RadioBanter

RadioBanter (https://www.radiobanter.com/)
-   Scanner (https://www.radiobanter.com/scanner/)
-   -   The World is on Fire (online scanner link?) (https://www.radiobanter.com/scanner/34628-re-world-fire-online-scanner-link.html)

Paul October 26th 03 05:04 AM

The World is on Fire (online scanner link?)
 
Burr: (or anyone else)

Is there an ONLIE scanner link in Real Time Audio
to this fire scene?? (aKa police scanner.com or similar?)

Pse advise via posting a reply for me and others !

Tnx! Paul - Harrisburg Pa.

"Burr" wrote in message
...
Power is burning down. LA may lose power anytime.

One person, maybe a fire fighter just got run over by fire.
He's alive and they are trying to get him down.

Real high winds are hitting them.

Burr wrote:

The fire bugs are setting fires faster then the fire departments

can
put them out in Southern California.
I am monitoring on my scanner the USFS, BLM and the local fire
departments and it's unreal. Over a 100 homes just burned up in a few
minutes and two reports have come in of two new fires in the last few
hours.
The winds are blowing at 30 to 60 mph and the fire are jumping fire
breaks and roads everywhere.

Burr




Frank October 26th 03 10:01 AM

Paul ...

^ Is there an ONLIE scanner link in Real Time Audio
^ to this fire scene??

I don't know, but it would be only a very small part of the picture; fires
generate a lot of traffic. The California Division of Forestry (CDF) starts
out by assigning two frequencies to the incident: a command frequency and a
tactical frequency. There are also about 10 fire units of various types that
constitute the initial response. As the fire grows and more units respond,
the incident commander might request additional tactical frequencies and
logistical frequencies.

In addition to the assigned frequencies there are the air frequencies, RED,
YELLOW, and BLUE, plus 10 VHF AM frequencies in the aviation allocation.

In addition to the CDF frequencies, other organizations, such as the U.S.
Forest Service and BLM, will be using their own frequencies for internal
organization, support, and tactics. Also, from what I've seen in the past,
fire teams in the field may be using FRS radios for internal team
communications.

So to effectively follow a major fire you need one receiver for COMMAND, one
for AIR, one to cycle through TACTICS, two to lock on to other interesting
frequencies, and two others to cycle through all remaining frequencies. And a
couple more ears.

Frank



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:28 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com