Aurora Fire |
Listen | Feed | Genre | Listeners | Player Selection | Links | Status |
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Aurora Fire Covering Dispatch & Tac. Aurora Fire Rescue is an ISO Class 1 and internationally accredited agency covering 163 square miles of the City of Aurora, the 2nd largest city by area and 3rd largest city by population in Colorado. Status: Power outages resulted in an unstable feed. Working on improving the stability. Unplanned audio outage from 15:00 on November 21 through 19:00 on November 21 has been resolved. Apologies for the issues! |
Public Safety
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15 | Online |
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This feed uses a priority interrupt system. Talkgroups with higher priority (lower number) will interrupt talkgroups with a lower priority (higher number). Talkgroups with the same priority will not interrupt the active talkgroup.
Talkgroup |
Name | Usage | Priority |
---|---|---|---|
39101 | Dispatch | Fire Dispatch | 3 |
39102 | Tac 2 | Fire Response | 3 |
39103 | Tac 3 | Incident Tac | 2 |
39104 | Tac 4 | Structure Fire Tac | 1 |
39105 | Tac 5 | Additional Tac | 1 |
39112 | EMS 5 | EMS Dispatch | 4 |
39113 | EMS 6 | EMS Response | 4 |
Alpha tags are enabled and can be seen with any supported applications that can recognize the data. Alpha tags are in the format of Name [Talkgroup ID].
Curious about how Aurora's map grids work? Check out this fire station map: link.
The first number represents a 1/2 mile north to south grid, the middle letter represents a 1/2 mile west to east grid, and the last number represents one of the four 1/4 mile by 1/4 mile grids that subdivides the larger grid.
An example layout of this grid system can seen below representing a 1.5 mile by 1.5 mile area made up of nine 1/2 mile by 1/2 mile grids that is divided into thirty-six 1/4 mile by 1/4 mile grids.
99-A-1 | 99-A-2 | 99-B-1 | 99-B-2 | 99-C-1 | 99-C-2 |
99-A-3 | 99-A-4 | 99-B-3 | 99-B-4 | 99-C-3 | 99-C-4 |
1-A-1 | 1-A-2 | 1-B-1 | 1-B-2 | 1-C-1 | 1-C-2 |
1-A-3 | 1-A-4 | 1-B-3 | 1-B-4 | 1-C-3 | 1-C-4 |
2-A-1 | 2-A-2 | 2-B-1 | 2-B-2 | 2-C-1 | 2-C-2 |
2-A-3 | 2-A-4 | 2-B-3 | 2-B-4 | 2-C-3 | 2-C-4 |
Aurora Fire Rescue provides limited live call information in the form of the PulsePoint Respond application available for Android and iOS. Call information is only available for calls assigned a Falck Rocky Mountain ambulance, Aurora Fire Rescue's emergency ambulance provider. Detailed location information is only available for calls that occur in a public setting and non-medical calls that are assigned an ambulance.
More Information on PulsePoint: https://www.pulsepoint.org/
Download for Android
Download for iOS
Web Application (no download needed): https://web.pulsepoint.org/
Agency: Aurora Fire - Falck Rocky Mountain
Feed Device: Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+
Receiver: RTL-SDR Blog V3
Software: OP25 (boatbod), Liquidsoap
Radio System: Aurora
This is a demonstration feed testing the features and cost effectiveness of a Pi + SDR + OP25 combination over a regular scanner. Aurora's radio system is a P25 Phase 2 four site simulcast radio system. Simulcast radio systems are notorious for being difficult to monitor on all scanners designed prior to 2018 without a special directional antenna setup. Reception is not guarenteed even with special directional antenna setup and requires some luck. Only a very limited selection of full feature top of the line scanners that costs $649.99 to $699.99 will reliably receive these systems.
The full cost of the setup in 2018 was the following:
$34.99 - Raspberry Pi 3 Model B+
$9.99 - 5V 2.5A Power Supply
$2.99 - 16GB microSD card
$34.95 - RTL-SDR Blog V3 with Dipole Antenna Kit
Total: $82.92
The approximate cost of the setup in 2023 is the following:
$45.00 - Raspberry Pi 4 Model B - 2GB
$8.00 - Raspberry Pi 15W Power Supply
$2.99 - 32GB microSD card
$43.95 - RTL-SDR Blog V3 with Dipole Antenna Kit
Total:$99.94
This is a fraction of the $649.99 price tag of a scanner designed to receive simulcast radio systems. For the price of one scanner, one could setup six standalone feeds (1x Raspberry Pi, 1x RTL-SDR) and upto eight feeds when providing two feeds per Raspberry Pi (1x Raspberry Pi, 2x RTL-SDR).
The setup is located approximately 2 miles from the nearest site using the stock RTL-SDR Blog v3 dipole antenna kit.