Thought I would prove to you I’m not what you believe non useful, so I made something I thought might make accessing information of this siren easier.
Let’s begin.
The B&M Model 15-AR-15 is a strange siren, since B&M is known mostly for being vehicular mobile siren company. I recently came across this siren and I haven’t found much about it on the surface.
So I went digging.
On the surface
When you search this siren up, you will be greeted by videos of this rare siren. There is one post on the board about how this siren was recently put back into service, explaining it’s rust on the siren in the videos. The siren is claimed to be quite loud since the intake ports are smaller than the chopper. That makes the air coming in more impactful acting like a blower into the siren which makes it a lot louder, consdiering it’s 5HP.
Among the weird remarks about how loud it is and the “religious 7th Horn” jokes, information is scarce on the surface. The siren is located in Sierra Madre if you want to go see it or something… nice place!
The shallow waters
If we look a bit deeper, we can find out the siren were produced on a small line family of 5 sirens with B&M’s vehicular sirens as the main focus. The air raid sirens that they dished out to people were similar to the Carter like trend of constructing sirens, with two intake ports to boost the power. This ended up benefiting the siren incredibly. It was 14/16 port, making it extremely loud.
What I found later on
After a few days of not finding anything and being busy, I came across a poster about B&M’s actual air raid sirens! There were 5 different models, the model 6-AR-1, model 10-AR-2, model 15-AR-5 (the only unit still left), the Model 20-AR-7, and the Model 20-AR-10. They boasted having twice the noise of any other siren of the same size at the time, and probably still now, and more noise up against any other siren of the same horsepower.
It was designed for towns and small compact communities up to the largest metro-politician areas at the time. They said that all exposed metal parts were protected by protective methods, although the rust on the 15-AR-5 in Israel says otherwise. The motor was specially designed for the siren, ball bearing, weatherproof (really?) built for long life and was two or three phase. They could be used for power plants, outdoor warning, atomic projects and even air bases!
Few facts:
B&M is the oldest siren company, being productive since 1913.
The air raid siren series they made never had good resistant paint against nature, presumably because it’s an old siren and has been against the weather.
The poster was made in 1943 presumably, in the war while sirens were needed. This explains how they used these sirens as a jump on the wagon for sirens manufacturing height in WW2.
This used reliable information and facts to make finding facts about this siren easier.
Info:
Poster: https://wiki.airraidsirens.net/B%26M
Extra facts: https://www.airraidsirens.net/forums/vi ... hp?t=24397
(Best recording) the last B&M siren: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A_JN7F6YwJU
Credit to Edaan freeman for the recording.