The method I use to set the clock in Win 10 is: 1) Right click on the time displayed at the lower right of the task bar 2) click on "Adjust date/time" 3) turn off "Set time automatically" 4) click on "Change date and time" and then change the time to something different. 5) turn "Set time automatically" back on.
Initially Time.is said my clock was 0.8 sec behind. After doing the procedure above, it said that my clock was right on. The crystal in my computer is pretty accurate so I find that it can take a day or two for time to drift off enough to be a problem with FT8. On Tue, Dec 4, 2018 at 9:48 AM Roy Gould <roygou...@gmail.com> wrote: > That is a very good idea. Thank you for making me aware of it. I have a > preset in my radio that tunes it to WWV on 10.0 MHz and I listen to it to > check my computer's time when the band is open to Colorado. > > On Tue, Dec 4, 2018 at 8:21 AM Al <k...@arrl.net> wrote: > >> If you have an internet connection and need a quick, independent check on >> you PC time, enter *time.is <http://time.is>* in your web browser.. >> That's it. Just go to the 'time.is' web site. ( no .com or .org ) >> >> AL, K0VM >> _______________________________________________ >> wsjt-devel mailing list >> wsjt-devel@lists.sourceforge.net >> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/wsjt-devel >> >
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