Get some help and take it down Johnny Cash style.
One piece at a time.
I'd love to do it that way but due to liability issues I am not allowed to work on the siren until it is on the ground. Robbinsdale Schools said I must have licensed, bonded, and insured contractors remove all parts of the siren I would like to have. I was originally going to hire the crane company to remove the siren body after I had disconnected the electric service and pulled out the control cabinets, AF timer, and radio receiver myself, but Robbinsdale schools said I may not work on the siren's electrical unless I'm a licensed electrician.holler wrote:Get some help and take it down Johnny Cash style.
One piece at a time.
If I somehow got in contact with a municipality that was in need of a "siren swap," or simply even a new (refurbished) siren installed, I would sell it to them for whatever it ends up costing me to remove it + any parts I have to buy for it (New Hope keeps their sirens in wonderful shape so I shouldn't have any big things I have to fix). I probably won't even have to repaint it. We'll see. I will for sure perform all maintenance on it that looks necessary, but otherwise it should be ready to go as a collector siren unless a town contacts me with interest.Midnight Drifter wrote:I really can't wait to see another Thunderbolt rescued. If it ends up being restored, reinstalled and reactivated, all the marrier!
Well, You have to think about the 1003's location. Its on top of a school. If it were to fall and crash through the roof and injure someone working down there, They would be liable for the injuries. So they have to charge extra for the risk.SirenSynthsInc wrote:I think 550 is a little to expensive around these parts.... The Siren removal services around here only ask around 300 to remove an old thunderbolt.
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