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I have a feeling that there's more damage that we can't see in the picture, like micro cracks in the chopper. With closer examinations, there is a possibility that the chopper assembly is fine enough to be used again. The motor should also be fine, although a new shaft would be necessary. Fixing those horns would be possible, but it would be a nightmare!federal signal 3t22 wrote: ↑Mon May 19, 2025 1:41 amYup. the siren is done unless a siren enthusiast comes to pick it up to restore it.
The Model 2 I own is larger than a lamp, I dunno if that would be a good size
Can you fit STH-10 horns on an STL-10?Greenrid wrote: ↑Mon May 19, 2025 11:39 amI have a feeling that there's more damage that we can't see in the picture, like micro cracks in the chopper. With closer examinations, there is a possibility that the chopper assembly is fine enough to be used again. The motor should also be fine, although a new shaft would be necessary. Fixing those horns would be possible, but it would be a nightmare!federal signal 3t22 wrote: ↑Mon May 19, 2025 1:41 amYup. the siren is done unless a siren enthusiast comes to pick it up to restore it.
With how the motor is bent up relative to the chopper, I'm thinking the whole thing's a mess. I'm expecting rotor and stator damage, and probably stuff bent up or squished, and maybe pulled apart in the motor case. That siren took a pretty violent fall. That's why I think I'd gut the motor case, maybe remove the rotor, kinda put everything back together, and turn it into living room decorGreenrid wrote: ↑Mon May 19, 2025 11:39 amI have a feeling that there's more damage that we can't see in the picture, like micro cracks in the chopper. With closer examinations, there is a possibility that the chopper assembly is fine enough to be used again. The motor should also be fine, although a new shaft would be necessary. Fixing those horns would be possible, but it would be a nightmare!
Yeah, now that you mention it, it looks to me like the part touching the ground completely lost the horns during the fall or winds, so there is a good chance that there is an incredibly big fracture somewhere on the rotor or chopper.HDN wrote: ↑Tue May 20, 2025 12:39 amWith how the motor is bent up relative to the chopper, I'm thinking the whole thing's a mess. I'm expecting rotor and stator damage, and probably stuff bent up or squished, and maybe pulled apart in the motor case. That siren took a pretty violent fall. That's why I think I'd gut the motor case, maybe remove the rotor, kinda put everything back together, and turn it into living room decorGreenrid wrote: ↑Mon May 19, 2025 11:39 amI have a feeling that there's more damage that we can't see in the picture, like micro cracks in the chopper. With closer examinations, there is a possibility that the chopper assembly is fine enough to be used again. The motor should also be fine, although a new shaft would be necessary. Fixing those horns would be possible, but it would be a nightmare!My dad did a similar thing to a damaged switch stand he brought home from when he worked on the railroad. He managed to straighten part of the stand enough that he could mount one of his signal lanterns to the top with a light fixture on top to light up the room.
Another idea: Fix up the horns and cut a clear glass table top to slide over the motor case to rest on the horns. Now you have a coffee table![]()
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