WEATHER RADIO
xx RADIO
xx WEATHER
Low-band weather receiver. Three-tube unit receives FAA weather reports. ELECTRONICS ILLUSTRATED Jul 1969 (v.12#4) pg. 71
Install a small trimmer capacitor on the exterior of an inexpensive "weather monitor" radio and you will be able to tune in fire, police and some FM programs. ELEMENTARY ELECTRONICS May-Jun 1975 (v.15#3) pg. 72
Radio weather reports. An overview of the up-to-the-minute weather broadcasts available nationwide from the National Weather Service. POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS Jun 1989 (v.7#10) pg. 60
Scanning AWOS (automated weather observing system), the VHF weather stations NOAA never told you about. POPULAR COMMUNICATIONS May 1995 (v.13#9) pg. 26
Receive FAA weathercasts with this rig. POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Jan 1964 (v.20#1) pg. 63
Two single-IC AM receiver projects. (1) The simplest AM/WWV receiver, and (2) an FAA weather receiver. POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] Jun 1974 (v.5#6) pg. 58
Severe weather warning alert radio receiver sounds an alarm if the alert signal is broadcast by the National Weather Service station in the area. Est. cost: $15. POPULAR ELECTRONICS [1] May 1976 (v.9#5) pg. 44
Weather alert decoder. Easy-to-build circuit detects the special 1050-Hz tone preceeding NOAA severe weather bulletins. POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] May 1991 (v.8#5) pg. 62
Build a battery-powered WWV receiver to get time, weather, frequency, and other information. POPULAR ELECTRONICS [2] Jan 1995 (v.12#1) pg. 49
Convert a pocket transistor radio to receive any one of the 100 FAA weather report stations by simply adding two capacitors across the tuner. POPULAR SCIENCE Aug 1972 (v.201#2) pg. 108
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