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On Mar 3, 12:31 pm, "HD Radio Fan" wrote:
"Geoffrey S. Mendelson" wrote in ... Roadie wrote: A radio that uses a built-in generator would be much easier to carry around and keep charged up than your other alternatives. AM, FM and weather channel coverage is far far more imprtant than shortwave in an emergency radio. Only in the U.S. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, Jerusalem, Israel N3OWJ/4X1GM IL Voice: (07)-7424-1667 Fax ONLY: 972-2-648-1443 U.S. Voice: 1-215-821-1838 Visit my 'blog athttp://geoffstechno.livejournal.com/ The original poster to this thread is in Canada. Close enough?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, I am in Canada. I live about ten miles from the border at Niagara Falls. Spent a lot of time in both Canada and the U.S. Have relatives in both countrys. Family been here since 1635. We have the same type of Weather Alert-Emergency Alert system as the U.S. Environment Canada runs it as far as I know. We can buy the same alert radios as in the U.S., We use SAME technology in the latest radios. Same frequencys. NOAA and Environment Canada have agreements together on the system. I agree that a radio with weather frequencys would be very important. However, for some reason, I don't trust these wind-up radios for long term use. I prefer to use a small digital am/fm/sw with spare rechargeables and a solar charger. Reason being that I also use AA batteries for other things. Some of the new thin film solar cell foldable chargers do a very good job. I believe the thin film foldables were developed for the military. I was able to get one for my kit. along with a some sets of the latest technology rechargeables. (Eneloop and Panasonic make some of the newest high tech batteries.) Ya, if you think they might drop the big one, wrap one radio in something like cardboard, and then wrap it in metal foil . (Faraday cage). If you think the big one is about to happen, retract all whip antennas, unhook all other antennas, keep your radios at least ten feet from any metal pipes, lengths of wire etc. that could act as a collector of EMP. Any whip antenna should be as short as possible, no more then 30", and much shorter then that if possible. That's why a very small radio, with a collapsed antenna length of maybe four or five inches has a better chance of surviving even if it is not in a Faraday cage. |
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