A good idea, but the 2T22 uses rotors about the size of a model 3's, spinning at 3450RPM. Those will kick out an equal amount of sound as the STH-10's much larger 22" rotor, not shared by any other federal omnidirectional siren.Daniel wrote: A twin-rotor siren like the 2T22 will actually be louder than its single-tone version, the STH-10...
No, the '3T' stands for the three tones it can produce; Alert, Attack, and Fire. The 22 is for the compliment of horns on the two stators. Ten on the bottom head for the lower note, and twelve on the upper head for the higher note.sirenmaster2000 wrote:Isn't the 3T22 made of 3 tones, hence the 3T part?
As described, the first clutch would release at the same time as the second engaged. This was inspired by the many towns I have visited where there are two similar or identical sirens side by side, presumably one for fire and one for civil defense. Why not put them in the same housing?robert gift wrote:
Also when the clutch engages the second rotor, the first siren
would slow from the sudden added load, causing it's tone to drop and recover.
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