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Old January 21st 07, 07:20 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival

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?

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Old January 21st 07, 07:36 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival

Survival,,,,,, a hatchet,a knife,figure the rest out on your
own.Or,watch Survivorman on the Discovery tv channel.I will watch them
Survivor Wimmins.
cuhulin

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Old January 21st 07, 08:25 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival


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?


A 2M ham HT can allow you to monitor the severe WX nets.

A VHF/UHF scanner can allow you to monitor fire and police,
though this is starting to change with digital.

MW and HF allow one to listen to local, not so local and international
news. During the civil war in Jorden the only comms were Ham radio.

After Katrina ham radio also helped with the relief efforts.

There have been several times where a ham radio has saved me
from at best serious discomfort to at worst injury or death. I have
been known to go deep into the Red River Gorge during heavy
snow to take photos. One time I had a starter fail. The temps
had dropped to the mid teens more snow was on the way. I was
very happy my ham radio worked and some friends came to retrieve
me. One of the more foolish things I have done as an adult. While
I did have a sleeping bag and food etc, it would have been a very
long and cold night.

Your question is so open ended that it is hard to present a useful
answer. In truth you may want to visit misc.survivialism where topics
like this are debated daily. Of course MS has the largest number
of net nuts on the web so be warned.

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Old January 21st 07, 08:55 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival

If my little doggy croakes before I do,I am going to get her taxidermy
freeze dried.At least she wouldn't be nagging me arse in the middle of
the night to take her out in the front yard anymore.
cuhulin

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Old January 22nd 07, 12:45 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival

Instead of a sleeping bag and food, you should have packed and extra
starter, tools and a cell phone


wrote in message
s.com...

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?


A 2M ham HT can allow you to monitor the severe WX nets.

A VHF/UHF scanner can allow you to monitor fire and police,
though this is starting to change with digital.

MW and HF allow one to listen to local, not so local and international
news. During the civil war in Jorden the only comms were Ham radio.

After Katrina ham radio also helped with the relief efforts.

There have been several times where a ham radio has saved me
from at best serious discomfort to at worst injury or death. I have
been known to go deep into the Red River Gorge during heavy
snow to take photos. One time I had a starter fail. The temps
had dropped to the mid teens more snow was on the way. I was
very happy my ham radio worked and some friends came to retrieve
me. One of the more foolish things I have done as an adult. While
I did have a sleeping bag and food etc, it would have been a very
long and cold night.

Your question is so open ended that it is hard to present a useful
answer. In truth you may want to visit misc.survivialism where topics
like this are debated daily. Of course MS has the largest number
of net nuts on the web so be warned.



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Old January 22nd 07, 02:37 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival

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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Old January 22nd 07, 02:47 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival

Look around and buy one of those battery powered transistor AM radios
from the 1950's/1960's.You might be supprised at how well they work.
cuhulin

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Old January 22nd 07, 03:42 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival


labtech1 wrote:
Instead of a sleeping bag and food, you should have packed and extra
starter, tools and a cell phone


Have you ever changed the starter on a VW bug?
In 15F weather?
In a foot of snow?

If so you are a hell of alot tougher then me.

My friends hooked a rope to their 4 wheel drive and I popped the clutch
in 2nd. Kind of interesting in a foot of snow.. Once I got the engine
running
we boogied back to Lexington.

Hint a Porshe 914 starter will fit a VW bug and you don't have to drop
the engine. VW bug starters were "missing the rear end and had to
be installed with the engine out. Major bummer.

So I would have needed to pull the engine, removed the dead starte,
drive out the
bushing in the transaxil, install the new starter, make sure it was
spaced correctly
and then reinstalled the engine.

I know I am just a lame slacker.

Terry

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Old January 22nd 07, 07:28 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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Default Radio as a tool of survival

VW's.I have owned three of them before.The first one was a 1961 van I
bought at Steakly Chevrolet in Killeen,Texas in 1965.(when I was in the
U.S.Army,,,, GO ARMY!) The second one was a 1963 VW beetle car I bought
when I came home on a three day leave from Fort Hood,Texas in 1965.The
third one was a 1970 VW van.Those old VW's are a pain in the arse! The
clutch cables stretch and break and the balves (valves) are suppose to
be adjusted every three thousand miles.I never ever want anything to do
with VW anythings ever again.You freeze to death in the wintertime in
those old VW pieces of junk too.There is a guy near me whom wheels and
deals in old VWs,I might get over there (it's only about two miles from
me) someday and look around.
cuhulin

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