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-   -   Radio commercial trips EAS receivers (https://www.radiobanter.com/broadcasting/154370-radio-commercial-trips-eas-receivers.html)

Patty Winter[_2_] September 24th 10 04:41 PM

Radio commercial trips EAS receivers
 
I hadn't heard this commercial, which has now been taken off the air:

http://www.sbe.org/pub_sc.php#BPCommercial

Did anyone here run across it, or hear about any stations that had
trouble when their local EAS primary station aired it?


Patty


[email protected] September 29th 10 10:56 PM

Radio commercial trips EAS receivers
 
On Sep 24, 8:41*am, (Patty Winter) wrote:
I hadn't heard this commercial, which has now been taken off the air:

http://www.sbe.org/pub_sc.php#BPCommercial

Did anyone here run across it, or hear about any stations that had
trouble when their local EAS primary station aired it?

Patty


I havn't heard it or heard of any problems with it, but I can imagine
what it would sound like and I'm glad they got it off the air. Jerks
at ad agencies in the past have used car horns, sirens and ringing
telephones in commercials---to the confusion of listeners. On one or
two occasions during my years in radio I was able to persuade
managements to get agencies to change them on the ground that the
station shouldn't be broadcasting something that might cause an
accident. "Where's that horn coming from? Who's honking at me? For
what?"

Gil Haar


John Higdon[_2_] September 30th 10 01:52 AM

Radio commercial trips EAS receivers
 
In article
,
" wrote:

I havn't heard it or heard of any problems with it, but I can imagine
what it would sound like and I'm glad they got it off the air.


Don't forget that the EAS burst (202 modem carrier) contains headers,
footers, event codes, region codes, and other information that has to
line up with the programming in a station's decoder. One item out of
place or incorrect and the message is ignored. Unless nefarious intent
was present, it is most highly unlikely that a random burst of even
genuine 202 data (which has its own self-validation) would present any
sort of problem to stations monitoring the broadcast for EAS purposes.

All that said, I think the current system is flaw-ridden in the
extreme...but this isn't one of those flaws. It should also be noted
that this is the first system (previous systems included EANS and EBS)
that has actually worked well enough that it has served in real
emergency notifications.

--
John Higdon
+1 408 ANdrews 6-4400
AT&T-Free At Last


[email protected] September 30th 10 11:12 PM

Radio commercial trips EAS receivers
 
On Sep 29, 5:52*pm, John Higdon wrote:
In article
,

" wrote:
I havn't heard it or heard of any problems with it, but I can imagine
what it would sound like and I'm glad they got it off the air.


Don't forget that the EAS burst (202 modem carrier) contains headers,
footers, event codes, region codes, and other information that has to
line up with the programming in a station's decoder. One item out of
place or incorrect and the message is ignored. Unless nefarious intent
was present, it is most highly unlikely that a random burst of even
genuine 202 data (which has its own self-validation) would present any
sort of problem to stations monitoring the broadcast for EAS purposes.

All that said, I think the current system is flaw-ridden in the
extreme...but this isn't one of those flaws. It should also be noted
that this is the first system (previous systems included EANS and EBS)
that has actually worked well enough that it has served in real
emergency notifications.

--
John Higdon
+1 408 ANdrews 6-4400
AT&T-Free At Last


I wasn't referring to its actually setting off the receivers, but to
the annoyance factor.


beendala February 14th 11 10:32 AM

In that faild of the radio banter for the ans given by dodge journey one week ago.


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