SuperBanshee wrote:No. In fact I've never seen any literature referring to such a siren.
It may have never been mass produced or advertised by Federal Signal.murrfarms wrote:While I'm fairly certain none have been found still up and/or in service to date, here are some photos of one that was for sale on eBay several years ago. This is the only one I have ever seen though but I have a feeling there may be a few out there that nobody has come across yet. Best I can tell this is an all original siren that wasn't modified in any way, and man is it an old one too judging by the old Valley(?) high slip three-phase motor it has.
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No. The tubing diameter for the STH-10's intake is way bigger than the 3T22's intake, plus the flange sizes (the part that bolts up to the stator) are completely different between the two sirens' intakes as well. In other words, there is no way this could work if that were a 3T22 intake even if they modified the flange to fit a STH-10; it simply would not work due to a lack of proper airflow to the siren's rotor if the smaller 3T22 tube were used.SoundMaster 391 wrote:Just wondering. Is it possible to fit a 3T33 intake onto the STH-10?
Could that maybe just be a 3t22 someone chopped in half?murrfarms wrote:While I'm fairly certain none have been found still up and/or in service to date, here are some photos of one that was for sale on eBay several years ago. This is the only one I have ever seen though but I have a feeling there may be a few out there that nobody has come across yet. Best I can tell this is an all original siren that wasn't modified in any way, and man is it an old one too judging by the old Valley(?) high slip three-phase motor it has.
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No, highly unlikely. The intake for the STH-10 is much larger in diameter than those used on the 3T22, and this one definitely appears to have the normal size intake for a STH-10, except with the addition of a solenoid-actuated butterfly valve for coding purposes.Zarlog wrote:Could that maybe just be a 3t22 someone chopped in half?
Wow that's really really rare. This is my first time seeing one. Is this STH-C siren just a multi signal version of a STH-10 siren? Just making sure. Or is it a completely different siren model all together.murrfarms wrote:No, highly unlikely. The intake for the STH-10 is much larger in diameter than those used on the 3T22, and this one definitely appears to have the normal size intake for a STH-10, except with the addition of a solenoid-actuated butterfly valve for coding purposes.Zarlog wrote:Could that maybe just be a 3t22 someone chopped in half?
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