Yes, I have.
First of all, Bowles said “Usually we didn’t change them until they became at least two minutes or more out of synchronization of each other.”
Secondly, whether the dispatcher clocks were synchronized with each other or not, that tells you nothing about how accurately either one was set to any time standard.
First of all, Bowles said “
Usually we didn’t change them until they became
at least two minutes
or more out of synchronization of each other.”
Here are the preceding two sentences:
“There was no way in the world that some six clocks in the telephone room and the two clocks in the dispatching room were synchronized.
They could be as much as a minute or two apart.”The above statement includes all eight clocks.
Here are the four sentences that follow your selected sentence:
“There was one clock in the office that had a generally reliable time. It was on the back wall of the telephone room. The only trouble was that it was way back in the corner which you could hardly see, and nobody ever looked at it. It was just there. They’d use it only when they wanted to check its time versus the other time.”
Now that we have all seven pertinent sentences to look at, it appears that if any one of the clocks became two minutes out of sync it was synchronized. Yes I will concede that it was possible for one to become more than two minutes out of sync occasionally. However, the rule appears to be that two minutes was the point that normally triggered the synchronization.