T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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931.1 | I want one, probably NEED one. | ULTRA::BURGESS | Mad Man across the water | Wed Nov 20 1991 15:11 | 25 |
| re <<< Note 931.0 by LEDDEV::DEMBA >>>
> -< Weather radios >-
We were out on the Merrimac river one sunny afternnon this
summer (Legal V-time, of course) and we just happened to have the
radio on at a time when they broadcaste a storm warning for "East
Coast, North of Boston" or some-such. We looked around, agreed the
sky looked gloomy and that the next ski run(s) should be toward the
ramp. I don't think we were more than 5 miles down river when we got
this first warning.
We didn't hurry, in fact someone knee-boarded back, but we kept the
radio on and I'm pretty sure the word "Imminent" was used. We only
just made it, torrential rain started as we were leaving and the side
winds on Rte #93 were dangerous (understatement, there was a
tractor/trailer rig on its side in the ditch before I got to 495).
Anyway, the point is that we barely had a 20 minute warning
and we could have been in REAL trouble if that wind had picked up just
as we were coming in or trying to put the boat on the trailer. I keep
meaning to get a weather band radio and I keep not doing it, for
$20-30, or even 50 it could be cheap coverage. Gee, maybe Santa has a
few to give out this year (-:
Reg
|
931.2 | | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Wed Nov 20 1991 15:39 | 11 |
| Having a weather radio aboard and using it is an excellent idea.
However, much severe weather is quite sudden and localized and is never
forecast. You have to depend on your own observations and, if you have
and doubts, it is prudent to find shelter. And too, the forecasts cover
a large area, and local geography can have a big effect. One September
afternoon we were sailing across West Penobscot Bay, Maine, in winds
gusting over 50 knots. The NOAA forecast was for 10 to 20 knot winds,
which in fact was correct along the edges of the bay, but not in the
middle.
Alan
|
931.3 | there's radios and their's radios | HYEND::HOBBS | | Wed Nov 20 1991 17:49 | 21 |
| Hi Steve, its been a long time. I assume you are interested in
listening to forcasts from home for winter weather or before you drag your
boat all the way to the ramp to find sea conditions keep you from launching.
If you still live in Stow you should be able to get Worcester (sp?) and
Boston (Blue Hills) and may be one of the NH stations Monadnock or Mt.
Washington. You could check out your ability to receive these at home using
your boat radio.
Now, the quality of the radio you need. I've found the Radio Shack
weather only radios to be of two types: tunable - "weather cube" - OK but
not good, and the xtal controled "emergency weather radio" - much better.
The difference in price is like $12 and $24. I would suggest you go to the
store, knowing what you get with your boat radio, and pick out the type which
best fit your needs. Personally I have the "emergency weather radio" down
stairs and in the winter bring home the hand held and keep it on the night
stand so if its snowing I can get the forcast and decide if I'm going to
mess with it before or after work.
Buy the way, I've found those combination flashlight, AM, FM, weather
radios to be junk and not worth the batteries you put in them.
Give me a call if I can help any more.
Rick
|
931.4 | NOAA 162.xxx MHz | STAR::SIMAKAUSKAS | Steam Locomotives have a tender behind | Wed Nov 20 1991 20:25 | 12 |
| NOAA, the poeple who bring you the weather, broadcasts on 3
frequencies throughout the country,
162.400, 162.475 and 162.500 MHz. The signal will carry for about
40 miles under normal conditions. Any radio that can receive
162-162 MHz can get you the weather forcast
radio shaft sells 3 or 4 different flavors of weather radio
each with a different set of whistles and bells. All ot these
work. It's more a matter of 'features'.
If you buy one of these, keep an extra battery handy just in case.
|
931.5 | NOAA by phone??? | TOOK::SWIST | Jim Swist LKG2-2/T2 DTN 226-7102 | Thu Jun 04 1992 14:06 | 9 |
| Does anyone know if there is a way to get NOAA forecasts from outside
the VHF range of the area? It would sure be nice to get the story on
Maine weather before going all the way up. My father-in-law was a
private pilot and I always remember him calling some phone number to
get some reasonably high-quality weather info for whereever he was
headed, although I'm fairly sure it was an aviation-oriented service.
|
931.6 | Concord NH NOAA | SHUTKI::JOYCE | | Thu Jun 04 1992 16:14 | 1 |
| NOAA in Concord - 603-875-6060 recorded message
|
931.7 | let your fingers do the walking | STAR::SIMAKAUSKAS | Steam Locomotives have a tender behind | Tue Jun 09 1992 11:58 | 5 |
| Most large cities have a NOAA phone w/ recorded forcast. Use a phone
book or dial information. In the US gov't listings, Commerce
department, NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)
listing should have an entry for recorded weather info.
|
931.8 | Marine Weather | LEVERS::SWEET | | Tue Jun 09 1992 12:43 | 5 |
| Marine forcast in Boston 617-569-3700 covers
Merrimack River to Watch RI out to 25 miles and give the offshore
forcast (Georges, great south channel, out to hague line...)
Bruce
|
931.9 | | TOOK::SWIST | Jim Swist LKG2-2/T2 DTN 226-7102 | Tue Jun 09 1992 13:19 | 3 |
| Where/what is the hague line. Also mentioned on the Maine NOAA
offshore forecast....
|
931.10 | US/Canadian border | HPSRAD::HOWARTH | | Tue Jun 09 1992 15:17 | 4 |
| Hague Line refers to the US/Canadian border that was determined
at the Hague Convention.
Joe
|
931.11 | We lost...they won | LEVERS::SWEET | | Wed Jun 10 1992 14:07 | 5 |
| On the other side is the "best" parts of Georges Bank. Go over it
and the canadian coast gaurd will chase you all the way to
New Bedford.
Bruce
|