2 a.m. Oct. 29
Daylight saving time saves light. You turn your clocks an hour ahead in spring and set them an hour back in fall.
On Sunday, November 7, 2010 at 2 a.m., Daylight Saving Time ends .
Daylight saving time is when clocks are adjusted forward by one hour during the warmer months to make better use of natural daylight in the evenings. This practice is typically followed from spring to fall to maximize daylight in the evening hours.
On Sunday, November 7, 2010 at 2 a.m., Daylight Saving Time ends .
To change from Daylight Saving Time to regular time, you typically "fall back" by setting your clocks back one hour. This transition usually occurs in the fall when Daylight Saving Time ends. People in regions that observe Daylight Saving Time usually set their clocks back on the first Sunday in November.
Just remember 'spring forward, fall back'.
In the fall of 2010, the clocks were turned back on November 7th. This is part of the daylight saving time practice where clocks are set back one hour to mark the end of daylight saving time for the year.
Daylight savings time actually ends in fall on November 2 at 2 am.
It probably is Oct. 31.
Winter is not included in the period of Daylight Saving Time. The period typically starts in spring and ends in fall, so it covers the seasons of spring, summer, and fall.
Yes, Indianapolis observes daylight saving time. The city follows the same schedule as most of the United States, moving clocks forward one hour in the spring and back one hour in the fall. However, it's important to note that Indiana as a whole previously had inconsistencies in observing daylight saving time, but since 2006, the entire state, including Indianapolis, has uniformly adopted it.
The answer would depend on whether it is during the observation of daylight savings time or not. When the clocks spring ahead 1 hour in the spring, you begin to use PDT (Pacific Daylight Time). When the clocks fall back an hour in the fall daylight savings time is over and then you begin to use PST (Pacific Standard Time).