152 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
152 lines
9.0 KiB
Plaintext
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NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE
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TELETYPE ACCESS
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The Rowan County Emergency Services has interfaced a telephone modem to the
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National Weather Service's main Weather Teletype Line so that anyone with a PC
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and a modem can access the System for real-time weather information direct from
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the NWS State Headquarters in Raleigh or direct from any other National Weather
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Service office, such as the National Hurricane Center in Miami, the National
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Severe Storm Headquarters in Kansas City or the Tornado Forecast and Research
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Center in Oklahoma City.
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The NWS maintains a teletype circuit that goes to to their regional offices,
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radio and television stations, local and state government emergency operation
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centers and military bases throughout the state and Country. Through an Z-80
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device manufactured by HAL Communications, Rowan County now has the
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capability to allow anybody with a modem and a PC to monitor this circuit and
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to pull weather information out of the HAL's memory. Once a person is into the
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system, they can monitor the weather line in real-time or recall weather
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information that may have come down the line previous to the access. There is
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a 30K common buffer for previous forecasts, good for storing about 18 hours of
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information, and a 4K priority buffer for emergency information, bulletins and
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severe weather warnings and watches. The priority buffer ususally retains
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information for about 48 hours. Both buffers are first-in, first-out.
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The system is accessed by dialing 704-633-8024 at 1200 baud, 8 bits, even
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parity and no stop bits. The system is completely menu driven, requires no
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special knowledge, registration or password and is open to anyone.
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The system is auto-answer on first ring and you will get a brief welcome
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message and what is called the "Short Directory" when you first get into the
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system. This short directory is a brief listing of the weather forecast
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"products" that are resident in memory at that time.
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The NWS is sending different information down the line almost all the time and
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they refer to each different piece of information as a "product" The product
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is uniquely identified in each message and the product code, when understood,
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describes what the information, or broadcast, contains. The short directory
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that greets a caller on sign-in tells what is in the two buffers. After the
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short directory, the system prompts you with the time and date and a ">"
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prompt. There is a help function and typing " H " (no quote marks" at the
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prompt will give you a brief summary of commands. It is a very passive system
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in that you can only retrieve information, not input or engage in an exchange
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like you can this bulletin board.
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To monitor the line and see what is being broadcast from the NWS, type an " M "
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at the prompt. You will then go into the monitor mode and if the system is
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active, will see some information. Keep in mind that the NWS now broadcasts in
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the Baudot language at 75 baud so the monitor function will seem slow to you.
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Also remember that the line is idle a good part of the time so you may see no
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activity in the monitor mode. The exit the monitor mode, you can strike any
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key and the ">" prompt will come back at you.
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The funny-looking product names need some explanation. The short directory
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will list about 25 or 30 files with names like RDULFPCLT 0114 or CLTCLICLT
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2314, etc. The first three letters of the product name indicate where the
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product came from, i.e., RDU indicates the broadcast originated at the
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Raleigh/Durham Office of the NWS, CLT indicates the product came from
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Charlotte, etc. There are too many origination codes to list here but you will
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soon be able to recognize them when you see them. The second three letters in
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the file name indicate what the product contains and again, there are hundreds
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of different ones but the LFP indicates a "Local Forecast Product" and the CLI
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means the "Climatological Report". Of particular interest is the LFP, the EFP
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(Extended Forecast Product), the REC (Recreational Report) and especially the
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SVS (Severe Storm), SVR (Severe Weather), TOR (Tornado) and TWO or TWI
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(Tropical Weather Outlook or Information). The last two or three letters of
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the product name indicate where the product is intended to go or the areas of
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most interest for that product. NC means (of course) North Carolina and shows
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that the product ending in NC is of interest or applicable state-wide. CLT,
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GSO, AVL and RDU are self-explanitory. The four digits after the product name
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is the time the product was recieved.
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In summary, then, the product names you see in the short directory on sign-on
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tell you where the product came from, what is in it and where it is intended to
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be of the most interest, and the time it was sent from the Weather Service.
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To recall a product (read a file) send an " R " at the ">" prompt (without
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quotes) in either upper or lower case and, because it is an in-key routine, no
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<ENTER> is needed. Another prompt will come back at you. You can then give
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the product name in one of several ways. You can enter the whole product name
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(RDUEFPNC), or the type of product (EFP) which will give you the most recent
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product with that coding, or just the time (2135). A carriage return is
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necessary here <ENTER> because product names can be either 8 or 9 characters.
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When the product has been sent, you will get a date/time prompt ( 03-07-87
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21:34 EST > ) and you are ready to read another product, to monitor the line or
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to sign-off.
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One exception to the above is the Zone Forecast ( RDUZFPNC ). It is broadcast
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6 times per day and is broken down into 18 zones state-wide and is quite
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lengthy, usually about 1800 bytes or about 1.5 minutes at 1200 baud. (Once you
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start a product, there is no way to escape or abort). To see only the part of
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the state you are interested in, you can specify, on the prompt line, which
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area you want to see by giving the product name, a slant sign and the zone you
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want, i. e. RDUZFPNC/NC07, which will return only the zone 7 forecast out of
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the entire state forecast. The northern foothills of North Carolina is zone
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NC07 and I can't begin to tell you where the other zones are or what they
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cover. The NWS has a map I can try to get for people who are interested.
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The NWS sends over 400 products per 24 hour period down the line. We are
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saving only 27 of those and putting them into memory but they are the ones of
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most interest to the Rowan County area and of importance to emergency
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responders and planners. In the monitor mode, everything can be seen but only
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27 of the products will go into memory for later recall. At present, we are
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saving:
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RDUEFPNC Extended Forecast, North Carolina
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RDULFPCL Local Forecast, Charlotte Area
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RDUZFPNC Zone Forecast, North Carolina
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RDUSFPNC State Forecast, North Carolina
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RDUSTPNC State Temperature and Precipitation
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***SVS*** Any Severe Weather Statement
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***SVR*** Any Severe Thunderstorm Warning
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***FLS*** Any Flash Flood Statement
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***FFW*** Any Flash Flood Warning
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***TOR*** Any Tornado Warning
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RDUCLICLT Daily Climatological Report, Charlotte
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***PNS*** Any Public Information Statement
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***RER*** Any Record-Setting Weather Event
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***REC*** Any Recreational Weather Statement or Forecast
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MKCNWX(1-3) National Weather Summary
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RDUAOARDU Agricultural Weather Outlook
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MIATWOMIA Tropical Weather Outlook
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MIATCEMIA Tropical Cyclone Position Estimate
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MIASPAAT(1-5) Public Subtropical Storm Advisory
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MIASPAT(1-5) Public Tropical Storm Advisory
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***PHS*** Any Post-Hurricane Statement
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RDUSLS0-9 Severe Local Storm Watch
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RDUREFRDU Administrative and System Information
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Some of these products are seasonal and will be on only during certain times of
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the year, others (SFP, STP) are transmitted hourly and yet others (EFP, LFP,
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ZFP) are broadcast from 2 to 8 times per 24 hour period. I have the full
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product list (over 400 products) if anyone would like to see it or request a
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special product be saved, such as another state forecast, beach forecasts
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during summer, etc. Leave a note on this BBS for me or, in the Weather System,
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see the help menu on how to leave me a message. However, a message left for me
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in the system sometimes gets buried in the local print-outs and I may never see
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it.
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There are some other features in the system, such as a long directory, a
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listing of what products are meant to be saved, etc., but the above will get
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you up and running and you can go to the help function " H " once you get
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familiar with it.
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To exit, simply type " B " at the > prompt. Please use descretion with it, it
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is very busy and a lot of emergency responders rely on it, especially during
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emergency weather situations. Have fun, enjoy it, I hope it proves as
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convenient and as valuable to you as it does to us and please let me know if
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you want something special on it or if we can help in any other way.
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73 de John, WD4FFX, in Statesville NC (Office Phone 704-878-3029)
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