The BBC World Service aired a story in the US with EAS tones and alert in it 5 times on Wednesday. ....why oh why would any broadcaster/programmer whos content airs in the US use this?
Was the story about AM radios in cars and the belief that people "rely on them in emergencies"?The BBC World Service aired a story in the US with EAS tones and alert in it 5 times on Wednesday. ....why oh why would any broadcaster/programmer whos content airs in the US use this?
Unless it was part of a World Service program about American radio, American emergency preparedness, American weather? And the BBC had recorded it in the US? Otherwise, the hack theory makes (scary) sense.Another website posts that the EAS tones were for a Tornado Warning....???!!
My question....WHO, exactly, SENT this message??
AFAIK, this would NOT have been something generated by the BBC......
In fact, the "average American" (don't ask me to define that...) hears EAS tones with startling frequency as part of "this station is conducting a test of the..." procedures at every FCC licensed station.As long as the proper procedure is followed - a notification letter to the FCC - it's unlikely there will be any further consequences. The BBC will no doubt remind its US journalists that you don't put EAS audio on the radio, ever, and life will move on.
For much of Summer 2021, I'd get frequent EAS alerts on OTA TV (I'd just moved and hadn't gotten cable set up yet) about the Dixie and Caldor fires, which were... about 150+ miles away (this was likely because the stations I was receiving are broadcast from Sacramento, which includes those areas as part of its TV market).In fact, the "average American" (don't ask me to define that...) hears EAS tones with startling frequency as part of "this station is conducting a test of the..." procedures at every FCC licensed station.
Even the most obtuse person knows from context whether such tones are "just a test" or something real. Even if the "letter of the law" is rather precise, the intent is to prevent using those tones in entertainment programming or, in an extreme, in situations where a fumbled play in a football game disappoints the crowd.
I guess it's better than what an EBS or CONELRAD test would've been like (both were defunct long before I was born, so I don't know what those were like), but it is annoying.
While a transmitter can be digitally tuned, on AM (CONELRAD was not allowed/deployed on FM), towers are not frequency agile and to accept a totally different frequency need a separate ATU (Antenna Tuning Unit) for the additional frequency. When you look at how many AMs today are diplexed (or more) adding an additional tuning unit is a huge, major cost and is not easily done.Interesting. Did anyone ever record audio of one of these CONELRAD tests?
It's interesting to me that nowadays, with transistors and digitally tuned transmitters, the kinds of things CONELRAD had stations do would actually be quite easy, if not practical to do nowadays.