz (the band 9 to 14 KHz is for
radio navigation services, such as the now retired "Omega" system - see
<
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omega_(navigation_system)> for details -
the band 14-19.95 KHz is "Maritime", 19.95-20.05 KHz is "Standard
Frequency and Time Signals", 20-70 KHz is "Maritime" and so on) and the
fact that few stations use those bands in no way changes the definition
of "radio frequencies".
If you look back in the archives of "comp.protocols.time.ntp", you'd
find Prof. Mills (RFC5906 and others) ranting about the interference
(4th harmonic) from analog television _receivers_ making WWVB unusable
in Deleware. Don't know if that's still the major problem it was.
Old guy