National Weather Service

NWS Weather Radio

Weather Radio

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NWR Broadcasts in the NWS Omaha County Warning Area  WNG549 Columbus, NE WXL-74 Grand Island, NE KZZ52 Hancock, IA KZZ50 Essex, IA KIH61 Omaha, NE WXM20 Lincoln, NE KZZ69 Beatrice, NE KWN41 Shubert, NE WNG645 Albion, NE WXL77 Carroll, NE WXL-62 Sioux City, IA KXI-21 Yankton, SD KXI-25 Pickstown,SD

NOAA Weather Radio Programming Information can be found by clicking here.

Transmitter Coverage maps can be viewed here.

Weather Radio Transmitters Programmed by NWS Omaha:

Weather Radio Transmitters Serving the NWS Omaha Area Programmed by Other NWS Offices:

Weather Radio Overview 

NWS Weather Radio: Live Weatherwise.National Weather Service Weather Radio (NWR) is a service that broadcasts on seven VHF Band frequencies ranging from 162.400 MHz to 162.550 MHz. These frequencies are outside the normal AM or FM broadcast bands found on the average home radio.

These broadcasts originate from local National Weather Service (NWS) offices across the United States. As the Voice of the National Weather Service, weather radio provides continuous broadcasts of the latest weather information. Known as the "voice of the National Weather Service," NWR is provided as a public service by the Department of Commerce's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The NWR network has more than 900 stations in the 50 states and adjacent coastal waters, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and U.S. Pacific Territories. Broadcasts can be heard as far away as 40 miles from the antenna site. However, the effective range depends on several factors, including the terrain, quality of the receiver, and current weather conditions.

NWS Weather Radio provides dependable and timely weather information at your fingertips. From day-to-day weather forecasts to warnings of deadly storms, NWR is always available, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. The broadcast schedule consists of messages which are repeated every three to five minutes and are routinely revised to provide up-to-date information.

weather radiosDuring severe weather or other potentially hazardous events, the regularly scheduled programming is interrupted to substitute severe weather (including warnings, watches, etc.) or other hazardous informational messages. Special NWR receivers can be activated, sounding an alarm indicating that important information soon follows. Tests of the warning alarm are normally conducted by NWS Omaha every Wednesday around 11:15 am local time.

NWR can also be used to alert you to non-weather related emergencies, such as earthquakes, toxic or chemical spills, national attacks, or nuclear blasts. Many local retailers or electronics stores sell NWS Weather Radios. To purchase a NOAA All Hazards Weather Radio, check with your local electronics shop or check out our NWR Receiver Consumer Information page.

The National Weather Service encourages everyone to use weather radio to receive life-saving warnings and other information from the National Weather Service in Omaha. The warning alarm precedes tornado and severe thunderstorm watches, and tornado, severe thunderstorm and flash flood warnings, as well as other emergency messages, and is designed to activate specially designed weather radio receivers, providing audible and/or visual warning signals to homes, schools and businesses in the path of the storm.

Normal Programming Schedule for Weather Radio Transmitters in NWS Omaha's area.

Other Programming Information As Needed

Specific Area Message Encoder (SAME)

New technology is now available in NWS Weather Radio that allows you to obtain only the warnings, watches, and other information you want.

This technology, called the Specific Area Message Encoder (SAME), broadcasts the same information we always have had, but adds a code that enables specially built receivers to receive only the information the you want. Thus, you can receive severe weather warnings, watches, and statements for the only county in which you live, if desired, and not information for other counties in the overall NWR broadcast area.

All current and older model NWR receivers will receive all information from the NWS, but only radios with the SAME capability can be programmed to receive only information for specific counties.

Since the SAME codes are fully compatible with the FCC's Emergency Alert System, it is possible in the future that new television sets, pagers, cellular telephones and other electronic devices will be able to receive these SAME coded messages.

These new receivers are available at local electronics stores in your area. If you have purchased a new weather radio with the SAME capability and want to program it for specific counties in your NWR listening area, you will need the proper county codes (FIPS).

NWR SAME County Codes

Live Streaming Audio is available for some sites

There are two types of NOAA Weather Radio All Hazards audio available on the Internet:

Whether you listen to the live streaming audio or download the static audio files, please remember that you should NOT rely on this Internet audio to receive watches or warnings. Instead, you should have a dedicated NOAA Weather Radio receiver which will alert you 24 hours a day to hazards in your area.

Console Replacement System (CRS)

One of Two NWR/CRS WorkstationsNWR broadcasts are automated, using a computerized voice. This personal computer-based broadcasting console, known as the Console Replacement System (CRS), automates the process of reading written information for broadcast on NWR.

CRS automatically translates written NWS forecasts, warnings, and observations into synthesized-voice messages and schedule them for broadcast on NWR. This automated system provides faster broadcasts of severe weather watches, warnings, and emergency information over NWR because multiple warnings can be recorded and transmitted at once. This capability dramatically speeds up the broadcast of warnings during multiple severe weather events.

CRS brings many benefits to the NWR network. Automating the process makes it easier for listeners to tune to NWR at particular times for the information they need. Forecast offices are able to broadcast particular forecasts and information, such as river forecasts or climate summaries, in time slots on a more regular schedule. In addition, updated hourly weather conditions always are recorded at the same time every hour, and forecasts and warnings are recorded and transmitted simultaneously. These capabilities allow NWR to be your most dependable source for accurate and up-to-date weather information.

 


  • National Weather Service
  • Omaha/Valley, NE Weather Forecast Office
  • 6707 North 288th Street
  • Valley, NE 68064-9443
  • 402-359-5166
  • Page Author: OAX Webmaster
  • Web Master's E-mail: w-oax.webmaster@noaa.gov
  • Page last modified: April 20th 2009 3:07 PM
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