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Radio streaming Issue

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Psmith20771

Radio streaming Issue
« on: November 25, 2017, 09:55:09 am »
Hi all.

Please could someone advise me on working the radio with the echo? I have just bought the echo and having problems playing live radio, it keeps cutting out (if it manages to be found).

Could anyone recommend the best radio app to link into the echo? I currently have the time in.

On this topic too, I am asking for a specific FM frequency and it won’t play this?

Any help much appreciated!

Thanks

Drwoodr

Re: Radio streaming Issue
« Reply #1 on: November 25, 2017, 11:41:16 am »
I don't listen to much fm radio these days with Spotify, SiriusXM, and Pandora. I assume you mean you have the TuneIn radio app. You might want to also try iHeartRadio. It doesn't have every station out there, but I do enjoy their smooth jazz station on occasion, and it plays flawlessly.

Laurel

Re: Radio streaming Issue
« Reply #2 on: November 25, 2017, 12:22:19 pm »
It seem to me that when I bought my first Echo, I had to go into Music & Books on Amazon Alexa site and choose tune in radio, local stations, and then make sure all the local ones I use AM and FM were searched for by me and set up.  Then thereafter Alexa has recognized them all.

mike27oct

Re: Radio streaming Issue
« Reply #3 on: November 25, 2017, 01:38:53 pm »
I use tunein a lot.  One really needs to get the station name right.  Look the stations up on actual tunein app to see the correct name.  Here are examples of station names I use to land on correct station.  Play Jazz 91, Play Classical KING, Play station Jazz Wyoming.  If I do not specify "on tunein", it will play on iHeart.  No matter.

Offline jwlv

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Re: Radio streaming Issue
« Reply #4 on: November 25, 2017, 03:13:04 pm »
Here's another tip to make sure you get the correct radio station.
For this to work you must have your address/zip code set up in your Alexa app. From then on, you can ask Alexa to "play 106.7 FM" and it will get the local station on that frequency. Alexa will find the correct station based on your zip code.

Psmith20771

Re: Radio streaming Issue
« Reply #5 on: November 26, 2017, 09:35:58 am »
Thanks for the assistance guys, have worked on a few of your comments.

I am sometimes getting - ‘now playing BBC Radio 5 KUBE from tune in’, and then nothing is playing, it’s just silent!

Any ideas as to why this happens?

Thanks

Alpha Bitch

Re: Radio streaming Issue
« Reply #6 on: November 27, 2017, 02:41:44 pm »
You can try the following...

unplugging the Echo for 5 minutes

If you know the radio station(s) call letter(s) use them instead

The radio station(s) you are interested in may have their own "Skills."  Most do now.


Use the Voice Training option in the Alexa app

Jeff29

Re: Radio streaming Issue
« Reply #7 on: November 27, 2017, 11:23:54 pm »
If you have done everything suggested there's one last thing to check.  RF signal strength.

If you have more than one Echo and a friend to help this is easy:
  • Leave the [problem] Echo you're troubleshooting in it's location where it is experiencing the problem.
  • Place your 2nd device in close proximity to your wireless router.
  • Have one device drop in on the other (doesn't matter which initiates as long as you get the connection established).
  • You listen at the 2nd device location while your friend talks normally.
  • If the audio sounds horrible you can verify it is a signal strength problem by bringing the 1st device closer to your wireless router and retesting.  Preferably in another room to avoid confusion and that nasty feedback noise.
You verify it is definitively a signal strength problem if audio of your friend becomes crystal clear on the 2nd device with step 5.

If you have only one Echo that limits your options to test unless you want to pay a professional to come measure signal strength.
  • With one echo you can relocate your echo close to your wireless router and see if your problem goes away.  If your problem is resolved then you probably have determined it's signal strength.  You decide how long to test as well as other variables that impact the probability of your final determination's accuracy.
  • Alternately, you can get a long cable and move your wireless router close to your Echo.  This may make testing easier but requires you obtain the necessary cable.  If you already have a cable that will let you relocate your wireless router this is the option I would suggest.

Signal strength can impact streaming.  From my experience drops in signal strength can cause service drops that become unpredictable.  I have seen Alexa state the name of a song (when no audio was being output) she thought was being played but actually wasn't because the stream had failed with the likely candidate causing the failure being signal strength.

The Alexa App should supply a signal strength meter given the information is available within the device.  Sadly, there isn't any help here and a signal strength meter could identify this problem during setup rather than forcing users like you through this frustrating experience.

One additional thought:  You can use the signal meter built into your smart phone.  Just remember it's more of an idiot-guage and you still have to do the above tests and compare results to your phone's meter to derive any value--unless it displays 1 bar or less next to your problem Echo location which could make things somewhat obvious.

Good Luck!