gmiller123456 11 hours ago

[Warning: bad joke ahead] Every day at noon a soldier fired a cannon to signal it was noon. A guy was curious as to how he knew when to fire the cannon. So he asked the soldier, who told him "the guy in the guard station gives me a signal, and I fire the canon". He asks the guy in the guard station how he knows when to signal, "I use the clock on the wall, a guy comes and sets it occasionally". He finds the guy who sets the clock and asks him how he knows what time it is, "I sync my watch to the clock in the town square, then set that clock from my watch". So he finds the guy who sets the town square clock and asks how he knows what time to set it to. "Oh, I just sync it to the noon cannon".

  • stn8188 8 hours ago

    Haha I didn't realize this was a joke. It was, nearly word for word, a problem on my control systems final exam a few semesters ago!

    • dullcrisp 5 hours ago

      I don’t know control theory but I think it wouldn’t work

olelele 14 hours ago

My neck of the woods on the front page!

Adelsnäs where the cannon is was built by some mining baron, as far as i remember.

gorgoiler 7 hours ago

Friendly reminder that if you are syncing your clock from marslight instead then remember that Mars, unlike Sol, isn’t always the same distance from us. Those light minute errors could mean you’ll miss the bus home!

I’m joking but this is also a real thing. For an example, see this code in the astrolib port used by SensorWatch’s “movement” project:

https://github.com/joeycastillo/Sensor-Watch/blob/e8f31beb70...

Animats 13 hours ago

"The 6-pound cannon is fired everyday at 1 PM, from May to September."

Not at local noon?

  • rob74 2 hours ago

    Before they introduced Daylight Saving Time, it was probably at local noon. It would be at local noon if it were fired between October and March, but it's only May to September, so...

  • impossiblefork 12 hours ago

    Sweden user summer time, so we get up earlier during the bright part of the year.

    So it's still local noon.

  • kzrdude 4 hours ago

    During summer, the peak sun altitude is at 1 pm (approximately) which makes it noon.

  • ahazred8ta 8 hours ago

    At 12:00, the calibration people were busy nailing down the time, so the public sync signal was given at 1.

  • p_l 13 hours ago

    For navigational purposes you want your "noon" to be aligned with a known datum, and that often was Greenwich meridian.

voidUpdate 3 hours ago

Doesn't Sweden have daylight savings time? How does that work with it being at 1pm every day?

  • dcminter 2 hours ago

    That's why it's at 1pm instead of at noon. They don't fire it the rest of the year.

    • voidUpdate an hour ago

      Ah, not firing it when it would be 12 is what I was missing

  • impossiblefork 2 hours ago

    That's why it happens at 1 PM instead of 12 AM.

PlunderBunny 14 hours ago

Why would a cannon be used instead of, say, striking a bell? Does the sound travel better/further, or was it a display of wealth/status?

  • p_l 13 hours ago

    The sound is hard to mistake for anything else and travels better. Such cannons were used for synchronization of clocks on ships for navigation, among other uses.

matsemann 14 hours ago

But the sun isn't always at the same place at noon? So how is the magnifying glass aimed?

  • perilunar 6 hours ago

    Same azimuth, different altitude. You could adjust the altitude angle daily, or just set the fuse along the north-south axis, and it will be lit in a slightly different place each day.

  • Pengtuzi 13 hours ago

    Down and to the left