canadian m7, in simplistic terms the earth rotates round the sun irregularly, sort of like a person doing the hoola
now the earth then rotates on its own axis, which isn’t exactly perpendicular to the notional rotation plate of the earth round the sun. however, it is actually (just about) fixed in angle, so that means that when we r one side of the sun we r always further away from it on a spot in the northern hemisphere than when we r the other side of the sun. and vice versa if u pick a spot in the southern hemisphere
now the rotation of the earth on its axis equals one day, with the part of the earth exposed to the sun being “daylight” and the other part “night”, and they rotate through
due to the rotation around the sun and the axis describe above, when a point on earth is further away from the sun, it will get less daylight
such rotation is disconnected to the time of day designated by humankind. how we record time is a man-made construct.
so u see we would get exactly the same amount of daylight, irrespective of the notional time we choose to ascribe to it
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dude we can’t always be in bst
it would just be lying to ourselves most of the time
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Think of the Scots…!
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Don't waste daylight.
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WTF would we scrap GMT? It's the standard around the world.
If anything, we should scrap BST.
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Whatever gives us longer days in winter gets my vote. Daylight savings times is bollocks, Guy is right
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agreed. but pedant mode on , days are still 24 hours long regardless Canadian
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canadian m7, in simplistic terms the earth rotates round the sun irregularly, sort of like a person doing the hoola
now the earth then rotates on its own axis, which isn’t exactly perpendicular to the notional rotation plate of the earth round the sun. however, it is actually (just about) fixed in angle, so that means that when we r one side of the sun we r always further away from it on a spot in the northern hemisphere than when we r the other side of the sun. and vice versa if u pick a spot in the southern hemisphere
now the rotation of the earth on its axis equals one day, with the part of the earth exposed to the sun being “daylight” and the other part “night”, and they rotate through
due to the rotation around the sun and the axis describe above, when a point on earth is further away from the sun, it will get less daylight
such rotation is disconnected to the time of day designated by humankind. how we record time is a man-made construct.
so u see we would get exactly the same amount of daylight, irrespective of the notional time we choose to ascribe to it
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There are indeed 24 hours in a day, for ‘day’ used in that sense.
But ‘day’ is also used to describe the period between sunrise and sunset, in contrast to the period called night between sunset and sunrise.
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Point of order Guy- they fall back in Autumn and spring forward in spring.
I'd keep BST going for the period October-April and then have 'double-BST' from May-September.
That way we can make even more of the light summer mornings and you could be still out playing golf/cricket socialising etc up to 11pm in high summer.
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Cheers, Chambo.
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(to Elfffi)
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heh
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wot Marshal Hall said.
It's annoying that the powers that be haven't been able to fix this. It's been the obvious solution for a very long time
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I would like Summer Time and Double Summer Time, its crazy it gets light at 4am in mid summer
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No. That's why we put them back.
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No.
Which is why they will go back one hour on Sunday.
HTH.
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yeah, always get that mixed up - my bad
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I like the current system and the ridiculous notion that once a year I get an extra hour in bed at the weekend.
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Footage of the discussion further up the thread has been found.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XsCLsc_NRXQ
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