What is louder (dB rating)? A Chrysler-Bell air raid siren or the German Pintsch Bamag HLS warning siren? Links to the actual specs would also be great...
Thanks,
Big Mike
BIGMIKE SOCAL wrote:What is louder (dB rating)? A Chrysler-Bell air raid siren or the German Pintsch Bamag HLS warning siren? Links to the actual specs would also be great...
Thanks,
Big Mike
What about the dB rating for the German Pintsch Bamag HLS warning siren?acoustics101 wrote:At 138 dB at 100 feet (30 meters), the 180 HP Chrysler siren was the loudest warning device ever built. Here is the website for it.
http://www.victorysiren.com/x/main.htm
BIGMIKE SOCAL wrote:What is louder (dB rating)? A Chrysler-Bell air raid siren or the German Pintsch Bamag HLS warning siren? Links to the actual specs would also be great...
Thanks,
Big Mike
It's rated at 163-165dB/1m, at 30m the SPL is around 135db - omnidirectionalBIGMIKE SOCAL wrote: What about the dB rating for the German Pintsch Bamag HLS warning siren?
Thanks,
Big Mike
der Papst wrote:It's rated at 163-165dB/1m, at 30m the SPL is around 135db - omnidirectionalBIGMIKE SOCAL wrote: What about the dB rating for the German Pintsch Bamag HLS warning siren?
Thanks,
Big Mike
acoustics101: You compare 4 Chrysler to 1 Pintsch-Bamag, a little bit unfair^^
Although this example is not an HLS siren, it is of a similar issue (not measuring on axis).acoustics101 wrote:Regardless of its actual dB rating, the HLS is the most impressive siren I've heard about outside of the 180 HP Chrysler siren and Bell Labs 95 HP Big Bertha. It is a very powerful siren capable of being heard indoors from great distances. Even 130 dB omni (outside of vertically stacked arrays) takes more total acoustical power output than a unidirectional source, such as the Chrysler or Penetrator 50.
A directivity index of 13 dB, as in the Chrysler, takes only 1/20 the acoustical power of a truly omnidirectional source to produce the same SPL on axis. The HLS is not, however, a truly omnidirectional source, due to the size of its horns relative to the wavelength and produces more of a doughnut shaped sound field around it, giving it a directivity index in the range of 3-6 dB.
Some so called omni vertically stacked loudspeaker arrays have directivity indices approaching 20 dB, requiring as little as 1/100 the total acoustical power for a given output! That is how they can give impressive SPLs on as little as 4 kW. There is really not much acoustical power involved, but the doughnut shaped pattern around the unit is squashed rather thin. This gives rise to skip and dead zones. When dealing with physics you can never get something for nothing.
I was disappointed by the video of a unit looking similar to the HLS which indicated a mere 100 dB at a mere 20 meters from such a unit. Either the sound level meter had a bad battery, the meter was defective, or the siren's air supply was low.
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