Yeah, it would. I would suspect it's a problem requiring maintenance attention, not a design decision. Doing it on purpose would require a modification to the way the horn attaches to the chopper housing, and for what purpose? To prevent an acoustic shadow near the siren? I would think it way more likely that the riser and head assembly wasn't properly guyed or installed or that the horn wasn't properly mounted or supported by the brackets. The horn must be one hell of a moment arm on those four bolts that attach it to the chopper.MattDean1003 wrote:Now wait a minute...
If the horn was angled down a bit, wouldn't that mean that the top of the horn throat would be angled away from the rotor housing?
-Matt Dean-
Return to “Main Outdoor Warning Sirens Board”
Users browsing this forum: Ahrefs [Bot], Amazon [Bot], B&NBN44E and 18 guests