viennaxmas
Well-known member
- First Name
- Sarah
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2023
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 103
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- 95
- Location
- Vienna, VA
- Vehicles
- 2023 F150 Lightning Lariat
It still requires the radio to be turned on and tuned to a station. It does help with it's longer range and when people have receivers or are prepared for an emergency. Most people are not. Radio consumption primarily happens while driving.While I’m right there with many of you ridiculing the idea of AM radio being a valuable entertainment source, I still support keeping AM radio in vehicles for _emergency purposes_. Think this is unneeded in this age of cell phones? Take a look at what happened in Paradise, CA during the fire that destroyed most of the town and killed nearly 100 people. The cell network was destroyed by the raging fire and was unable to send out emergency alerts, let alone support the idea of people looking up info on the internet. AM radio is more resilient in emergency situations than any other technological source of information due to its simplicity and ubiquity. A single AM radio broadcast tower (or maybe 2 or 3 for redundancy and backup) is much easier to provide power to, keep running, and protect than hundreds of smaller cell towers and the necessary backhaul they require. Do people need to be informed to tune to AM radio in the event of an emergency? Probably. But that’s a solvable issue when everyone already has an AM radio in the vehicle they are using to flee in.
Who still has a radio at home, let alone one that can receive AM?
In Europe, certain alerts can override any other media source playing (aka: It would pause cassette or Apple CarPlay and play the emergency message, primarily used for emergency traffic alerts).
One of the reasons why cell phone broadcast messages have become so popular, they are everywhere and always on, even though they have range issue.
Would an EAS alert have helped in the Paradise situation? Maybe. Without power, the core source for receiving EAS alerts would have not worked: The TV's. And not many people would have listened to radio at that moment.
I do not want to downplay the issues in the Paradise Sheriff's office, based on the information in the article it looks like a combination of system failures and an overcomplicated system. EAS via AM/FM/TV also has to be initiated, go through the chain of command and then transferred to a master station that sends out the alert.
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