Man you beat me to it! I love the Broadmoor system. Those CS8s are neat units. One of a kind. How close was Klaxon/Secomak with Carter/Gents of Leicester?Chem_Boffin_6589 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 01, 2017 7:22 pmI'll chime in with Broadmoor which has 13 sirens in a more or less circle around it. All are expected to be replaced by 2018 by Klaxon's electronic equivalents in only 6 locations (I believe it will be Klaxon replacing them). The sirens are Secomak/Klaxon CS8 sirens, of which almost all are not functioning correctly as of present.
Well Secomak (which was later Klaxon), Gent's of Leicester, Carters of Burnley and Castle Castings were close in competition from what I've seen. Mainly Gents' and Carters were in competition then. Sirens during the Second World War were mainly made by Gent's and had big, long motors and large stators. Some airfields had the large Gent's tri-tone sirens as well (and believe me, they are long... almost a full metre!). Carters of Burnley sirens were there, and a small crop of Castle Castings and Secomak sirens were in between.MKIIProductions wrote: ↑Thu Mar 02, 2017 5:31 pmMan you beat me to it! I love the Broadmoor system. Those CS8s are neat units. One of a kind. How close was Klaxon/Secomak with Carter/Gents of Leicester?Chem_Boffin_6589 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 01, 2017 7:22 pmI'll chime in with Broadmoor which has 13 sirens in a more or less circle around it. All are expected to be replaced by 2018 by Klaxon's electronic equivalents in only 6 locations (I believe it will be Klaxon replacing them). The sirens are Secomak/Klaxon CS8 sirens, of which almost all are not functioning correctly as of present.
I think I found them:siren fan wrote:Terrell State Hospital in Terrell, Texas has an SD-10 and a 2T22. I'll try to google image it.
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