This is in Ithaca, NY.
http://youtube.com/watch?v=RPLTQnvSkcY
The Whoop signal sounds different than I'm used to hearing.
How would going to a high pitch cause an increase in temperature??? Speaker drivers are designed for higher pitches, low pitches are what causes excessive overheating.SirenMadness wrote:The whoop doesn't go up that far in pitch most likely to reduce wear on the speaker-coils, as going from a really low frequency to a very high one can cause wear sooner, due to changes in temperature.
What I meant to say was a change in temperature, not higher heat. The higher pitch produces a lesser heat, and the temperature change between the low pitch and the high pitch might be what causes slightly faster wear. So going from warm to slightly cooler might cause faster wear, not the temperature itself, so to keep the temperature more uniform, the pitch would have to be more uniform. Other than that, though, it might just be a newer tone choice.JasonC wrote:How would going to a high pitch cause an increase in temperature??? Speaker drivers are designed for higher pitches, low pitches are what causes excessive overheating.SirenMadness wrote:The whoop doesn't go up that far in pitch most likely to reduce wear on the speaker-coils, as going from a really low frequency to a very high one can cause wear sooner, due to changes in temperature.
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