Created by VideoShow:videoshowglobalserver.com/free. If you have epilepsy do not watch, don't pull any alarms unless there's a real fire emergency in the building, I'm not responsible for your actions. Enjoy
For a while now i’ve had in the back of my mind an idea to write down what type of alarm device i think each brand is probably best known for. I think for Wheelock, it might be bells.
@@BlackLightning4547 well i mean the generic types of alarm devices. Strobes, bells, horns, chimes, Etc. Which is best at which? But also it was awesome of you to reply. Keep doing what you do man!
Bro this is insane I have phobia when it komes to fire alarms I will not go into a building when I see I gotta walk pass them unless I’m with people lmao
I hear ya, I used to be afraid of fire alarms back in elementary school due to the noise they produced as well as the fact that they made me jump every time. However, what made me become a hobbyist and overcome that fear, was my middle school's fire alarm system. Firstly, they weren't loud, but the way the alarms flashed, look, and sound, somehow just made me attached, and I've been a collector ever since.
Well if it's professionally installed in a building, then yes as that is tampering. However, if it's yours from your personal collection, doing that will void the UL listing of the device but no big deal
Thank you, glad you enjoyed. Bells aren't exclusive to the USA although uncommon. You'll most likely find systems using fire bells generally outside the US.
Ah, well older systems here are usually set to continuous. However, after 1996(I believe), NFPA mandated that fire alarms need to sound in a Temporal 3 pattern to signify fire evacuation.
Not illegal to my knowledge, especially since this system is categorized as a demonstration system and not a life safety system since the house's smoke alarms are still in place. If you were to remove those smoke alarms and put a commercial fire alarm system in their place, then that system will need to comply with NFPA as well as approved by your local AHJ.