Do YOU have a Toshiba flat screen?

DLK150

The Quiet Man
Messages
1,313
Reaction score
6
Flat-screen TV emits international distress signal

Search and rescue operation leads to apartment

Monday, October 18, 2004 Posted: 7:15 PM EDT (2315 GMT)


EUGENE, Oregon (Reuters) -- TV hardly gets much better than this.
An Oregon man discovered earlier this month that his year-old Toshiba Corporation flat-screen TV was emitting an international distress signal picked up by a satellite, leading a search and rescue operation to his apartment in Corvallis, Oregon, 70 miles south of Portland.

The signal from Chris van Rossmann's TV was routed by satellite to the Air Force Rescue Center at Langley Air Base in Virginia.

On October 2, the 20 year-old college student was visited at his apartment in the small university town by a contingent of local police, civil air patrol and search and rescue personnel.

"They'd never seen signal come that strong from a home appliance," said van Rossmann. "They were quite surprised. I think we all were."

Authorities had expected to find a boat or small plane with a malfunctioning transponder, the usual culprit in such incidents, emitting the 121.5 MHz frequency of the distress signal used internationally.

Van Rossmann said he was told to keep his TV off to avoid paying a $10,000 fine for "willingly broadcasting a false distress signal."

Toshiba contacted Rossmann and offered to provide him with a replacement set for free, he said.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/SHOWBIZ/TV/10/18/odd.television.reut/index.html
 

cowboyfan4life_mark

5 outta 8 ain't bad
Messages
3,037
Reaction score
125
DLK150 said:
Flat-screen TV emits international distress signal

Search and rescue operation leads to apartment

Monday, October 18, 2004 Posted: 7:15 PM EDT (2315 GMT)


EUGENE, Oregon (Reuters) -- TV hardly gets much better than this.
An Oregon man discovered earlier this month that his year-old Toshiba Corporation flat-screen TV was emitting an international distress signal picked up by a satellite, leading a search and rescue operation to his apartment in Corvallis, Oregon, 70 miles south of Portland.

The signal from Chris van Rossmann's TV was routed by satellite to the Air Force Rescue Center at Langley Air Base in Virginia.

On October 2, the 20 year-old college student was visited at his apartment in the small university town by a contingent of local police, civil air patrol and search and rescue personnel.

"They'd never seen signal come that strong from a home appliance," said van Rossmann. "They were quite surprised. I think we all were."

Authorities had expected to find a boat or small plane with a malfunctioning transponder, the usual culprit in such incidents, emitting the 121.5 MHz frequency of the distress signal used internationally.

Van Rossmann said he was told to keep his TV off to avoid paying a $10,000 fine for "willingly broadcasting a false distress signal."

Toshiba contacted Rossmann and offered to provide him with a replacement set for free, he said.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/SHOWBIZ/TV/10/18/odd.television.reut/index.html
I don't have one...yet. Consumer Reports has them listed as the number one big screen. I'm in the process of having a new house built and I'm trying to make up my mind for the bonus room. The 57" is rather nice. Any thoughts?
 

trickblue

Not Old School...Old Testament...
Messages
31,439
Reaction score
3,961
I have two 17" Toshiba flat panel pc monitors...

This explains my feelings of distress when I work on my pc at work...
 
Top