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Specific Area Message Encoding
EAS protocol used to activate ENDECs, weather-alert radios, and other devices

Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME) is a protocol used for framing and classification of broadcasting emergency warning messages. It was developed by the United States National Weather Service for use on its NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) network, and was later adopted by the Federal Communications Commission for the Emergency Alert System, then subsequently by Environment Canada for use on its Weatheradio Canada service. It is also used to set off receivers in Mexico City and surrounding areas as part of the Mexican Seismic Alert System (SASMEX).

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History

From the 1960s to the 1980s, a special feature of the NOAA Weather Radio (NWR) system was the transmission of a single 1050 Hzⓘ attention tone prior to the broadcast of any message alerting the general public of significant weather events. This became known as the Warning Alarm Tone (WAT). Although it served NWR well, there were many drawbacks. Without staff at media facilities to manually evaluate the need to rebroadcast an NWR message using the Emergency Broadcast System (EBS), automatic rebroadcasting of all messages preceded by just the WAT was unacceptable and impractical. Even if stations and others with the need were willing to allow for this type of automatic capture, assuming the events for activation were critical, there was no way for automated equipment at the station to know when the message was complete and restore it back to normal operation.

SAME had its beginnings in the early 1980s when NOAA's National Weather Service (NWS) began experimenting with system using analog tones in a dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) format to transmit data with radio broadcasts.1 In 1985, the NWS forecast offices began experimenting with placing special digital codes at the beginning and end of every message concerning life- or property-threatening weather conditions targeting a specific area. The intent of what became SAME was to ultimately transmit a code with the initial broadcast of all NWR messages. However, the roll-out moved slowly until 1995, when the U.S. Government provided the budget needed to develop the SAME technology across the entire radio network. Nationwide implementation occurred in 1997, when the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) adopted the SAME standard as part of its new Emergency Alert System (EAS).2 In 2003, NOAA established a SAME technology standard for weather radio receivers.

The SAME technique was later adopted by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in 19973 for use in the EAS as well as by Environment Canada4 for its Weatheradio Canada service in 2004. Much like the original EBS dual-tone Attention Signalⓘ, this produces a distinct sound (the SAME headerⓘ) which is easily recognized by most individuals due to its use in weekly and monthly broadcast tests, as well as weather alert messages. During the said events, viewers and/or listeners will hear these digital codes in the form of buzzes, chirps, and clicking sounds (colloquially known as "duck farts" by broadcast engineers)5 just before the attention signal is sent out and at the conclusion of the voice message.6

Format of digital parts

In the SAME system, messages are constructed in four parts, the first and last of which are digital and the middle two are audio. The digital sections of a SAME message are AFSK data bursts, with individual bits lasting 1920 μs (1.92 ms) each, giving a bit rate of 5205⁄6 bits per second. A mark bit is four complete cycles of a sine wave, translating to a mark frequency of 20831⁄3 Hz, and a space bit is three complete sine wave cycles, making the space frequency 1562.5 Hz.

The data is sent isochronously and encoded in 8-bit bytes with the most-significant bit of each ASCII byte set to zero. The least-significant bit of each byte is transmitted first, including the preamble. The data stream is bit and byte synchronized on the preamble.7

Since there is no error correction, the digital part of a SAME message is transmitted three times, so that decoders can pick "best two out of three" for each byte, thereby eliminating most errors which can cause an activation to fail.

Header format

The text of the header code is a fixed format:

««««««««««««««««ZCZC-ORG-EEE-PSSCCC+TTTT-JJJHHMM-LLLLLLLL-

This is broken down as follows:

  1. A preamble of binary 10101011 (0xAB in hex, ASCII character "«") repeated sixteen times, used for "receiver calibration" (i.e., clock synchronization), then the letters ZCZC as an attention to the decoder (a message activation method inherited from NAVTEX).
  2. ORG – Originator code; programmed per unit when put into operation8
    • PEP – National Public Warning System (Previously known as "Primary Entry Point System". It will be FEMA for National Tests through the Legacy format instead of IPAWS.)
      • President or other authorized national officials
    • CIV – Civil authorities
      • i.e. Governor, state or local emergency management, local police or fire officials
    • WXR – National Weather Service (or Environment Canada.)
      • Any weather-related alert
    • EAS – EAS Participant (or Broadcast station or cable system)
      • Broadcasters. Generally only used with test messages.
    • EAN – Emergency Action Notification Network (No longer used after c.2010.)
  3. EEE – Event code; programmed at time of event
  4. PSSCCC – Location codes (up to 31 location codes per message), each beginning with a dash character; programmed at time of event
    • In the United States, the first digit (P) is zero if the entire county or area is included in the warning, otherwise, it is a non-zero number depending on the cardinal location of the emergency within the area.9 The remaining five digits are the FIPS state (SS) and county code (CCC). The entire state may be specified by using county code 000 (three zeros).
    • In Canada, all six digits make up a Canadian Location Code, which corresponds to a specific forecast region as used by the Meteorological Service of Canada. All forecast region numbers are six digits with the first digit always zero.
  5. TTTT – Purge time of the alert event (from exact time of issue)
    • In the format hhmm, using 15-minute increments up to one hour, using 30-minute increments up to six hours, and using hourly increments beyond six hours. Weekly and monthly tests sometimes have a 12-hour or greater purge time to assure users have an ample opportunity to verify reception of the test event messages; however; 15 minutes is more common, especially on NOAA Weather Radio's tests.
    • For short term events (like a tornado) this value could be set to 0000 (four zeros), which will purge the warning immediately after the message has been received. However, this is not typical, and FCC guidelines suggest a minimum of 15 minutes purge time.
    • The purge time is not intended to coincide with the actual end of the event. Longer events that may not end for days (like hurricanes) may have a purge time of only a few hours. That an event message has been purged does not indicate or imply that the threat has passed. In summer of 2023, the National Weather Service changed the maximum purge time for alerts on NOAA Weather Radio from 6 hours to 99.5 hours to address long duration events purging before the event begins.10
  6. JJJHHMM – Exact time of issue, in UTC, (without time zone adjustments).
    • JJJ is the Ordinal date (day) of the year, with leading zeros
    • HHMM is the hours and minutes (24-hour format), in UTC, with leading zeros
  7. LLLLLLLL – Eight-character station callsign identification, with / used instead of – (such as the first eight letters of a cable headend's location, WABC/FM for WABC-FM, KLOX/NWS for a weather radio station programmed from Los Angeles, or EC/GC/CA for a Weatheradio Canada station).

Each field of the header code is terminated by a dash character, including the station ID at the end; individual PSSCCC location numbers are also separated by dashes, with a plus (+) separating the last location from the purge time that follows it.

Full message format

An EAS message contains these elements, in this transmitted sequence:

  1. Header
  2. Attention signal – Sent if any message is included (normally sent with all messages except RWT on broadcast radio/TV); must be at least eight seconds long. (On weather radio in Canada the 1050 Hz tone is only used with three event codes: RMT, SVR & TOR11)
    • Single 1050 Hzⓘ audio tone used by NOAA Weather Radio.
    • Combined 853 and 960 Hzⓘ tones for broadcast radio/TV.
  3. Message – An audio message. The FCC permits encoded video or text in lieu of an audio message, but neither are implemented in practice.12
  4. Tail – (Preamble) NNNN (EOM).

There is one second of blank audio between each section, and before and after each message. For those used to packet communications systems where each packet has a checksum, note that there is no checksum used in the message format. The header and EOM are transmitted 3 times,13 and the receiver is obliged to implement columnar parity correction.

The combined tones date back to 1976 when they were made part of the Emergency Broadcast System, the EAS' predecessor.

Event codes

There are roughly 80 different event codes that are used in EAS. These codes are defined federally by the FCC for use in the EAS system and publicly by the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) standard14 for SAME protocol weather radio receiver decoder units.

All but the first six of these used to be optional and could be programmed into encoder or decoder units at the request of the broadcaster. However, a July 12, 2007, memo by the FCC now requires mandatory participation in state and local level EAS by broadcasters. Furthermore, the creation and evolution of a voluntary standard by the CEA in December 2003 has provided participating manufacturers of weather radio receivers a single definitive reference to use when designing and programming receivers. In addition, some receiver manufacturers have added an additional layer as to whether or not an event code can be user-suppressed (e.g., a Hurricane Warning in a Midwest US State) or will never be allowed to be suppressed (e.g., Nuclear Power Plant Warning).

The FCC established naming conventions for EAS event codes. The third letter of the code must be one of the following.15

Third letter of event codeCategoryDescription
WWarningAn event that alone poses a significant threat to public safety and/or property, probability of occurrence and location is high, and the onset time is relatively short.
AWatchMeets the classification of a warning, but either the onset time, probability of occurrence, or location is uncertain.
EEmergencyAn event that, by itself, would not kill, injure or do property damage, but indirectly may cause other things to happen that result in a hazard.
SStatementA message containing follow up information to a warning, watch, or emergency.

The exceptions to this convention are "TOR" (tornado warning); "SVR" (severe thunderstorm warning); "EVI" (evacuation immediate); "EAN", "EAT", and "NIC" (the EAS national activation codes); and "ADR" (administrative messages).16

In use

Key for event code tables
USA type keyCAN/MEX type keyEvent level key
MMandatory codeABAdministrative bulletinADVAdvisory
O1Original optional codeCICurrently implementedWCHWatch
O22002 optional code1718RTRequired testWRNWarning
O32017 optional code19FIFor future implementationTESTTest
NINot implementedNINot implemented
TSTesting for Implementation

The following event codes have been implemented by agencies in the United States and/or Canada, and CIRES A.C. in Mexico.

Event CodeU.S. TypeCAN. TypeMEX. TypeEvent DescriptionEvent Level
ADRO1ABNIAdministrative MessageADV
AVAO2FINIAvalanche WatchWCH
AVWO2FINIAvalanche WarningWRN
BLUO3NINIBlue Alert20WRN
BZWO1CINIBlizzard WarningWRN
CAEO2FINIChild Abduction EmergencyADV
CDWO2FINICivil Danger WarningWRN
CEMO1FINICivil Emergency MessageWRN
CFAO2FINICoastal Flood WatchWCH
CFWO2FINICoastal Flood WarningWRN
DMOO1ABNIPractice/Demo WarningTEST
DSWO2CINIDust Storm WarningWRN
EANMFININational Emergency Message21WRN
EATNIFINIEmergency Action Termination 22ADV
EQWO2FICIEarthquake Warning23WRN
EVIO1FINIEvacuation ImmediateWRN
EWWO3NINIExtreme Wind WarningWRN
FFAO1FINIFlash Flood WatchWCH
FFSO1FINIFlash Flood StatementADV
FFWO1FINIFlash Flood WarningWRN
FLAO1FINIFlood WatchWCH
FLSO1FINIFlood StatementADV
FLWO1FINIFlood WarningWRN
FRWO2FINIFire WarningWRN
FSWNICINIFlash Freeze WarningWRN
FZWNICINIFreeze Warning (also known as a "Frost Warning" in Canada.)24WRN
HLSO1FITSHurricane Local StatementADV
HMWO2FINIHazardous Materials WarningWRN
HUAO1CITSHurricane WatchWCH
HUWO1CITSHurricane WarningWRN
HWAO1FINIHigh Wind WatchWCH
HWWO1CINIHigh Wind WarningWRN
LAEO2FINILocal Area EmergencyADV
LEWO2FINILaw Enforcement WarningWRN
NATNIABNINational Audible TestTEST
NICMABNINational Information Center25ADV
NMNO2ABNINetwork Notification MessageADV
NPTMABNINationwide Test of the Emergency Alert System26TEST
NSTNIABNINational Silent TestTEST
NUWO2FININuclear Power Plant WarningWRN
RHWO2FINIRadiological Hazard WarningWRN
RMTMRTNIRequired Monthly Test27TEST
RWTMRTCIRequired Weekly Test28TEST
SMWO2TSNISpecial Marine WarningWRN
SPSO1FINISpecial Weather StatementADV
SPWO2FINIShelter In-Place warningWRN
SQWO1CINISnow Squall WarningWRN
SSAO3NINIStorm Surge WatchWCH
SSWO3NINIStorm Surge WarningWRN
SVAO1CINISevere Thunderstorm WatchWCH
SVRO1CINISevere Thunderstorm WarningWRN
SVSO1TSNISevere Weather Statement (U.S., CAN)ADV
TOAO1CINITornado WatchWCH
TOEO2FINI911 Telephone Outage EmergencyADV
TORO1CINITornado Warning29WRN
TOE02CINITornado Emergency30WRN
TRAO2CINITropical Storm WatchWCH
TRWO2CINITropical Storm WarningWRN
TSAO1TSNITsunami WatchWCH
TSWO1TSNITsunami WarningWRN
VOWO2FICIVolcano Warning31WRN
WSAO1CINIWinter Storm WatchWCH
WSWO1CINIWinter Storm Warning32WRN
??AO2CINIUnrecognized Watch33WCH
??EO2CINIUnrecognized Emergency34ADV
??SO2CINIUnrecognized Statement35ADV
??WO2CINIUnrecognized Warning36WRN

Internal use only

Receiver decoders that comply with the CEA standard37 will neither display the messages below, nor activate a warning tone if applicable. While the message will be stored in memory, it will not be displayed to the user. The FCC has also designated38 these event codes as being for "internal use only", and not for display. Environment Canada lists39 these messages as "Administrative Bulletins".

Event CodeU.S. TypeCAN. TypeEvent DescriptionEvent Level
TXBO2ABTransmitter Backup OnADV
TXFO2ABTransmitter Carrier OffADV
TXOO2ABTransmitter Carrier OnADV
TXPO2ABTransmitter Primary OnADV

The above events are only seen on NOAA Weather Radio if certain situations happen, such as a station losing power. In this case, the "TXB" or "Transmitter Backup On" code would be transmitted, following by beeping noises of multiple frequencies, finally followed by EOM tones. However, these tones are not typically transmitted over the air.

Future implementation

The following codes are part of the CEA standard40 for receiver decoders, but are not listed as being in use by any agencies in the United States. Environment Canada lists41 these codes, along with several others, as "for possible future implementation". None of these event codes are being implemented in Mexico, as Mexico's network is for seismic and volcanic alerts at this time.

Event CodeU.S. TypeCAN. TypeEvent DescriptionEvent Level
BHWNIFIBiological Hazard WarningWRN
BWWNIFIBoil Water WarningWRN
CHWNIFIChemical Hazard WarningWRN
CWWNIFIContaminated Water WarningWRN
DBANIFIDam WatchWCH
DBWNIFIDam Break WarningWRN
DEWNIFIContagious Disease WarningWRN
EVANIFIEvacuation WatchWCH
FCWNIFIFood Contamination WarningWRN
IBWNIFIIceberg WarningWRN
IFWNIFIIndustrial Fire WarningWRN
LSWNIFILandslide WarningWRN
POSNIFIPower Outage AdvisoryADV
WFANIFIWild Fire WatchWCH
WFWNIFIWild Fire WarningWRN

On weather radio receivers

There are many weather/all-hazards radio receivers that are equipped with the SAME alert feature, which allows users to program SAME/FIPS/CLC codes for their designated area or areas of their interest and/or concern rather than the entire broadcast area. (For example, a person living in Irving, Texas, would program a FIPS code for Dallas County. However, if there is a need to know of severe weather from the west and northwest ahead of time, the user would program additional FIPS codes for Denton and Tarrant Counties.)

On a more specialized receiver, a user has the option to eliminate any SAME alert codes that may not apply to their area such as a "Special Marine Warning" or a "Coastal Flood Warning". Once the SAME header is sent by NOAA/NWS and if it matches the desired code(s), the receivers then decode the event, scroll it on their display screens, and sound an alarm.

Receivers receive on one of the following National Weather Service network frequencies (in MHz): 162.400, 162.425, 162.450, 162.475, 162.500, 162.525, and 162.550. The signals are typically receivable up to 40 miles (80 km) from the transmitters.42

  • The Iowa State Cyclones football sports program uses a SAME tone at the end of the pregame video before the football team takes the field. The SAME message is followed by the following narration: "This is a Cyclone Weather Alert! Ladies and Gentlemen, radar has indicated a strong storm approaching Jack Trice Stadium. High winds and low visibility are expected. [The opposing team's] fans in the area should seek immediate cover...."43
  • The EOM (end of message) tone was heard in the movie trailer for Knowing and in the series Jericho in which its familiar emergency use and its increasing cadence create a sense of foreboding.44
  • It was used in the movie trailers for Olympus Has Fallen and The Purge. The uses have since been heavily discouraged on air by the Federal Communications Commission (outside public service announcements demonstrating SAME and EAS technology), and stations and networks using them (for instance, TBS and WNKY in Bowling Green, Kentucky) in advertising or promotions have been fined for doing so.4546
  • The SAME tones can be briefly heard in the Impractical Jokers episode "Virtual Insanity".47
  • SAME Tones are heard in the campaign of the popular video game Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2, prior to the mission “Of Their Own Accord”. Ironically, these tones are decoded down to an EAS Participant issuing a Required Weekly Test on station WLS-TV.
  • In the 2020 video game Black Mesa, entire emergency messages with SAME tones can be heard on radios as the player progresses, each describing the game's events with increasing urgency. In January 2015, prior to the game's release on Steam as early access, a website was launched that played back one such message as a teaser.
  • SAME tones are used within a genre of videos on video sharing platform sites like YouTube known as "EAS scenarios," which depict fictional emergency situations through a series of fictional EAS broadcasts. The majority of SAME tones used within these videos are valid, though some creators choose to use customized tones (and on several occasions, a warning/disclaimer) to prevent unintentional activation of EAS equipment.
  • In Leave The World Behind, a conversation is interrupted with a SAME message suddenly emerging from the television, with it later revealing that an "Unrecognised Warning" ("??W") is being distributed over the network.

See also

  • Common Alerting Protocol (CAP) – A SAME-compatible digital format for multi-system warning coordination.
  • METAR – The international meteorological code for an aviation routine weather report.

References

  1. Nelson, W.C. (2002). "American Warning Dissemination and NOAA Weather Radio". http://cliffedits.com/thesis/thesis.html

  2. "The History of NOAA Weather Radio". Weather Radios Direct. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved May 13, 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20150402093323/http://weatherradios.com/blog/the-history-of-noaa-weather-radio

  3. NOAA Weather Radio - Watches, Warnings and Tones/Alarms – National Weather Service in Philadelphia/Mount Holly (accessed October 1, 2009) http://www.erh.noaa.gov/phi/wxradio/nwrfaq.htm#Watches

  4. http://www.ec.gc.ca/media_archive/press/2004/040107_b_e.htm  – The Green Lane: (Backgrounder) – Weatheradio Network (accessed December 5, 2011) http://www.ec.gc.ca/media_archive/press/2004/040107_b_e.htm

  5. "EAS Meeting Minutes". Archived from the original on July 19, 2011. Retrieved June 28, 2010. https://web.archive.org/web/20110719120045/http://www.wsab.org/eas/eas_meeting_minutes_jan06.html

  6. WRSAME – Weather Radio Specific Area Message Encoder Archived April 15, 2013, at archive.today – Metro Skywarn (accessed August 20, 2009) http://www.metroskywarn.org/wrsame.html

  7. "F LIGHT IN C ONTROLLED A IRSPACENational weather service instruction 10-1712" (PDF). National Weather Service NOAA. February 17, 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 18, 2006. https://web.archive.org/web/20060818132928/http://www.nws.noaa.gov:80/directives/sym/pd01017012curr.pdf

  8. 47CFR11.31(d)

  9. "EAS protocol". https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CFR-2010-title47-vol1/xml/CFR-2010-title47-vol1-sec11-31.xml

  10. "Service Change Notice 23-03" (PDF). January 10, 2023. https://www.weather.gov/media/notification/pdf_2023_24/scn23-03_nwr_same_upper_limit_change.pdf

  11. "Event codes for Specific Area Message Encoding". Canada.ca. Environment and Climate Change Canada. December 20, 2023. Archived from the original on June 23, 2024. Retrieved December 9, 2024. Note: Severe thunderstorm and Tornado warnings are also accompanied by a 1050 Hz warning tone to trigger basic tone alert receivers. https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/weatheradio/specific-area-message-encoding/event-code.html

  12. Wood, Tom; Price, Harold, eds. (May 14, 2010). ECIG Recommendations For a CAP EAS Implementation Guide (PDF) (Report) (Version 1.0 ed.). EAS CAP Industry Group, EAS-CAP Implementation Guide Subcommittee (published May 17, 2010). pp. 8–9. Archived (PDF) from the original on March 2, 2022. Retrieved December 9, 2024. The FCC specifies that the message portion may be audio, video, or text. In practice, neither text nor video is actually embedded into the audio signal. Video and text accompany video broadcasts of EAS alert audio, but these elements are not part of the audio encoding of EAS, and are not propagated through the "daisy chain" architecture of EAS decoding receivers. http://www.eas-cap.org/ecig-cap-to-eas_implementation_guide-v1-0.pdf

  13. C. Hodan (October 3, 2011). National Weather Service Instruction 10-1712 (PDF) (Report). National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration. p. A-1. Retrieved August 11, 2021. https://www.nws.noaa.gov/directives/sym/pd01017012curr.pdf

  14. Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) Technology Standard "CEA-2009-B (ANSI)" Archived January 11, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, November 2010, accessed January 11, 2014. http://www.ce.org/Standards/Standard-Listings/R3-Audio-Systems/CEA-2009-B-(ANSI).aspx

  15. National Weather Service [1], accessed September 22, 2012. http://www.nws.noaa.gov/os/eas_codes.shtml

  16. "Federal Communications Commission Report and Order" (PDF). February 22, 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 19, 2004. Retrieved September 22, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20041119155250/http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-02-64A1.pdf

  17. "Federal Communications Commission Report and Order" (PDF). February 22, 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 19, 2004. Retrieved September 22, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20041119155250/http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-02-64A1.pdf

  18. "Electronic Code of Federal Regulations". Archived from the original on October 18, 2011. Retrieved April 16, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20111018151420/http://ecfr.gpoaccess.gov/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=ecfr&sid=75127c72007aa6a3f1ce8fda8cb814e2&rgn=div5&view=text&node=47:1.0.1.1.11&idno=47#47:1.0.1.1.11.2.239.1

  19. "Federal Communications Commission Report and Order" (PDF). July 11, 2016. Retrieved August 30, 2017. https://apps.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-16-80A1.pdf

  20. The FCC created the BLU code for Blue Alerts beginning on December 14, 2017.[19]

  21. Formerly known as "Emergency Action Notification". A national-level EAS activation. If it's ever used, it will be seen on all broadcast stations at the same time across the country, to carry a live Presidential message. /wiki/Emergency_Action_Notification

  22. The FCC in 2012 modified protocol for national EAS activations. Emergency Action Notifications are now treated as any other EAS alert (except that it is mandatory to air), eliminating the need for Emergency Action Terminations, so the FCC removed it from operation.[20] It was not used to terminate the Emergency Action Notification test of 2011.

  23. The EQW and VOW event codes are used in Mexico as part of the Mexican Seismic Alert System (also known as SASMEX). EQW is referred as "Alerta Sísmica", while VOW is referred to as "Alerta Volcánica".[21] Other event codes are being tested, such as Hurricane Warning (HUW), Hurricane Watch (HUA) and Hurricane Statement (HLS). Required Weekly Tests (RWT) are conducted every three hours to make sure receivers are working properly.[22] /wiki/Mexican_Seismic_Alert_System

  24. While the CEA standard[14] lists the FZW event code as "Freeze Warning", Environment Canada refers to it[23] as a "Frost Warning". However, it will be displayed as a "Freeze Warning" on receivers that are compliant to the CEA standard.

  25. Never used, but assumed to be a National Emergency Message follow-up. This code was discontinued on December 12, 2023.[citation needed] /wiki/National_Emergency_Message

  26. Formerly known as "National Periodic Test".

  27. These are required to contain headers, an attention signal, an audio message, and end of message tones.

  28. These only require headers and end of message tones, but an attention signal and/or audio message are optional except for NOAA Weather Radio stations.

  29. The National Weather Service additionally uses the TOR event code to refer to an Extreme Wind Warning. See http://www.nws.noaa.gov/os/vtec/pdfs/EWWInstructions.pdf /wiki/Extreme_Wind_Warning

  30. The National Weather Service additionally uses the TOE event code to refer to an Extreme Wind Warning. See http://www.nws.noaa.gov/os/vtec/pdfs/EWWInstructions.pdf /wiki/Extreme_Wind_Warning

  31. The EQW and VOW event codes are used in Mexico as part of the Mexican Seismic Alert System (also known as SASMEX). EQW is referred as "Alerta Sísmica", while VOW is referred to as "Alerta Volcánica".[21] Other event codes are being tested, such as Hurricane Warning (HUW), Hurricane Watch (HUA) and Hurricane Statement (HLS). Required Weekly Tests (RWT) are conducted every three hours to make sure receivers are working properly.[22] /wiki/Mexican_Seismic_Alert_System

  32. Environment Canada additionally uses[23] the WSW event code to refer to any of the following weather conditions: Blowing Snow Warning, Freezing Drizzle Warning, Freezing Rain Warning, Snowfall Warning, Snow Squall Warning

  33. Unrecognized Alerts are only seen on NOAA Weather Radios. This is typically due to poor reception, or for newly implemented event codes, which an older radio may not recognize. /wiki/NOAA_Weather_Radio

  34. Unrecognized Alerts are only seen on NOAA Weather Radios. This is typically due to poor reception, or for newly implemented event codes, which an older radio may not recognize. /wiki/NOAA_Weather_Radio

  35. Unrecognized Alerts are only seen on NOAA Weather Radios. This is typically due to poor reception, or for newly implemented event codes, which an older radio may not recognize. /wiki/NOAA_Weather_Radio

  36. Unrecognized Alerts are only seen on NOAA Weather Radios. This is typically due to poor reception, or for newly implemented event codes, which an older radio may not recognize. /wiki/NOAA_Weather_Radio

  37. Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) Technology Standard "CEA-2009-B (ANSI)" Archived January 11, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, November 2010, accessed January 11, 2014. http://www.ce.org/Standards/Standard-Listings/R3-Audio-Systems/CEA-2009-B-(ANSI).aspx

  38. "Federal Communications Commission Report and Order" (PDF). February 22, 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 19, 2004. Retrieved September 22, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20041119155250/http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-02-64A1.pdf

  39. "Event codes for Specific Area Message Encoding". Canada.ca. Environment and Climate Change Canada. December 20, 2023. Archived from the original on June 23, 2024. Retrieved December 9, 2024. https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/weatheradio/specific-area-message-encoding/event-code.html

  40. Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) Technology Standard "CEA-2009-B (ANSI)" Archived January 11, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, November 2010, accessed January 11, 2014. http://www.ce.org/Standards/Standard-Listings/R3-Audio-Systems/CEA-2009-B-(ANSI).aspx

  41. "Event codes for Specific Area Message Encoding". Canada.ca. Environment and Climate Change Canada. December 20, 2023. Archived from the original on June 23, 2024. Retrieved December 9, 2024. https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/weatheradio/specific-area-message-encoding/event-code.html

  42. NWR Specific Area Message Encoding (SAME), https://www.weather.gov/nwr/nwrsame https://www.weather.gov/nwr/nwrsame

  43. "Cyclone Weather Alert for Texas Longhorns Fans". Youtube. October 31, 2015. Archived from the original on December 12, 2021. Retrieved January 8, 2020. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmET9EAfOE4

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