Listen to this Sentry 7v8 in attack.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f-WLG2HW ... re=related
I am always surprised by the length of fire calls in some towns. Around here, the fire stations give either three short or three long blasts. In fact, Silverton's siren is now only sounded at noon, and as of this year, Mount Angel's 3T22 has been silenced altogether. As a kid, Ashland's Fedelcode Model 7 gave a one minute steady blast, while Mount Shasta's air horns sounded short-short-short-long two times. All of these fire calls took no more than a minute to sound.zetronist wrote:
Wow.... I can't believe how long they cycle that siren. I'm assuming it's a fire call. We used to blast our system 8 times, but now that's down to 4. This Sentry just keeps going like the Everready Bunny! I love it!
John
I agree. Any siren signal over a minute for fire calls is unnecessary. Around here, Adsig replaced all of the controllers for the county and all the sirens do a 3-minute attack signal for fire/EMS calls which is way to long. Back in the old days though, it was common for a siren to go off until a fire department member was able to shut the siren off.Daniel wrote:I am always surprised by the length of fire calls in some towns. Around here, the fire stations give either three short or three long blasts. In fact, Silverton's siren is now only sounded at noon, and as of this year, Mount Angel's 3T22 has been silenced altogether. As a kid, Ashland's Fedelcode Model 7 gave a one minute steady blast, while Mount Shasta's air horns sounded short-short-short-long two times. All of these fire calls took no more than a minute to sound.zetronist wrote:
Wow.... I can't believe how long they cycle that siren. I'm assuming it's a fire call. We used to blast our system 8 times, but now that's down to 4. This Sentry just keeps going like the Everready Bunny! I love it!
John
Then I visited Blue Earth, Minnesota, where the sirens went on attack for about five minutes, or as a store clerk told me, until someone got to the fire station to turn them off. In Burns, Oregon, their Model 5 sounds twelve cycles of attack for fires. It seems to me that the attack signal, or anything longer than a minute or so, ought to be saved for something more serious than a fire call.
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