Looking for an accurate time zone map.

My Google wizardly is failing me.
I easily find generic time zone maps.

https://goo.gl/images/qyA6KK

I can’t get Google maps to show specific details. Which towns are on each side of a time zone.

I put in “US Time Zones” and Google maps identifies businesses with those words. :rolleyes:

A standard map should come up with a long line indicating the time zone border.

Trying to plan a car trip East and want to know when we’ll lose an hour of our daylight driving time. One second it’s 3 pm and ten seconds later it’s 4 pm.

What are the magic words that I can whisper to get Google Maps to show time zones?

Weren’t time zones shown in a road atlas? I used to buy one before making any cross country trips.

Google Map supposedly replaced them.

I really should pick up the Rand McNally before we leave.

Well the ones that aren’t on state boundaries are generally on county boundaries.
Wikipedia has a series of articles “Time in {State}”. These describe which counties are in which time zones. You could look up those states which split time zones individually before you enter them. For instance, Kentucky:

And this will be somewhat more convenient - it has a zoomable map, although the detail level isn’t that good:

ETA:

This one zooms a little better:

Thank you. The 2nd map zooms in great.

I knew Nashville was central time. I see now that Eastern time starts at the edge of Chattanooga TN.

Going to work must be an adventure. You live in the Central zone and you have to be at work at 8 Eastern. That’s 7AM for you.

But you do get home at 5 pm. 4 pm your time. You can relax in the yard, cook burgers while everyone else is stuck in a cubicle.

We’re planning to drive 8 hours and stop at a hotel in the new time zone. Then we’ll be ok for the rest of the trip.

Chattanooga would be a logical place to reserve a room.

…never? You don’t have to change your habits just because a government line told you to change your clock. If you stay at roughly the same latitude, there’s always the same amount of daylight.

Or you just live on eastern time, or both times simultaneously.

Time zone boundaries are an inconvenience for people who live near them, but that’s because it’s annoying to always have to specify what time someone is talking about, not because there are magic hours popping out of nowhere to make your day longer or shorter.

(Also, my understanding from other threads is that typical work hours are later in the east than in the central time zone. So it may be that “your time” is lined up exactly with “their time” and you just call it different things.)

Actually, now that I think about it, you’ll lose around a half hour of daylight while driving to Chattanooga from Little Rock. But it will be gradual, and would still happen if Chattanooga was on central time.

I find a surprising number of people struggle with this idea.

You should try living in Arizona.
[ul]
[li]The state is in the Mountain time zone and does not observe DST.[/li][li]Except the Navajo Nation reservation, which does.[/li][li]Except the Hopi Nation reservation, entirely within the Navajo reservation, which does not.[/li][/ul]
A tourist guide for the area recommends that you “ask locally.” We forgot bullet two once and arrived at the Hubbell trading post in Ganado after it had closed for the day. I’ve learned to put my smart phone on airplane mode because its time is unreliable and the coverage is spotty anyway, making power consumption an issue.

My company has an office in Phoenix and it’s annoying trying to schedule meetings because Arizona doesn’t do DST.

The boundary between the Central and Mountain time zones in South Dakota on I-90 used to run a little bit west of Murdo which is about in the middle of Jones County but, several years ago, the government decided to move it several miles to the west to the county border. This made sense as far as lining it up with the boundary coming from the south which follows the western borders of Todd and Mellette Counties but now it takes a several mile jog to the east on the northern border of Jones County to rejoin the original boundary. It then goes a few miles north to join the Missouri River between Pierre and Fort Pierre and then follows the river to the northern border of the state. It then takes a several mile jog to the west along the border before going into North Dakota.

Fun fact: Since Pierre and Fort Pierre are right on opposite sides of the boundary and bars cannot legally sell alcohol after 2am there is usually a mass exodus from Pierre in the Central time zone to Fort Pierre in the Mountain time zone to gain another hour of drinking time.