With regards to Carter, Klaxon and Secomak sirens - consideration was never given in the UK to placing these sirens in a certain direction as the claims of the '
...manufacturers of the power sirens used for the warning system ... claimed that their sound output was omnidirectional... Anechoic chamber measurements commissioned by the Home Office in 1985, however, showed that the output was far from omnidrectional... Calculations showed that the resulting coverage pattern on the ground was the shape of an "hour glass", covering only 60% of the area of its circumscribed circle...'.
I've covered some of the points regarding positioning of UK sirens in a reply on the post
'More Sirens from Across the Pond'.
Out of interest - the 'polar plot of sound output' of single ended Klaxon sirens is included in this pdf file
http://www.klaxonsignals.com/instructio ... s/GP12.pdf
I've noticed though that all my hand sirens seem to be louder where the air intake is and quieter where the air actually comes out of the siren. I don't know why this would be, but it would correspond with the findings of the Home Office that dual-toned UK sirens had an "hour glass" plot of sound output.
In 1989 the police (who had the responsibility of operating, maintaining and identifying new siren emplacements) were insturcted to cease the installation of new sirens. A study group set up by the Home Office in 1991 to investigate UK Warning Arrangements decided that if a siren system should still exist -
'(a system) which used powerful modern electronic sirens, computer controlled by radio transmission, was selected as the preferred alternative of the Study Group'. However, Ministers decided to base future warning arrangements exclusively on media broadcasts and the existing siren system was dismantled during late 1992 and early 1993.