I have photos now...this vaguely reminds me of a Decot or SoundMaster.VASirens wrote:This little guy turned up at the Greenwood VFC in Winchester, VA:
https://goo.gl/maps/K1s5oVP1bdw
Not sure if it's a vent or a siren, but it looks like a siren to me, especially with the radio antenna being on the same tower. The question is, what is it?
Probably 9/12 since that seems to be the only dual toned ratio on those that has been seen yet. One never knows for sure though, could be other port ratio options out there for those that hasn't been discovered, as could be the case here. Still really cool to see what the chopper design looks like on these, they look very "Sterling"-esque with the long, narrow ports.connerdstines wrote:Model 20. A 10/12 one from the looks of it.
It's another Federal Model 20.SuperBanshee wrote:The siren in Winchester, VA looks very similar to Farmland, Indiana's old siren. It was a dual head vertical 9-12 port Fedelcode made in 1959.
Federal made dual head versions of the vertical Fedelcode siren when someone requested a siren larger than the standard Model 5. This siren was not a common request so it was never touted in most of Federal's advertisements.
Most of them were drawn from the same parts pool as the Models 3 and 5, but the dual tone version used a unique set of fans (choppers) to comply with Civil Defense guidelines. The reason it's such a rare siren is because most towns were already happy with the Model 5, SD-10, and other standard models.
Farmland's siren was blown down in 2007 and replaced with a Sentry. Here is a photo from years ago, hosted by another ARS member. Their siren was painted red and white.
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