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  3. NOAA weather radio, at least in DC, seems to be dying of accelerated neglect.

NOAA weather radio, at least in DC, seems to be dying of accelerated neglect.

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  • Matt BlazeM This user is from outside of this forum
    Matt BlazeM This user is from outside of this forum
    Matt Blaze
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    NOAA weather radio, at least in DC, seems to be dying of accelerated neglect. It’s never been especially well funded or maintained, but it’s gotten to the point of being useless for emergency alerts.

    The DC transmitter on 162.45 lost its site in NW a few months ago and relocated to Silver Spring, with a much worse signal in the District.

    They seem to have given up on sending encoded alerts; I didn’t see a single one for the recent storms or extreme cold warnings.

    Norman WilsonO Matt BlazeM 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • Matt BlazeM Matt Blaze

      NOAA weather radio, at least in DC, seems to be dying of accelerated neglect. It’s never been especially well funded or maintained, but it’s gotten to the point of being useless for emergency alerts.

      The DC transmitter on 162.45 lost its site in NW a few months ago and relocated to Silver Spring, with a much worse signal in the District.

      They seem to have given up on sending encoded alerts; I didn’t see a single one for the recent storms or extreme cold warnings.

      Norman WilsonO This user is from outside of this forum
      Norman WilsonO This user is from outside of this forum
      Norman Wilson
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @mattblaze It's Government Efficiency. You're supposed to get weather alerts on X now.

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      • Matt BlazeM Matt Blaze

        NOAA weather radio, at least in DC, seems to be dying of accelerated neglect. It’s never been especially well funded or maintained, but it’s gotten to the point of being useless for emergency alerts.

        The DC transmitter on 162.45 lost its site in NW a few months ago and relocated to Silver Spring, with a much worse signal in the District.

        They seem to have given up on sending encoded alerts; I didn’t see a single one for the recent storms or extreme cold warnings.

        Matt BlazeM This user is from outside of this forum
        Matt BlazeM This user is from outside of this forum
        Matt Blaze
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        While smartphones and the Internet have largely supplanted NOAA radio for routine local weather information, it fills an important niche for emergency alerts: it’s the only alarm system for sending emergency alerts directly to affected residents that doesn’t depend on the Internet or cellular infrastructure.

        I hope it hangs on.

        you're all idiotsI W 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • Matt BlazeM Matt Blaze

          While smartphones and the Internet have largely supplanted NOAA radio for routine local weather information, it fills an important niche for emergency alerts: it’s the only alarm system for sending emergency alerts directly to affected residents that doesn’t depend on the Internet or cellular infrastructure.

          I hope it hangs on.

          you're all idiotsI This user is from outside of this forum
          you're all idiotsI This user is from outside of this forum
          you're all idiots
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @mattblaze what you might call redundancy some government slasher calls unnecessary and wasteful duplication of service.

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          • Matt BlazeM Matt Blaze

            While smartphones and the Internet have largely supplanted NOAA radio for routine local weather information, it fills an important niche for emergency alerts: it’s the only alarm system for sending emergency alerts directly to affected residents that doesn’t depend on the Internet or cellular infrastructure.

            I hope it hangs on.

            W This user is from outside of this forum
            W This user is from outside of this forum
            w6msu
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @mattblaze It's funny NOAA weather radio never "meshed" with the low-power AM Highway emergency (or even real-estate information!) broadcasts even the way Emergency Management could provide NOAA alerting hardware for ham repeaters.

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