
I think landline. Power comes from above to the siren but there are a few tubes they come out of the ground and I think that might be the phone line(s), as a lot of communities around there have their phone lines underground.Jim_Ferer wrote:I'm surpised the caller doesn't have to use a passphrase to finish activating the siren(s). It sounded as though the siren controller used caller ID to only allow certain numbers to call and activate. So, if a siren controller with an unlisted siren number could only accept a call from phone number (xxx) yyy-yyyy, who then had to dial , say 12345 to activate the siren, then I think the chances of an accidental activation would be pretty low. It's probably never going to be zero.
Is this system land-line or cellular? A lot of people don't realize that most roadside message boards are controlled by a cell phone inside.
Jim_Ferer wrote:I'm surpised the caller doesn't have to use a passphrase to finish activating the siren(s). It sounded as though the siren controller used caller ID to only allow certain numbers to call and activate. So, if a siren controller with an unlisted siren number could only accept a call from phone number (xxx) yyy-yyyy, who then had to dial , say 12345 to activate the siren, then I think the chances of an accidental activation would be pretty low. It's probably never going to be zero.
No not really, it takes me less than a minute to dial out our siren if the line is clear. Human error and the phone system in general are the biggest drawbacks.t-bolt82 wrote:Jim_Ferer wrote:I'm surpised the caller doesn't have to use a passphrase to finish activating the siren(s). It sounded as though the siren controller used caller ID to only allow certain numbers to call and activate. So, if a siren controller with an unlisted siren number could only accept a call from phone number (xxx) yyy-yyyy, who then had to dial , say 12345 to activate the siren, then I think the chances of an accidental activation would be pretty low. It's probably never going to be zero.
but, if you had to go thru all those steps just to activate the siren(s), wouldnt that take longer to get warning out to people when theres an actual tornado??
holler wrote:No not really, it takes me less than a minute to dial out our siren if the line is clear. Human error and the phone system in general are the biggest drawbacks.t-bolt82 wrote:but, if you had to go thru all those steps just to activate the siren(s), wouldnt that take longer to get warning out to people when theres an actual tornado??Jim_Ferer wrote:I'm surpised the caller doesn't have to use a passphrase to finish activating the siren(s). It sounded as though the siren controller used caller ID to only allow certain numbers to call and activate. So, if a siren controller with an unlisted siren number could only accept a call from phone number (xxx) yyy-yyyy, who then had to dial , say 12345 to activate the siren, then I think the chances of an accidental activation would be pretty low. It's probably never going to be zero.
There there aren't many steps, really. Imagine it goes like this:t-bolt82 wrote:Jim_Ferer wrote:I'm surpised the caller doesn't have to use a passphrase to finish activating the siren(s). It sounded as though the siren controller used caller ID to only allow certain numbers to call and activate. So, if a siren controller with an unlisted siren number could only accept a call from phone number (xxx) yyy-yyyy, who then had to dial , say 12345 to activate the siren, then I think the chances of an accidental activation would be pretty low. It's probably never going to be zero.
but, if you had to go thru all those steps just to activate the siren(s), wouldnt that take longer to get warning out to people when theres an actual tornado??
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