Well, it certainly has the sound that gets my heart pumping and adrenaline going. Granted, I'm sensitive to loud noises, and thus sirens, along with tornadoes, was my fear in childhood. Still, very great one of a kind siren! It has the "Get to shelter NOW" sound.
its Really Cool to see a Shop Made Siren....id Love to see the Chopper on This one..and All of the Insides,especially the Construction Process. The Tone is Nice too...that Fast Wind Up Does Sound Like a Hurricane!
its pretty big. This siren was not manufactured by any big company. If you read the description, you'll see it says its a shop made siren. So its one of a kind.
The high pitched siren almost sounds as though they took a fire truck siren, put a large, 240 volt motor on it, and stuck it in a huge funnel. As for the low pitch siren, either it is a two-tone with some weird interval that only the overtones are being heard, or it only has 3 or 4 ports like those old Elektror sirens from prewar Germany.
Yes, it is mainly for severe weather, like most outdoor sirens. I'm guessing due to a smaller, less massive rotor, it has a quick wind up, but the inertia causes the slow wind-down. They wanted a dual tone sound, so they used two-single tone sirens. I dont have dimensions, but one can guesstimate by the location on the building. Thanks to BellyJae, and most questions can be answered in the description. Hope I answered.
Is that siren still there, if not they should have replaced it with the thunderbolt that use to be on top of jcpenny in northgate mall before they tore that building down for a new movie theater that they never started on.
Thunderbolts have very tiny choppers behind their horns, but there is a blower that helps the siren bring out the sound more... Also note the pipe behind the weird one on the building... I mean, it's either a piping for the wires or where the air goes through.
I've got to say it's got such a unique sound to it...should be put to mass production against the electronic sirens (which I am not crazy about at all)
That siren is no longer around. The guys at that shop built it as a project and then got it connected to Hamilton County's system. Not sure who has it now.
+Elliott Maines I'd like to see the low-tone siren without the metal box. Never heard anything like it. Almost sounds like an old Elektror siren from Germany with 4 ports. I hope you do find out who has these sirens and they let you take photos or video for youtube incase some "siren fans" are somewhat curious.
The only person that I believe would know is Clayton Werden of Werden siren. He didn't build it, but he originally connected it to the county system. He is a member on the Airraidsirens website. Otherwise, I'll ask when I see him next.
I never knew about any STH-10s in Hamilton County. I know you also posted a photo of either a 2T22 or a 3T22 in Forest Park. Something tells me it was removed.
How could that heavy buzz be the siren next to this one, when the wind-up is the same crazy-fast speed (as I couldn't imagine more than one brand of non-consumer mechanical siren having that fast a wind-up)? Yeah, I'll go check out that video from Archon, if ya show me where it is. Where is it?
no, probably not fully confirmed, but judging by its sound, it sounds 14 port running on a "standard" 60hz motor speed (approx 3450 - 3600 rpm or something like that). Reminds me of how people used to think high-tone Ericks were 15 port, yet they sounded like any other siren on 14 ports running that same motor speed range
Is there any particular reason for having these two sirens on the same building? Don't get me wrong, they sound cool together, I'm just wondering what they're used for.
That's a lame-crazy siren! I've never heard a mechanical one wind-up so fast! It doesn't sound quite right when it's like that. How can it wind up that stinkin' fast, anyway? I wonder what give it that heavy buzz sound that ya don't hear from too many sirens. Hmm... Yeah, that's a weird one, all right. But it doesn't have a chilling scream of danger that some are really good at having.
Sounds like a HOR siren with hemroids
HemoHORoids
It honestly sounds more like a hor single sirex
H.O.R super H-P
1:40 low tone siren
The lower tone one sounds like a buzz saw these probably sounded freaking epic too bad they got scrapped. IT WAS FEATURED ON THE SIREN BOARD
we need to hook up a thunderbolt blower to that!!
Well, it certainly has the sound that gets my heart pumping and adrenaline going. Granted, I'm sensitive to loud noises, and thus sirens, along with tornadoes, was my fear in childhood. Still, very great one of a kind siren! It has the "Get to shelter NOW" sound.
Wow never heard or seen a siren like that!
Fastest wind up award goes to! ^
Chris Kush faster than a Aca hurricane
and not the hurricane
its Really Cool to see a Shop Made Siren....id Love to see the Chopper on This one..and All of the Insides,especially the Construction Process.
The Tone is Nice too...that Fast Wind Up Does Sound Like a Hurricane!
THE BOX IS THE LOW TONNED SIREN AND THE RIGHT IS THE HIGH TONNED SIREN
its pretty big. This siren was not manufactured by any big company. If you read the description, you'll see it says its a shop made siren. So its one of a kind.
The high pitched siren almost sounds as though they took a fire truck siren, put a large, 240 volt motor on it, and stuck it in a huge funnel. As for the low pitch siren, either it is a two-tone with some weird interval that only the overtones are being heard, or it only has 3 or 4 ports like those old Elektror sirens from prewar Germany.
5/16 port dual tone and 2 siren runned by air and motor
tHAT IS a different sound for sirens.i love the coast on the high pitched siren
A siren with a "sub-woofer siren" :P
Yes, it is mainly for severe weather, like most outdoor sirens. I'm guessing due to a smaller, less massive rotor, it has a quick wind up, but the inertia causes the slow wind-down. They wanted a dual tone sound, so they used two-single tone sirens. I dont have dimensions, but one can guesstimate by the location on the building. Thanks to BellyJae, and most questions can be answered in the description. Hope I answered.
What's the location of this siren. I've been trying to find it.
@@ACAFanAdventures It's been gone for some years now, but it was at the corner of Hughes and Struble Roads near Rumpke.
the fast wind up sounds like the ACA hurricane, the low one had a frequency modulation-like effect maybe because it is in a metal box?
Is that siren still there, if not they should have replaced it with the thunderbolt that use to be on top of jcpenny in northgate mall before they tore that building down for a new movie theater that they never started on.
Still wonder what the insides look like
It has no moving parts.
It's pneumatic.
Edaan Friedman Then how does it have a wind up and down just like an electromechanical siren
The more air you give it, the higher the pitch.
Edaan Friedman You can hear it's clearly mechanical
Thunderbolts have very tiny choppers behind their horns, but there is a blower that helps the siren bring out the sound more... Also note the pipe behind the weird one on the building... I mean, it's either a piping for the wires or where the air goes through.
I've got to say it's got such a unique sound to it...should be put to mass production against the electronic sirens (which I am not crazy about at all)
You still exist in 2023?
@@brandonmiller4672Nope, last upload 10 years ago.
No, they are one of a kind. The guys at the shop built it for fun basically.
They should we make the siren and put it on a display for 2022
Where is this located in Colerain Ohio?
I found the building, but the sirens are gone
You down year to 2008
soud like a fire truck and a alien siren
It sounds like they stuck a 12 port rotor in a 10 port stator and the other way around
It’s unique and very interesting and inexpensive.
I named the sirens ying n yang
Which one is who?
Yeah, I know. I don't think there even are any 2001-130s in the county. The only STH-10 I'm aware of in Hamilton County is in Sharonville.
Sound like a fire truck siren
Yes...been busy lately, but I may record an STH-10 closeby my work in Sharonville come May.
Sounds like that sirex in Toledo except it sounds more like a tablesaw
That is a weird looking siren
0:19
Not really, but can ask my friend who tied them into the county system. Will reply when I know.
That siren is no longer around. The guys at that shop built it as a project and then got it connected to Hamilton County's system. Not sure who has it now.
+Elliott Maines I'd like to see the low-tone siren without the metal box. Never heard anything like it. Almost sounds like an old Elektror siren from Germany with 4 ports. I hope you do find out who has these sirens and they let you take photos or video for youtube incase some "siren fans" are somewhat curious.
The only person that I believe would know is Clayton Werden of Werden siren. He didn't build it, but he originally connected it to the county system. He is a member on the Airraidsirens website. Otherwise, I'll ask when I see him next.
what building is this located on? I searched "Messner Bros Machine Shop" on google earth and nothing came up. :(
It's no longer up
That poor siren is gone now but the building is on Hughes road. It’s a white building
I never knew about any STH-10s in Hamilton County. I know you also posted a photo of either a 2T22 or a 3T22 in Forest Park. Something tells me it was removed.
Looks like those were removed sometime between 2014 and 2016.
So these aren't Federal Signals, American Signals, or Sentrys? There's a website that gives major cities and their siren companies.
How could that heavy buzz be the siren next to this one, when the wind-up is the same crazy-fast speed (as I couldn't imagine more than one brand of non-consumer mechanical siren having that fast a wind-up)?
Yeah, I'll go check out that video from Archon, if ya show me where it is. Where is it?
Why is it low
How often is it tested?
It’s not here anymore
Keep in mind I did ask this 6 years ago. I am aware that they were removed.
@@RaisedLetter where did the siren go
@@dank980 to a scrapper I suppose. I don't know if they ever got saved.
Still a shame that these are probably scrapped. Probably the weirdest sirens in the U.S. Not to mention the cursed ports of 5 and 14
so the high pitch one was confirmed to be 14 port?
no, probably not fully confirmed, but judging by its sound, it sounds 14 port running on a "standard" 60hz motor speed (approx 3450 - 3600 rpm or something like that). Reminds me of how people used to think high-tone Ericks were 15 port, yet they sounded like any other siren on 14 ports running that same motor speed range
@@wigwagstudios2474 ah okay
I think thats right, from what I could tell.
Yeah, at the corner of Struble...Rumpke acquired the building.
how big is that siren
Look when the camera pans left on the apex of the roof. It's a faded yellow.
IDK what siren type
Is this the high pitched one?
Yes
what kind of siren????
Is there any particular reason for having these two sirens on the same building? Don't get me wrong, they sound cool together, I'm just wondering what they're used for.
One is probably a backup incase one of them have power failure
i believe they did it simply for the dual-tone sound
its a MessnerBros Siren
update the sirens are removed and left behind and moved some were in canada
“Some”? What do you mean “some”? There’s only 2 ever produced
Two things. Didn't you post two photos of the high pitched one on the siren archive? When are you gonna film another siren?
Should put it up higher, would sound better than laying on the roof?
I here FIDGETS IN THOSE DANM THINGS LOL!!
0:20 1:14
Wow
i've seen this before, well this siren anyway, I've always wanted to hear how it sounded. I live not far from it :)
This siren is gone now
@@414Citrus WHO GIVES A SHIT??
R.i.p, i really wanted to see it
@@Thunderbolt_7026 Dude the fuck is wrong with your problem?
Where the high tone siren?
...right there
what siren is this???
Seamus Greene it’s a homemade siren
@@alexmcface no
Yes it it
@@alexmcface no you dumbass
Yes it is,don’t you have a brain you big fat kiddie
sounds like my neigbor's wood cutter thinger
@Tabby266 It was on Wikipedia but its gone now
What metal box?
4 port chopper inside
Do you know anything about the other siren?
Yes. One is 14 OR 16 port, and the low tone is covered in a metal box. And it’s 5 port.
A box siren and a horn
Were is the location of these sirens?
Long gone now, but was at Struble and Hughes Road in Colerain, OH
Ok 👍
Ying n yang
The scrapyard
What siren is this called
It doesn't have an official name, beyond being a single unit built by the shop in the description.
Ying n yang
What port ratios were these? I assume the use air.
5 and 14 supposedly
The wind up is fast, so I’m guessing this is probably an aca hurricane
No
why not make it dual tone instead of having 2 sirens
Do you keep trying to convince people that you live in the Cincinnati area? According to your buddy Jpressman8, you live in Cleveland.
thats wierd sounding
No, it was a SD-10.
Loud
look like a federal signal 500 from Los Angeles
not really
@@pennsy77 w h a t a r e y o u d o i n g h e r e
Timmy73 hamco siren lol
it is
What is this?
Read comment below
@@sirenzrok It’s a Colerain Siren. I just learned about them yesterday.
It sounds a bit like an ACA Hurricane.
It's gone
sean juth OOF No
@@johnang700 it's gone.
That's a lame-crazy siren! I've never heard a mechanical one wind-up so fast! It doesn't sound quite right when it's like that. How can it wind up that stinkin' fast, anyway?
I wonder what give it that heavy buzz sound that ya don't hear from too many sirens. Hmm... Yeah, that's a weird one, all right. But it doesn't have a chilling scream of danger that some are really good at having.
its the low-tone siren
WHAT THE ACTUAL HELL IS THIS ABOMINATION???
Too damn loud to be that close to the ground.
10 year old Siren video.
No what
lol
Weak
1:40
it is
It’s gone