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TrainsAndSirens1
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Siren Hunt in Cobb County, GA & Bibb County, GA

Mon Nov 25, 2013 1:55 am

**This post will have a lot of photos.**
I went siren hunting in Cobb County, GA and Bibb County, GA today, November 24, 2013. It seems I saw a lot of sirens when I was siren hunting in Cobb County and Bibb County. I was able to siren hunt in Cobb County, GA and Bibb County, GA. It was very cold when I siren hunted in Cobb County. I actually went siren hunting in Cobb County before, the reason why I siren hunted again in Cobb County because I wanted better photos of them since the last time I siren hunted in the county, the weather was terrible because it was raining hard for hours. Anyway, here are the photos:
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^Thunderbolt 1000T (Cobb County Siren #19) located in Smyrna, GA.
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^Federal Signal STH-10 located in Smyrna, GA.
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^Thunderbolt 1000T (Cobb County Siren #7) located near Mariette, GA.
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^Thunderbolt 1000T (Cobb County Siren #22) located somewhere west south of Cobb County, GA.
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^Whelen WPS 2910 located somewhere in south of Cobb County, GA(?).
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^Whelen Vortex R4 located in Macon, GA next to a water tower and a fire station (replaced a Thunderbolt 1000T).
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^Federal Signal Thunderbeam/RSH-10 located near Macon, GA at a Clubhouse near to a lake.
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^Fedelcode Model 5 located in downtown Macon, GA on top of a building.
Notices: I saw a Whelen 4004 (replaced a Thunderbolt 1000T) in Cobb County, another STH-10 in Smyrna, 2001-SRN in Forsyth, Modulator in Foryth, 2001-SRN (replaced a Thunderbolt 1000T) in Macon. But I wasn't able to get photos of them.
Owner of a -130, Modulator 6048, B-Series 1003,1000B, 3016, STH-10B, Little Giant, two 5As, 2, 2T, Model B9, 2 Model Ds, 4 Model As, Faraday Type 2, OC-9, 2 AR Timers, other. Skywarn Spotter.
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MattDean1003
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Re: Siren Hunt in Cobb County, GA & Bibb County, GA

Mon Nov 25, 2013 8:45 am

I know where that Thunderbeam is! It's off the interstate at a church.

If you went through Monticello going down there they have either a Vortex or a 4004 on top of I believe the courthouse; there is a picture of it floating around on Google images and I'll see if I can dig it up later.
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holler
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Re: Siren Hunt in Cobb County, GA & Bibb County, GA

Mon Nov 25, 2013 11:23 am

Is that the lake wildwood Thunderbeam?

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Re: Siren Hunt in Cobb County, GA & Bibb County, GA

Mon Nov 25, 2013 11:48 am

Nice photos!

The FS where Cobb #7 is located actually has an Austell address..although the Methodist Church across road has a Smyrna address! It's one of only 3 functioning Tbolts in the county now.

Smyrna's STH-10s were silenced a few years ago. City now has a system of Whelen Vortex sirens. Not every STH-10 was replaced, but they all(except one) still stand silent atop their poles. I was living in Smyrna when the STH-10s were installed(in 3 phases over period of about 10 years).

Cobb #22 is in Austell. It's at the S. Cobb Government Center. I've been told that its chopper has quit working.

Cobb #19 works, although I've heard that it doesn't rotate. It's located at the former FS#19 on Powers Ferry Rd. near WinHill Rd. intersection.

I wonder where that Whelen in S. Cobb is. Could it be in Powder Springs? I know there's one at the Municipal Court in the town(former police station).

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TrainsAndSirens1
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Re: Siren Hunt in Cobb County, GA & Bibb County, GA

Mon Nov 25, 2013 5:06 pm

holler wrote:Is that the lake wildwood Thunderbeam?
Yep! That's the one!
Melvin Potts wrote:Nice photos!

The FS where Cobb #7 is located actually has an Austell address..although the Methodist Church across road has a Smyrna address! It's one of only 3 functioning Tbolts in the county now.

Smyrna's STH-10s were silenced a few years ago. City now has a system of Whelen Vortex sirens. Not every STH-10 was replaced, but they all(except one) still stand silent atop their poles. I was living in Smyrna when the STH-10s were installed(in 3 phases over period of about 10 years).

Cobb #22 is in Austell. It's at the S. Cobb Government Center. I've been told that its chopper has quit working.

Cobb #19 works, although I've heard that it doesn't rotate. It's located at the former FS#19 on Powers Ferry Rd. near WinHill Rd. intersection.

I wonder where that Whelen in S. Cobb is. Could it be in Powder Springs? I know there's one at the Municipal Court in the town(former police station).
Oh, ok. I didn't really know where the Cobb County Siren #7 is actually at. I know Smyrna's old sirens are decommissioned. I didn't really know the exact location where Cobb County Siren #22 is at. I was guessing what it is at. I know the Cobb County Siren #19 has a broken rotator. And the Whelen siren I saw, I think it's located somewhere in Smyrna at a fire station. The location looked familiar when I saw it. So, I think it is a Whelen 4004 that replaced a Thunderbolt 1000T. I'm gonna try to find the location of that Whelen 4004.
Owner of a -130, Modulator 6048, B-Series 1003,1000B, 3016, STH-10B, Little Giant, two 5As, 2, 2T, Model B9, 2 Model Ds, 4 Model As, Faraday Type 2, OC-9, 2 AR Timers, other. Skywarn Spotter.
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Re: Siren Hunt in Cobb County, GA & Bibb County, GA

Wed Nov 27, 2013 11:43 am

Cobb has some strange address boundaries. FS#7 has an Austell address; parts of Hurt Rd. are Smyrna, one stretch is Austell, and I believe one stretch of it has Marietta addresses. One place I lived in early 70s had Marietta address even though it was much closer to Smyrna. STRANGE!

The Whelen at FS may be FS#1 on Mableton Parkway...a WPS replaced Tbolt there.

#22 is located on Austell Rd. As you get closer to Austell, the addresses are for that city..but a long stretch of same road has Marietta addresses.

Smyrna had 2 Tbolts. One was at Smyrna FS#4. It's been deactivated and a Vortex or 4004 is there now. Other one at Boral Brick Company is silent but no replacement at that location.

The Smyrna STH-10s had a GREAT sound; distinctive startup and LONG winddown. No way to mistake them for something else.

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Re: Siren Hunt in Cobb County, GA & Bibb County, GA

Wed Nov 27, 2013 3:02 pm

For the record, where I grew up in Battle Creek, MI, had a really strange address boundary. The south side of West Territorial Road (where I lived) has a normal "hundreds block" numbering system, counting blocks west from the north-south Southwest Capital Avenue (again, it's a consequence of weirdness, as the downtown area was on an NE-SW/NW-SE grid system, while the rest of the city is on an N-S/E-W grid system... but Capital, being pretty much the main artery through the center of the city, is signed as if it's in the downtown area even when it's running N-S). Both EAST Territorial and the first 10-ish blocks of the NORTH side of West Territorial used some sort of mostly-sequential system that didn't number by blocks. I lived at 419 W Territorial; the house across the street was 142.

This was a relic of a quirk of the city boundaries. Up until 1980 (or maybe a little later), West Territorial was the boundary line between the City of Battle Creek and Battle Creek Township, two legally distinct municipalities, each with their own standards, city services, school districts, etc. In fact, the *centerline* of West Territorial was the boundary, with the south side being in the Township, and the north side being in the City. (This even means that there are separate water mains, sewer mains, and power grids on opposite sides of the street, because those networks were laid out while they were separate.) In 1980 or so, the City annexed the Township, but due to inertia and public resistance, the streets were never renumbered.

And to bring it back around to sirens, just four doors down from my house was one of the Township fire stations, which had some sort of omnidirectional siren mounted on it. (I don't remember what kind; I was only about four years old when the annexation went through!) After annexation, since it was old, small, and in fairly poor condition, as was the nearby (like, maybe five blocks away) City fire station, part of the rationalization of City and Township services was to close both old stations and build a big new modern fire station about a mile further west. The siren didn't move with the new station, since the City already had an SD-10 on a water tower about four blocks north of the old Township station, plus the ANG base's Thunderbolt at the airport about two miles to the west, a couple more 4/5-port 1000Ts downtown (about two miles N and NE), and a couple of EOWS-612s scheduled to arrive in 1983 or so at schools about two miles SE and S, it was felt that the area was already sufficiently covered, and since the City used a full-time fire department, there was no need for a fire siren. It was, however, removed, and I suspect it was either sold to one of the suburbs or moved into an undercovered area.

The old Township fire station is now a podiatrist's office, and while I distinctly remember there being a bracket off the hose-drying tower that the siren had been mounted on, there's no longer any sign of it having ever been there at all. When the water tower to the north, with the SD-10, was removed and replaced by a ground-level water tank, the SD-10 was replaced with one of the city's new-siren standard rotating ATIs. The T-bolt at the airport has been replaced by two Mods, a quarter-mile apart(!). And I've not been to Battle Creek in almost ten years now. But apparently, three of the downtown 4/5-port 1000Ts are still in place, along with quite a few of the city's SD-10s, since the city EM's policy seems to be to only replace sirens if they break badly enough to be cost-ineffective to repair... and I'm rambling now, so I'll stop.

But yeah, my point is that strange address boundaries aren't at all uncommon, and usually relate to historic quirks of municipal boundaries...

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