Man, this took me back. My old high school still has a 1990s Notifier system. The majority of the building has the same MASS ADA set to 800hz. A newer addition to the school has a few Spectralert Classics. A separate building next door is also tied into the system and has Spectralert Classics, also on the exterior. The exterior of the main building has old Simplex horns and two Wheelock 7002Ts which could be left over from an even older system that was simply integrated into the Notifier system.
Just like my high school had, even down to the few SpectrAlert Classics. I wish I'd known they were replacing it a year after I graduated because I would have for sure tried to grab everything from the old system
@@joshc7348 sadly yes, white L-Series speaker/strobes that say “alert” and a lot of the places that used to have pull stations now just have switchplate covers
My middle school had the same system, except it was Johnson Controls branded. It was installed in 98, the classrooms had the same exact remotes, during Christmas break in 06-07 they replaced the ones in the classrooms and gym got replaced with Wheelock MTs.
My middle school had this exact system. It was installed around 1995-96 circa. The classrooms had strobes only. The pull stations were made by Johnson controls not notifier. The mass alarms were so unique in design and sound. They always outlived mechanical horns like the 7002T series etc. great reliable NAs.
Right! I was always wondering though, how would one become a Fire Alarm Inspector? Like what are the qualifications/prerequisites? I wouldn’t mind doing this as a job
@@TheJakeman789Blocking fire alarm equipment is a code violation! He can’t go about moving stuff without permission. It’s not his job! He could also seriously injure himself if he moves a cabinet or bookshelf without assistance.