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Introduction, About your radio – Uniden Radio User Manual

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About Your Radio

Traditional weather radios receive NOAA's weather broadcast (usually

within a 50-mile radius) then sound an alarm of any emergency code

which was transmitted along with the broadcast. This means that people

who live outside an affected area are often alerted even when their area

is not affected, causing many of them to ignore potentially real

emergency/weather warnings that can save lives.

In 1994, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)

began broadcasting coded signals called FIPS (Federal Information

Processing System) codes along with their standard weather broadcasts

from stations in your area. These codes identify an emergency and the

specific geographic area (such as a county) affected by the emergency.

The WX500 was developed with the S.A.M.E. (Specific Area Message

Encoding) technology. This allows your radio to receive, interpret,

and display the information about the codes so you can determine

if the emergency might affect your area. Only S.A.M.E. compatible

emergency/weather radios are able to take advantage of this new

technology.

Each FIPS code identifies a specific geographic area (defined by the

National Weather Service), so your radio sounds an alert only when

an emergency/weather emergency is declared in those locations.

This helps you more efficiently track the emergency/weather conditions

in and around your area.

INTRODUCTION

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