Midnight Drifter wrote:European sirens tend to not follow the classic American formula of Build it BIGGER. They all seem to be between 5-15 horsepower, if that, can't think of a single directional unit off the top of my head, either.
First, there are no european sirens.
Every country in Europe has it's own sirens, only a few sirens can be seen in more than one countrys.
One example are german sirens like the sirens from Siemens.
They were mounted in the conquered nations during World War 2 and because of the high quality, they still work today.
After World War 2, germany exported sirens to the whole world, mainly the HLS-System.
The next thing is, many countries don't have a real siren network or had it dismantled after the cold war. There are nearly no other catastrophes than flood in middle europe. Storms do lower damage because the buildings here are much more massiv. The heaviest damages are normaly destroyed roofs.
Sirens are mainly used to alarm the fire brigade.
In countries like Austria , very big sirens are useless since the land is not flat.
Germany is a flat land and has the only mechanical high-power-siren, the HLS.
Now, at least germany has very powerful electronic sirens.
Electronic sirens are the first directed sirens in europe but they don't rotate.