Here's my recently acquired Whelen Vortex R4 doing all its tones. Soon Ill be mounting it on a short pole and getting it solar powered and radio activated.
@@SteelCitySirensandTrains Yeah but i'm in The Netherlands. I don't use eBay. So how can i actually get a siren in real life and not online? Since NL Alert will be coming soon and NL will decomission all sirens. I want to know this if it happens so i may get my own siren.
@@WolfieMar My best answer is to pay attention to some EMS dispatches (I think that’s what it is) to see if they are going to remove a siren. If a siren is going to get removed, try asking to see if you could buy it.
What was the purpose of the back "fin?" I once filmed a siren like this one with the fin on the back of it. Could it be helpful for even weight distribution?
Do Whelens emit sound via speakers? I've always been interested, because the design seems compact in a way. Like the radio receiver on the back, with the speakers in the same place.
@@luigikoopa8771 Good to know. I'm not familiar with Whelen sirens, and only guessed at the features since both the Vortex and 4004 have speaker drivers. It must have been Whelen 4004 rotating sirens that Plano, Texas had before replacing them with 2910 sirens. I heard one say, "TORNADO WARNING" at night as frequent lightning lit up the scary looking lumpy clouds. There was a tornado 5 miles away along U.S. Highway 75, but not one in my immediately area.
I don’t have an answer to that but I don’t think it hurts anything. I didn’t mean to switch tones in the middle of this, turned it past cancel on accident
0:20 (fast wail) is what the one out by my house sounds like during a tornado warning and 0:30 (attack/wail-idk they sound the same) is what it sounds like during the weekly test. Guess it’s a way to distinguish between the two so they don’t have to announce the test before it starts. Fast wail is definitely more eerie sounding during a storm. The thing is within walking distance of my house so if I’m not tracking the time for the test it will catch me off guard when it kicks up cuz it’s so dang loud haha. There are a few houses in my neighborhood that have it practically in their backyard. Probably rarely anyone home during the weekly tests since those happen around noon but when it goes off during a warning especially at night…yeesh.
In the Vortex and WPS series sirens, each siren speaker (at each narrow end of the four small horns that end in the large horn) gets its own amplifier. This allows the amplifier to test each speaker cell independently and sense a fault, such as a damaged or blown speaker.
Vortex: Shut up EOWS 612 EOWS: COLLECTOR Rings 1000000x times Vortex: SHUT THE *bleep* UP *Throws EOWS 612 at space through the universe* EOWS 612: *distorted*
I am friends with my County's EMA Director and a person rammed Into a 3016 pole and broke the siren and the siren fell off the rotator somehow and smashed the car. I tried to acquire the siren to see if I could fix it. Sadly I was told he couldn't give it to me, and btw, I can't tell you why it's a no, because the reason why is classified. Don't ask why I got a no.
@@rainyrec You Know How To Maintain A 3016? I Might Be Getting One. It's Standing On A Pole By A New 2908. The 3016 Should Have Been taken down 4 years ago. I'll have to ask EM about it. I'm Hoping That I'll get it!
It does not have because all WHELEN 3016s, 4004s, R3 & R4s, do not have collector rings because the wires are very fragile, if they rotate 360 degrees the wire will snap and cause serious damage to the siren. the collector rings can be a bad idea for WHELEN sirens because very easily the CRs (collector rings) will get dirty and are expensive to clean.