@w7voa
While pricey, this radio has great sound, is waterproof, has a great speaker, includes an emergency flashlight, can tune into NOAA emergency weather stations, and is still on its first set of batteries two+ years after purchasing it. I use it for an hour or so a day. Highly recommend.
@w7voa Those car battery jumpers with lithium batteries usually also have USB ports for phone or tablet charging. Those are cheaper than alot of emergency stuff,
"While the threat is there (to GPS) it is mitigated by the presence of all these spacecraft" able to provide precision, Rob Steenburgh of NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center says in response to my question about what a G4 or higher geomagnetic event later today would temporarily mean for navigation.
There's the potential for larger geomagnetic threats as the current Solar Cycle 25 peaks and then on its downside in the next several years, according to NOAA experts.
And now we've reached an extreme (G5) geomagnetic storm level, according to NOAA.
Satellite navigation (GPS) may be degraded or unavailable for days.
Radio - HF (high frequency) radio propagation may be impossible in many areas for one to two days.
Aurora - Aurora may be seen as low as Florida to southern Texas and southern California.
Too early to know about any damage from the extreme geomagnetic storm, but this appears to be the most serious such event since the 2003 'Halloween solar storms' which cause an hour-long power outage in Sweden and blew up transformers in South Africa.
@w7voa I suppose I should try to tune in CHU to see if they’re audible. I am in such a weird spot in northeast Ohio that CHU is easier to receive than WWV on normal days.
@w7voa and don't forget, that you have to replace the batteries on regular intervals, even if you don't use them. The generator needs (professional) maintenance with a higher frequency, obviously.