LibertyNT said:Though oddly WBAP-FM keeps going off the air.
Seems like they're having a hard time keeping power at the site
milton77 said:I wish KRLD's coverage would simulcast on at least one FM station when they are wall-to-wall with weather (perhaps KRLD-FM when not in a game). Lightning can make listening a bit difficult at times.
JRZFM100 said:WBAP-FM had tornadic activity in very close proximity to their tower.LibertyNT said:Though oddly WBAP-FM keeps going off the air.
bturner said:The radio station that is not a primary in the Emergency Alert System has the option of airing the alert or not. The important thing is the information got on the air.
2. All other broadcast stations and cable systems which are monitoring key sources via
EAS equipment and will be alerted by the header codes and attention signal will, at
the discretion of management, perform the same procedures as in step 1 above by
transmitting the emergency message from the LP-1 or LP-2. Broadcast stations and
cable systems using automatic interrupt of programming should receive the EOM
codes before retransmitting State and local level EAS messages. This can prevent
downstream locations before missing parts of the EAS message.
Robert Bass said:IMHO, EAS is a waste of time. By the time you broadcast the header and attention signal, you've lost roughly 20 seconds of total time that you could have used to broadcast information of actual importance. If EAS activation for weather alerts is non-mandatory for participating EAS stations, it should not be used.
R
bturner said:I get what you are saying. Perhaps an opening sound effect that lets people know the forthcoming is not just more regular programming. I would think such a sounder would already be in place.
Just wondering: How'd KPIR do prior to sunset?
Robert Bass said:Yeah a sounder is an excellent idea. When Barton was with KRLD, he used some type of beeping tone under his voice to signify it was an alert.
R
Gordonradio said:Why does KRLD use a different method for severe weather alerts with the beep tones instead of the standard EAS method?
Robert Bass said:IMHO, EAS is a waste of time. By the time you broadcast the header and attention signal, you've lost roughly 20 seconds of total time that you could have used to broadcast information of actual importance. If EAS activation for weather alerts is non-mandatory for participating EAS stations, it should not be used.
Robert, JRZFM, Grantchester, etal..
Thanks for the kind words.
As "primary" EAS outlet, WBAP is required to activate EAS for all tornado, severe tstm and flash flood warnings in our assigned area. Even though the process has been streamlined, it's still a time-consuming hassle to execute the warning protocol. That's why we do a brief "pre-warning" that mentions the warning and county before we hit the EAS opening tones.
Not sure, but I don't think we can put any other sound underneath the warning-copy when we're in EAS-mode.
I will pass your "weather beeps" suggestion onto Tyler. Thanks again.