Weather radio
A weather radio is a specialized radio receiver that is designed to receive a public broadcast service, typically from government-owned radio stations, dedicated to airing weather reports on a continual basis, with the routine weather reports being interrupted by emergency weather reports whenever needed. Weather radios are typically equipped with a standby alerting function—if the radio is muted or tuned to another band and a severe weather bulletin is transmitted, it can automatically sound an alarm and/or switch to a pre-tuned weather channel for emergency weather information.
Weather radio services may also broadcast non-weather-related emergency information, such as in the event of a natural disaster, a child abduction alert, or a terrorist attack. They generally broadcast in a pre-allocated very high frequency (VHF) range using FM. Usually a radio scanner or a dedicated weather radio receiver is needed for listening, although in some locations a weather radio broadcast may be re-transmitted on an AM or FM broadcast station, on terrestrial television stations, or local public, educational, and government access (PEG) cable TV channels or during weather or other emergencies.
Weather radio receivers
Weather radios are generally sold in two varieties: home (stationary) or portable use. Portable models commonly offer specialized features that make them more useful in case of an emergency. Some models use crank power, in addition to mains electricity and batteries, in case of a power outage.
Smaller hand-held weather receivers generally do not support the SAME alert type encoding, but allow hikers and other explorers to listen to weather reports without packing a heavy and bulky base station radio. Some models have a built-in flashlight and can double as a cellphone charger. Some also serve as a more general emergency radio and may include multiband and two-way communication capability. "Scanner" radios designed to continuously monitor the VHF-FM public service band are already able to receive weather channels.
Besides SAME alerting capability, modern weather radio receivers may include visual alerting elements (e.g., multicolored LED indicator lights) and allow for the use of external devices (e.g., pillow vibrators, bed shakers, strobe lights, and loud sirens, which attach via an accessory port) to alert those who are deaf or hearing impaired.
Global weather radio services
Both private and commercial seagoing vessels need accurate weather reports, in order to avoid storms that might damage or capsize the vessel, or make paying passengers uncomfortable. One such service is Navtex, which is a low-frequency facsimile radio service.
North American weather radio services
The United States, Canada, Mexico, and Bermuda operate their government weather radio stations on the same marine VHF radio band, using FM transmitters.
Official | Frequency | Marine
Channel |
Public
Alert Channel |
---|---|---|---|
WX1 | 162.550 MHz | 39B | 7 |
WX2 | 162.400 MHz | 36B | 1 |
WX3 | 162.475 MHz | 97B | 4 |
WX4 | 162.425 MHz | 96B | 2 |
WX5 | 162.450 MHz | 37B | 3 |
WX6 | 162.500 MHz | 38B | 5 |
WX7 | 162.525 MHz | 98B | 6 |
WX8 | 161.650 MHz | 21B | |
WX9 | 161.775 MHz | 83B | |
WX10 | 163.275 MHz | 113B |
WX1 through WX7 are the standard weather band channels, as assigned and implemented by NOAA,[3] and are consistently used across U.S. Government agencies, including the Coast Guard.;[4] WX8 and WX9 are Canadian Continuous marine broadcast channels. WX10 was formerly used by the NWS for coordination during power outages. All stations in United States, Canada, and Bermuda transmit a 1050 Hz attention tone immediately before issuing a watch or warning, and this alone serves to activate the alarm feature on many older or basic alerting radios.
All U.S. and newer Canadian stations transmit WRSAME codes a few seconds before the 1050 Hz attention tone that allow more advanced receivers to respond only for certain warnings that carry a specific code for the local area. SAME codes are defined for counties, parishes, territories, or marine zones, and are set using preassigned six-digit FIPS county codes (in the U.S.) or CLC codes (in Canada). The SAME code protocol also includes an end-of-message (EOM) tone (three short data bursts of the binary 10101011 calibration then "NNNN", which some radios will use to mute the speaker after the alert broadcast has been completed.[5][6]
United States
NOAA Weather Radio (NWR; also known as NOAA Weather Radio All Hazards) is an automated 24-hour network of about 133 radio stations[7] in the United States that broadcast weather information directly from a nearby National Weather Service office. A complete broadcast cycle lasts about 3 to 8 minutes long, featuring weather forecasts and local observations, but is interrupted when severe weather advisories/warnings/watches are issued. It occasionally broadcasts other non-weather related events such as national security statements, natural disaster information, environmental and public safety statements (such as an AMBER Alert) sourced from the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) Emergency Alert System. Weather Underground discontinued live streams of NWR broadcasts in 2017.[8]
Canada
In Canada, Weatheradio Canada transmits in both official languages (English and French) from 230 sites across Canada. Canadian broadcasts are also transmitted on travelers' information stations on AM and FM, especially near national parks.
Caribbean
Bermuda Radio (call-sign ZBR) is a weather radio station in Bermuda working under the Government of Bermuda.
Bermuda has only one station dedicated purely for weather, on 162.55 MHz from Hamilton, now operated by the Bermuda Weather Service with tropical weather forecasts from NOAA. It has a second station, however, for marine conditions and forecasts, ZBR (operated by the Bermuda Maritime Operations Centre), at 162.4 MHz.[9][10]
Mexico
Mexico has since launched its own weather radio system, SARMEX (Sistema De Alerta De Riesgos Mexicano, or Mexican Hazard Warning System) for coverage of its cities,[11] which also implements the Mexican Seismic Warning System. Some Mexican alert radios also support activation by a two-tone alert for another type of risk warning.[12]
European weather radio services
Germany
In Germany, the Deutscher Wetterdienst broadcasts marine weather reports and weather warnings via long and short wave transmissions.[13]
Commercial weather radio services
The weather radio band is part of the marine VHF radio band reserved for governmental services. However, most standard AM and FM broadcast radio stations provide some sort of private weather forecasting, either through relaying public-domain National Weather Service forecasts, partnering with a meteorologist from a local television station (or using a meteorologist hired by the station, common when a radio station is a sister station of their TV counterpart or has a news and forecast-sharing agreement), affiliating with a commercial weather service company, or (in the most brazen cases) copying a commercial service's public forecasts without payment or permission. (The first option is not available, or at least legally, in Canada, where Environment Canada's forecasts are under crown copyright.)
Accuweather (through United Stations) and The Weather Channel (through Westwood One's NBC Radio Network) both operate large national weather radio networks through standard AM and FM stations. Brookstone licensed Accuweather's data service for their popular 5 Day Wireless Weather Watcher Cast Forecaster.
Microsoft's MSN Direct was a popular data service that included weather forecasting sent over US FM radio signals from 2004 to 2012. It was used by Microsoft Spot watches and Oregon Scientific clocks.[14]
See also
- Category:Weather radio
- Category:Emergency population warning systems in Canada
- Category:Emergency population warning systems
- Emergency population warning
- Emergency communication system
- Emergency notification system
- Mexican Seismic Alert System
- Public Warning System (Singapore)
- Integrated Public Alert and Warning System
- Wireless Emergency Alerts
- ShakeAlert
- Standard Emergency Warning Signal
- Emergency Alert Australia
- All clear
- J-Alert
- Civil defense siren
- International Early Warning Programme
- Warning system
- Indian Ocean Tsunami Warning System
- Tsunami warning system
- Earthquake warning system
- Earthquake Early Warning (Japan)
- Emergency Response Information Network
- EMWIN
External links
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to NOAA weather radio. |
- ↑ "NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE MARINE PRODUCTS VIA NOAA WEATHER RADIO".
- ↑ "USCG: U.S. VHF CHANNELS".
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-01-13. Retrieved 2015-01-12.
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-12-05. Retrieved 2015-01-12.
- ↑ "Radio Operations with E.O.M (End Of Message) Detection".
- ↑ "Using NWR SAME".
- ↑ "NOAA Weather Radio".
- ↑ "WU feature and product updates – Customer Feedback for Weather Underground". help.wunderground.com. Archived from the original on 2017-09-22. Retrieved 2017-09-21.
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-07-03. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
- ↑ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2013-07-19. Retrieved 2013-07-19.
- ↑ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-09-17. Retrieved 2015-10-29.
- ↑ "Sistema de Alerta de Riesgos Mexicano (Mexican Risk Alert System)".
- ↑ "Broadcastings of transmitter Pinneberg".
- ↑ MSN Direct stops FM data network