User avatar
Brendan W
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 2353
Joined: Fri Apr 08, 2011 12:51 am
Real Name: Brendan Williamson
YouTube Username: Brendan Williamson
Discord: Brendan W.#7026
Location: Greenwood, SC
Contact: Website Facebook Skype Twitter YouTube

"New" Faraday Type 2

Tue Dec 04, 2012 3:37 am

Image

Got this for $30 at a local shop. It was supposedly made in 1948. All I was told is that it came from a decomm'd DeKalb County fire station that was demolished around 1987. It still works, the owner of the shop actually let me fire it up for 5 seconds.

Other than what I said, anyone know anything about these?
Ripe old age of 26.
1950 Model A, 1979 AF Timer, 30 something ID tags, some other odds and ends
Registered Skywarn spotter as of 4/29/18

User avatar
FSThunderboltfan1000
Supporter
Supporter
Posts: 768
Joined: Thu Aug 11, 2011 12:51 am
Real Name: Tom
YouTube Username: FSThunderboltfan1000
Location: sheboygan WI
Contact: Website

Tue Dec 04, 2012 3:40 am

I love these. These were comonly used in old faraday systems. This alarm shood run off 120v.
Proud owner of rcm1, model 2,2T,Model A, Thunderbolt 1003, AF timer, FS SS1000, 500SHST
Wisconsin siren services
https://www.swssirens.com

User avatar
3t22
Registered User
Registered User
Posts: 802
Joined: Mon May 15, 2006 4:48 am
Real Name: Dan Drega
YouTube Username: federal3t22
Location: Vernon CT
Contact: YouTube

Tue Dec 04, 2012 5:34 am

I have 2 of them, one 110 volt and the other 12 volt. Check the tag to make sure it's 110 volts. If it just says 12 or 11f (like my 12 volt horn) you'll need a 12 volt transformer to run it properly. If you're not sure take a pic of the tag. it should sound like this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMChwc0inHA

And should be quite loud.

These are actually relabeled Benjamin horns who produced horns mainly for other manufactures, especially IBM and later Simplex when they bought out IBM's fire alarm and time clock line. I believe were produced in the 1930's as by the 40's they were redesigned and sounded like the Family Feud strike buzzer.

Looks like your horn was repainted at some point. But the good news is they require no maintenance other than an occasional test blast and are easy to fix if on the off chance something does bad or breaks.
Proud owner of a 2T, 5, M-5, 1000 Head, 7T, 3T22, and a single toned 2

Return to “Other Warning Systems - Indoor, Outdoor and Vehicular”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 14 guests