It makes more sense for the english message to go first then the Spanish because more people understand english then spainsh and in a real emergency, seconrs count, not that it would make a huge difference, this is the way its setup in my middle school, its a 4100es voice evac system, it does an english message which is the 4100es low rise message then the 4100es spanish message which is a high rise message so it does not match. Bilingual systems are kinda cool and rare to find here in the United states, but it seems to be poorly implemented in most cases.
It’s common down here in South Texas. My old high school auditorium uses voice evac and it played a female voice speaking Spanish then English. It was pretty neat to hear.
I was lucky enough to witness a fire alarm at Orlando Airport. They use Edwards G4 LED Strobes marked “ALERT” tied to the buildings every day speakers that play three whoop tones and a bilingual English and Spanish message. As you said, it’s rare to see bilingual systems in the United Statesbut it’s even rarer to see the messages played by Edwards G4 LED alarms.
It is a Evax 100 with Gentex speakers taped at about 2 watts each. A little more money for a system that people can hear and understand but I’m proud of it.
I didn't know that there was a Spanish message for the EVAX! Do you have a higher quality version of this message?
0:24 Magnets Release.
0:25 Alarm Tone Sounds.
0:56 Voice Message.
1:08 Alarm Tone Again
It makes more sense for the english message to go first then the Spanish because more people understand english then spainsh and in a real emergency, seconrs count, not that it would make a huge difference, this is the way its setup in my middle school, its a 4100es voice evac system, it does an english message which is the 4100es low rise message then the 4100es spanish message which is a high rise message so it does not match. Bilingual systems are kinda cool and rare to find here in the United states, but it seems to be poorly implemented in most cases.
Code says the message should be in the language predominantly spoken by the occupants. I put it in Spanish because it’s a Spanish church.
It’s common down here in South Texas. My old high school auditorium uses voice evac and it played a female voice speaking Spanish then English. It was pretty neat to hear.
I was lucky enough to witness a fire alarm at Orlando Airport. They use Edwards G4 LED Strobes marked “ALERT” tied to the buildings every day speakers that play three whoop tones and a bilingual English and Spanish message. As you said, it’s rare to see bilingual systems in the United Statesbut it’s even rarer to see the messages played by Edwards G4 LED alarms.
Trust what a tech does. You're an enthusiast.
That's some good quality on those messages on the EVAX. It must be because it's an evax 100. I've only heard poor quality from evax amps until now.
It is a Evax 100 with Gentex speakers taped at about 2 watts each. A little more money for a system that people can hear and understand but I’m proud of it.
I think that the default messages are just poor quality. The actual equipment is good.
i really want my hands on that message very nice i love this message type
What kind of alarm system is this like white brand?
I believe its a Gentex system
@Evan Vander Stoep its a potter evax likely with potter rebranded gentex speaker strobes
Silent Knight 6808 FACP Evax 100 voice panel with Gentex notification
What Kind Of Alarm Tone Is That.
@@jacobisworld9516 Code 3 whoop
great system!
This Look Like A Church Building.
What kind of alarm tone is that?
Is this alarm system in a church
balls
What is balls
@@WONKAVATOR nutsack
@@WONKAVATOR that comment was a joke comment, it does appear to be a cruch system which most chrucj systems are voice evac
Balls LOL.
What kind of alarm tone is that.
@enzibear7785 no is that like a Simplex alarm tone sound.
Actually, the EVAX samples the Star Trek "Red Alert" sound.
it looks like a church
Alarm alarm alarm alarm alarm alarm alarm
Gentex Speaker Strobe