@@North_Jersey_SirensAlthough it is a sterling, someone did found an 10/15 port type B which is known for being decot's trademark port ratio, so you never know, and we don't know a lot of the electric type B's background since they're were made over 100 years ago so their origins and their documents are lost to time, and comparing Tyler shaw's video, they do look very similar by design, but I could wrong though.
It’s a 3T00. Also looks like a sideways sterling model m
It definitely has more of a Carter sound to it without the horns
The Sterling 💀💀
Cool video! interesting how they took the horns off and took the parts of the sterling 🤔 i wonder what the deal is with that ??..
Now that is weird. They took apart alot up there.
Good video.
it sounds the same. Why does it need for horns
0:07 Fedelcode housing part?
Sterling heavily bastared
Sterling : no stator?
What in the fuck is happening in there, de horned 3t22 and what ever in gods name happened to that sterling
No not the sterling with no stator 💀
is that a statorless sterling next to it?
yep, I assume that was their original fire siren
Daym
@@North_Jersey_Sirenslooks nothing like a sterling, mostly look like a federal electric type B
@@VonnaWasser its a sterling, it just has a bunch of parts removed off it. Plus its 8/16 and the B never came in that ratio
@@North_Jersey_SirensAlthough it is a sterling, someone did found an 10/15 port type B which is known for being decot's trademark port ratio, so you never know, and we don't know a lot of the electric type B's background since they're were made over 100 years ago so their origins and their documents are lost to time, and comparing Tyler shaw's video, they do look very similar by design, but I could wrong though.