This keeps coming to my mind, and it bewilders me every time, so I decided to finally ask about it.
Several years ago, I had a conversation with some firefighters who claimed they could hear the Sentry 10V in Berkeley Springs, West Virginia (it's my profile picture) from their fishing spot on the Potomac River. I didn't say anything about it then, but I thought it was ridiculous. Still, the possibility makes me wonder.
Here's the details of the situation:
- Any given point along the Potomac around here is 15 or 16 miles away from the 10V "as the crow flies." There's one spot that's only 11 miles away, but it's on the other side of two very tall ridges.
- There are no highways, factories, town centers, or other sources of noise anywhere in that 15-16 mile span
- The 10V is on a ridge at an elevation just over 1000 feet, higher than any other land over that 15-16 mile span, but not as high as the two ridges in the way of the 11-mile span.
- The firefighters were from a different fire department
- There's a different siren, a Sterling K-5 that sounds nothing like the 10V, close to the river on the other side
- We didn't discuss the 10V by name; I didn't know about siren models back then; we named it by the VFD where it's located, South Morgan VFD.
I know there's a method of calculating sound fade over distance, but I forget what it is. How would I take 115 dBc and calculate its intensity at 15 miles? Does it matter that the 460hz tone carries well over distance, better than higher tones? Can we be sure whether or not we've debunked the firefighters' claim?
I used to live 3 miles (again, as the crow flies) from the 10V and it could penetrate the house easily (here's my own recording), but 15 miles?? Golly!