MOYIWAVE
SIGNAL SPECS

Six radio time-code standards, worldwide

MoyiWave doesn’t play a pre-recorded clip. On your iOS device it generates each transmission live, following five countries’ entirely different PWM cycles, numeral bases and parity logic. Pick a station below to see its spec, transmitter and live decode.

Six countries, five entirely different encodings — generated live in one app.

Select station
JJY40
Japan
(40 kHz)
JJY60
Japan
(60 kHz)
WWVB
USA
(60 kHz)
DCF77
Germany
(77.5 kHz)
MSF
UK
(60 kHz)
BPC
China
(68.5 kHz)
WWVBMSB First

USA NIST · AM/PWM + BPSK · 1 bps · 0 = 200 ms / 1 = 500 ms / Mark = 800 ms low · MSB first · no parity

Frequency
60 kHz
Power
70 kW
Est. night range
3,200 km
Authority
USA · NIST · National Institute of Standards and Technology
Location
Fort Collins, Colorado
Antenna
Phased array: two antennas of four 122 m towers each, 857 m apart (flat; can run single-antenna at 30 kW)
Modulation
AM/PWM with added PM (BPSK phase modulation since 2012)
Bit encoding
0 = 200 ms low · 1 = 500 ms low · Mark = 800 ms low (encodes the low duration)
Read order
MSB First · BCD · no parity; frame aligned via position markers
Engineering note

A 2012 upgrade superimposed BPSK phase modulation on top of the original AM/PWM amplitude code, greatly improving jamming resistance and weak-signal reception; this app reproduces only the legacy AM/PWM amplitude code (what virtually all radio clocks decode) and does not support the BPSK phase layer. It carries no parity, aligning frames via position markers, and is sent directly as UTC. The unimplemented BPSK phase layer does not affect time-setting — radio clocks decode the amplitude code described above anyway.

LinksOfficial site ↗ Time-code spec ↗ Wikipedia ↗
Glossary
AM/PWM
Amplitude modulation + pulse-width: the carrier amplitude varies and pulse length carries data (used by most stations here).
Base-4
Quaternary: each pulse carries 2 bits (used by BPC).
BCD
Binary-coded decimal: each decimal digit is encoded separately in binary. These stations send only the bits needed — the units digit (0–9) takes 4 bits, while the tens digit drops leading bits thanks to its small range (minutes tens 0–5: 3 bits, hours tens 0–2: 2 bits).
bps
Bits per second; these stations mostly run at 1 bps.
BPSK
Binary phase-shift keying: a second data layer added by flipping the carrier phase 180°, on top of the amplitude code — more jamming-resistant.
DUT1
UT1−UTC: the small (sub-second) correction between Earth-rotation time and atomic time.
Leap second
A 1-second insertion occasionally added to UTC; the frame announces it via warning bits (e.g. LS1/LS2).
Marker
Position marker: a special fixed-position pulse used to align the one-minute frame.
MSB / LSB first
Bit transmission order — most-significant bit first / least-significant bit first.
OOK
On-off keying: data sent by switching the carrier fully on/off (used by MSF).
Parity
Check bit: an extra bit whose parity (even/odd) detects reception errors (e.g. PA1/PA2, P1/P2/P3).
PRN
Pseudo-random-noise phase modulation: phase is modulated with a PRN sequence for sharper, noise-resistant lock.
PWM
Pulse-width modulation: the length of each pulse encodes the bit value.
References

Sources & further reading

The signal specifications, encoding logic and station data on this page are drawn from each country’s official timekeeping authority and public records. They are grouped below by purpose for verification and further reading.

Time-code specifications
NICTJJY signal format
Time-code format and bit layout for Japan’s JJY at 40 / 60 kHz.
NISTWWVB time code
The AM/PWM amplitude-code specification for the U.S. WWVB signal.
PTBDCF77 time code
Germany’s DCF77 bit allocation and LSB-first encoding.
NPLMSF time & date code (2019)
The UK MSF A/B dual-sequence OOK specification.
WikipediaBPC (time signal)
China’s BPC quaternary-PWM encoding (no official English spec is published).
Receiver design
NISTWWVB radio-controlled clocks — recommended practices
Recommended practices for radio-clock manufacturers and receiver designers.
Stations & background
WikipediaRadio clock
Overview of the six time stations’ history, coverage and reception.
WikipediaAnthorn Radio Station
The co-located VLF military station and antenna array shared by MSF.