Okay. Hi. My name is Jordan Gosselin, and I have a HUGE interest in Fire alarms and Out Door Warning Sirens. Many of the great fire alarm Companys are Simplex Grinnell, Honeywell, witch owns the company Notifier. They make the BG-12 and the BG-12LX pull stations. Here is a picture of the BG-12 pull station
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Notifier BG-12 Pull Station. |
There are many siren company's as well. Some better then others. One that I want to Talk About is ACA or ASC. Those are acronyms for Alerting Communications Of America and American Signal Corporation Back in the early 1980's the company was named Alerting Communications of America. But a while ago, the President sold the company to a new guy who then renamed it to American Signal Corporation. It's is still known as that to this day. They once made the worlds loudest Siren that was currently manufactured. It was the P-50. It looked like this
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Old add picture of the P-50. |
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A yellow painted P-50 that was part of the old siren system in The Colony, Texas. |
ACA Also made other models like the P-50. The little brother to the P-50 was the P-15 and the RM-130. Pictures of them are here.
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A yellow painted ACA P-15. |
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A standard grey painted ACA RM-130. |
Both the RM-130 and the P-15 sirens had motor gear driven rotors, meaning that when the chopper motor starts up, there is a speed reduction gear in the hosing in the back of the horn, witch reduces the speed of the chopper motor to 3 or 2 RPM. This was used for the rotation of the horn, the speed reduction does not affect the speed of the chopper motor, or the sound of the siren.
ACA Also made electronic sirens. This included the Allertronic 6000-R rotating electronic siren.
Some omni directional models were made. Such as this extremely rare Allertronic model, pictured here.
This was an old vintage siren that was installed in the Oakridge National Security Complex in Oakridge TN. This was a very rare ACA model that sadly has been taken down and replaced with new sirens. A video of it sounding is below.
It had a wind up, but no wind down. But the new sirens that came out long after this model had no wind up's, just wind down's. The wind up's were there, except for they were very quiet. The ACA Allertronic 6000-R looked like this.
Like it said in the old P-50 add, the siren was 135 Decibels at 100 feet away. No other siren at that time produced that sound pressure form that far. But in between 1952 and 1957, there was a siren that produced more. It was made my Chrysler and used a Chrysler V8 Hemmi Engine. It was either diesel or gas, I can't remember, and it was rated at 138 Decibels at 100 feet. It could be heard from 4 miles away. They built these during the Cold War Era to warn of incoming enemy attacks. One of them is pictured here
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A yellow Chrysler Air Raid Siren. |