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dead of night wrote:
Hi. I'm reading Daphne Du Maurier's short story "The Birds" right now. In this story, a family is inside their boarded up house, attacked by thousands of birds. They tune to their radio and learn that farther away,in the cities, the population is under attack by hordes of large birds. These attacks seem to be organized, military, and reasoning. I'm interested in the radio as a tool of survival in an emergency: weather, terror, war, epidemic, or alien. What would be some of the best radios to own as a source of news information and survival in a time of severe crisis and emergency? It depends on what you want to find out and what kinds of radio you're comfortable working with. It pains me to admit this, but Shortwave radio isn't terribly useful during a disaster. Even a MW AM radio can hear radio stations from hundreds of miles away on any given night. On most nights I can hear stations in Montreal from my home about 30 miles west of Baltimore. Such a radio doesn't need to be expensive. I'm thinking GE SuperRadio here... In general, the utility of a Shortwave radio is less because fewer and fewer stations broadcast to North America on any regular basis. Instead of a Shortwave radio, I'd get an XM or Sirus satellite radio. A VHF and UHF scanner of good quality (one capable of APCO-25 digital reception) would be a solid investment --assuming you know how to set it up to receive your local police and fire companies. It could give you a real heads up in the event they're involved in something truly ugly. The bottom line, however, is that you need to listen to them to get news. Most people don't want that "noise" in the background. Me? I live across the street from a fire station. My wife actually pushed me to get a scanner and set it up so that she could find out what was going on out there. Some day, we'll get a decent APCO-25 capable scanner to find out the whole story. And I still wake up to my Grundig YB-400 every morning. Yes, I have other radios. All of them are better than the stuff I use next to my bedside. But size and battery power mean a lot. Some day, I plan to put solar film arrays on my barn roof. It will mostly be for backfeeding my electrical meter a bit, though I still think it would be nice to have for emergencies. I'm no survivalist, but I do think it's worth while being prepared. You never know when Mother Nature will throw a curve ball at you. Jake Brodsky Amateur Radio Station AB3A |
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