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Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Fri May 17, 2019 2:27 pm
by NahIDee
Howard County sounds the sirens for monthly tests and tornadoes. A few sirens sound off for fire calls. Same thing applies to Hall County.

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Fri May 17, 2019 2:33 pm
by fire_freak_57
My town (we are incorporated as a Village so that’s what I mean when I say the Village) has one siren we own (a 2001-130) and another (also a 2001-130) at the local high school. They warn of tornadoes and are activated ONLY if a tornado is on the ground near the Village. It’s not a policy I agree with (as we will not activate the sirens even if we are in the Warning polygon for a tornado warning).

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Sun May 19, 2019 6:45 pm
by archizackture
West Virginia here. Our sirens are almost exclusively fire sirens, though they also do an attack pattern for an extended time for weather emergencies. There's around 3 to 8 in each county (3 here in Morgan County: a Sterling M10, a Sentry 10V, and a Model 5/7).

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Mon May 20, 2019 1:43 pm
by sirensandfirealarms
Mostly tornadoes, but there's an Amerigas Storage facility with ATIs in Middletown which likely warn of any accident at the plant.
There's also Elmwood Place, which has an HOR Siro-Drone that does a daily blast at 9:00pm, and Seven Mile, which has a 16/16 port Sterling M-10 that goes off every day at 6:00pm. Fernald used to have some 1212s for nuclear accidents, but most of those are gone now (2 sirens are still in place but inactive as of writing this post).

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Tue May 21, 2019 7:17 am
by FahmiRBLX
Malaysia Countrywide :

Only electronic sirens sound for the real deal, while remaining mechanical ones for non-energency occassions such as Iftar time-marking alongside Azan during months of Ramadhan. A particular mechanical siren atop Kuala Kangsar Police HQ sounds for this on Alert (Hoping that I can film it this year).

Our electronic sirens are usually placed at risky areas (e.g Coastal portions of a city, Flood-prone low areas, etc.) sound only for a single threat; Tsunami for coastal sirens, Flooding for sirens in flood prone areas. Meaning, other threats such as Waterspout will not sound those sirens. As of now, testing and actual warning is signalled by Attack, the only thing differenciating between testing and warnings are via announcement prior to signalling.

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Tue May 21, 2019 4:59 pm
by Model L
Tsunami's
at the beach
Or floods.
In ashland
Or fire.
In Sunriver
or nothing at all
(my siren, and a few others...)

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Thu Jun 06, 2019 10:12 pm
by Whelenfan2802
Madison Co: Short Alert 1st wens of Every month So far I'm not sure What Madison Co. Al Uses for warnings.

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Fri Jun 07, 2019 2:04 am
by NewEnglander1212
The Port of Providence, RI runs a system of Whelens for port emergencies. Brown University also has Whelens, I believe, that sound in case of emergencies on campus.

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Fri Jun 07, 2019 7:37 am
by freebrickproductions
Whelenfan2802 wrote:
Thu Jun 06, 2019 10:12 pm
Madison Co: Short Alert 1st wens of Every month So far I'm not sure What Madison Co. Al Uses for warnings.
Madison County sets off the sirens in alert for tornado warnings. I'd assume attack is reserved for an attack. Redstone Arsenal also uses their E-classes for other warnings as well.

Re: What do sirens in your area warn of?

Posted: Sat Jun 08, 2019 3:47 pm
by archizackture
NewEnglander1212 wrote:
Fri Jun 07, 2019 2:04 am
Brown University also has Whelens, I believe, that sound in case of emergencies on campus.
Cornell as well, they have four roof-mounted 2804 sirens: Bartels Hall, Hans Bethe House, Mary Donlon Hall, and Vet School. I studied urban planning at CU for two semesters before transferring out and heard two of their twice-yearly tests and one actual alarm when there was a severe storm during Slope Day (a major outdoor celebration). In all cases the sirens first do a voice announcement, then 7 or 8 rounds of a rising whoop sound that cuts off instead of hovering at the highest tone (in fire alarm terms it would be a "slow whoop"), then another voice announcement. I also heard a noon siren test in Collegetown (south end of campus) that sounded an electronic hi-lo but I never found out where or what that siren is.