The guy says at 1:34 that they painted it. Judging by the crappy spray job they did and all the stuff they missed, it was just a normal gray RM 130 when they got it.
That kind of siren isn't even 30 years old yet. It can't be any older then 1989. Appearntly these sirens quit in 1998 when ASC changed into the Tempest line.
When using the 20 amp DC power supply, perhaps a proper start/run capacitor hooked up to it will get it moving. After all, that what their used for. You should let the older guy explain everything with out you taking over the show. I would think that it already has a start/run cap in circuit, but I don't know that because you never let the older guy explain everything about it. If you're a so called "Geek", then you should have explained the whole running circuit, including the caps if used with or with out, and why with or with out. Some DC motors need start and or run caps, some don't. Explain everything the hows and whys, including the Voltage, micro farad values, how and why, faze delay, power factor correction and perhaps the duty cycle on run caps and a little explanation on RMS and Peak to Peak voltage. Something for the kids and green horns to learn about too. And let the older guy talk and demonstrate things too.
Being a child of the cold war, these sirens are real familiar to me. They represented the spectre of nuclear war to us and were no laughing matter. Running at full power and speed it would produce sound levels that would certainly deafen you if you stood that close to it in operation. I lived a city block from one many years ago and when it was tested all other sound vanished in the wail of the siren. The one you have appears to be one of the sirens made by Allied Switch and Signal or Bendix Corp, between 1955 and 1965, given the fiberglass horn and motor cover. Those made earlier were all steel or steel and aluminum. Incidently the part located inside the horm is the "Sound Projector" assembly.
I hated the that skinny dude. He doesn't allow his colleague to talk or do anything.. Man u should be a professional and take communication skills course before u do anything.
Yeah, the old guy was actually trying to explain and discover how the thing worked in detail and the skinny guy just hooks the thing up and fires it. Not only was that a big safety risk it was also very dickish
That skinny dude is Chris Boden he is a badger he thinks he knows everything much better and he's wants to make that clear in a nasty way. Without him I had already been subscribed to this channel. He also will endure no competition on youtube. so he has once said nasty things about PhotonicInduction.
Yes, when the man started to explain what he was reading on the nameplate ( 15:28 ), he just goes ahead and plugs in the siren. Out of respect, you should not do that. I hate to criticize, but I don't care how little information that other man knew on sirens, he should have heard him out, not turn on the siren whilst he is talking.
My grandson is OBSESSED with Tornado SIRENS!! Not the tornadoes as he is only 5 but loves the sirens (I know, lucky me,) and we watch any kind of video the has a tornado siren in it! He wants to be a Storm Chaser when he grows up so who knows ,maybe he will? Anyways thanks again for sharing your videos :)
Oh man, I just cannot watch you put your hands into that impeller while the battery is still connected. That is BAD BAD BAD. Don't do that!! What if that button box fell over and that momentary switch closed for just a split second? A DC motor will take your hand off in that tiny period of time.
Hey guys the Air is drawn into the centrifugal fan in the centre via the outside ring and the exhaust and siren sound is concentrated by the conical flutes into the pie grid in the centre. There will be some sound emanating back out the Air due to the pressure pulses created internally but not much. anyone that argue's against that has no idea of siren and speaker theory. . So to recap Air is drawn in via the outer ring and sound projected out through the triangular pie grid in the centre.
This is too cool. I have a few warning sirens myself and they are a lot of fun to mess around with. Just recently I did a complete overhaul of a Thunderbolt siren - you guys should definitely see about acquiring one! Ask Jeff at WSS, I talked to him recently and he still has a ton of Thunderbolts sitting around. You guys would have a lot of fun with it, especially since they run on AC power. Great video, keep up the good work!
You know it is very difficult to understand people when others talk over them. When Paul mentioned what he is looking for "The chrysler victory....", Chris proceeded to speak over him and we can't understand what you are looking for. This happens many times on talk shows especially on TH-cam, and its very annoying.
Bug Grinder... Sirens of this type commonly operate with a 240v-440v 3 phase ac motor which allows for slow starting torque and high speed eventually, much more reliable than DC. And, Chris needs a corrective interview with the safety supervisor.
@leeofbacup he he he, yeah. We have a new production crew and they're all in training. Though if you want to donate your services to help us make a real intro we'd certainly appreciate the help! :)
@danz409 We've already left Kalamazoo. The taxes were simply unbearable. We're working on locating and securing a new facility somewhere in the SW Michigan area.
They use these types of sirens as tornado warning devices in Texas. I was in Amarillo once when one went off across the street. It was so loud I could hardly think straight....
This is a Nice Siren.....Never seen a RM-130 Before....but the Design looks like a Transition Between the Past Penetrator P-10/P-15 and the Modern T-128
The power of these comes not in how many dB, but in how far those dB reach out. A firecracker going off may be 140 dB, but at 10 feet away it's just a loud pop because it's only a small amount of air. So this may not be as loud as you might think, even though it sounds loud from far away.
The horns aren't shaped very well on this particular siren. All the sides are basically flat at the business end, which reduces the overall power of the noise. Horns with the flared ends will transfer more power into the open air, and will be audible much farther away. The Chrysler Victory siren horns are flared, which helps propel the siren's sound up to 25 miles away. Another guy built himself an oversized air horn with a proper flare, and it was clearly audible 2.5 miles away, and would probably have stretched to 4 or 5 miles pretty easily.
@ilikepie123rs actually guys this is an ACA(alerting communicators of america)(right before they changed names to ASC[American signal Corp]) PN20 or RM-130.
Nice upload. I was cringing at the thought of the power switching on at around the 8 minute mark when he shoves his whole hand in the rotor. Even the other dude was cringing.
yall should really get two ratchets next time, ya know what im sayin? You guys have a very tense relationship and I love seeing you actually, honestly butting heads and genuinely not liking each other very much lol. The vibe really reminds me of Jamie and Adam on mythbusters. It is entertaining in the sense that you guys very clearly have a tumultuous relationship at best, but it also does really borderline being too real and tense in a way as well lol makes for an interesting convo for sure
Nice RM 130! You need to get a Thunderbolt 1003 By Federal Signal !!! DO NOT EVER wind it up with your hand you can chop your hand off, Not Safe! Those other rings are for the heating pads to melt snow. Nice Video. I'm a Air raid siren Geek!!!
Oh the current is so high because there are 4 windings as field coils and then 16 or so connected to the commutator and the brushes. Depending on the 24 V DC starter motor used you could be possibly pulling 80 to 120 Amps or more.
Good luck with the Chrysler air raid siren. Only one, maybe two are still in running condition. The rest were literally left on their placements to rust away. That said, even if you could get one in moderate body condition, a lot of them have had the engines removed. If would probably be easier to build your own from the manufacturing specs.
But yeah, this one is still pretty big, and obviously plenty capable. But I'm baffled as to why a chopper only that size, whose motor doesn't look really much bigger than maybe a clothes washer motor (or the size of motor on a motorized excercise bike like an Exercycle brand) would need so many amps! Anyway, this was really cool, guys! I've always wanted to see the chopper in one of these!
There was a serene on the telephone pole right in front of my house growing up. It got tested every other weekend. That's what you get when you grow up in a military town during the cold war.
Given the casual attitude toward safety displayed in this video, I would not at all be surprised if that skinny dude has killed or maimed someone else or himself by now.
There's a Chrysler siren on top of a building in Kansas City it's disconnected but I heard that the power is still connected it just won't sound off during a test of the city but the problem is that it's a three phase power
Hilarious.... Paul has more stuff attached to his waist line then a construction worker and won't let Chris power the unit back up as he tries to read a date, and spits out the gear reduction. Great team work fellas.
Ha, "giant"? Now that I've seen the chopper on that, and when I compare that to even just a Federal Signal 3/5/7 or STH-10/2T22/3T22, I can see that even those are a good bit bigger! I didn't realize that before. I wonder why those don't seem to have as often been classified as air-raid worthy. (Cont.)
dont you guys have a good size welder? i've started a car on a large homemade welder supply (when i say large it was 1/3 the size of the supply you had but i think it would be heaver)
I know this has been up for awhile, but .... You said "The chopper outputs through these channels....". When you got to the impeller, well, I would think that the air being 'pumped' out, comes IN through the the sides and the 'gap' discussed at 9 minuets into the video. IMHO :-D
Skip ahead to 15:58 to actually hear the siren....................
thanks dudes
"The Little Red Forklift That Died." That's a great title for an illustrated children's book
Ha
Hahahahaha!!!!!!!!!!!
This ACA PN-20/RM-130 is believed to be from Eden Prarie MN, a Federal Signal 2001-SRNB now stands in its place.
yup
Oh, well that explains the red.
It could just be the poor camera quality, but i think the red on Eden Prarie sirens were a bit darker.
The guy says at 1:34 that they painted it. Judging by the crappy spray job they did and all the stuff they missed, it was just a normal gray RM 130 when they got it.
As a child in the 60’s I remember the civil defense siren at the end of the street. It took a good five minutes to wind down after it was tested.
do you know if it was single or dual tone? if it was single tone i bet it was a federal signal sth/stl10
way to aim it at the guy who doesn't have ear protection.
Thank you Karen.
@@TempoDrift1480 👁👄👁 YaAaAAAaaSS
Oh don't worry, he's got his pinkies.
@@BicycleFunk Yeah, at least he plugged his ears!
That kind of siren isn't even 30 years old yet. It can't be any older then 1989. Appearntly these sirens quit in 1998 when ASC changed into the Tempest line.
When using the 20 amp DC power supply, perhaps a proper start/run capacitor hooked up to it will get it moving. After all, that what their used for. You should let the older guy explain everything with out you taking over the show. I would think that it already has a start/run cap in circuit, but I don't know that because you never let the older guy explain everything about it. If you're a so called "Geek", then you should have explained the whole running circuit, including the caps if used with or with out, and why with or with out.
Some DC motors need start and or run caps, some don't. Explain everything the hows and whys, including the Voltage, micro farad values, how and why, faze delay, power factor correction and perhaps the duty cycle on run caps and a little explanation on RMS and Peak to Peak voltage. Something for the kids and green horns to learn about too. And let the older guy talk and demonstrate things too.
That siren is a ASC RM-130 or a PN-20 and that logo is the ASC/ACA logo and it was made in Milwaukee WI around the1990s
I think it’s a pn20 because you can see the ACA sticker just slightly.
Being a child of the cold war, these sirens are real familiar to me. They represented the spectre of nuclear war to us and were no laughing matter. Running at full power and speed it would produce sound levels that would certainly deafen you if you stood that close to it in operation. I lived a city block from one many years ago and when it was tested all other sound vanished in the wail of the siren. The one you have appears to be one of the sirens made by Allied Switch and Signal or Bendix Corp, between 1955 and 1965, given the fiberglass horn and motor cover. Those made earlier were all steel or steel and aluminum. Incidently the part located inside the horm is the "Sound Projector" assembly.
LuxDude2003 Vacuums it possibly is an aca pn20
thanks for the anecdote!
*mailman walks up*
*siren goes off*
*mailmans eardrums liquify*
How about annoying sales/business men or Jehovah witnesses pestering you at 7am.
+Brendan Matelan yeah 😂
@@brendanmatelan2129 even worse.. telemarketers calling you at all hours of the day and even night.
Mmmm...ear juice-
I hated the that skinny dude. He doesn't allow his colleague to talk or do anything.. Man u should be a professional and take communication skills course before u do anything.
I know right! He was being a complete dickhead. I feel bad for the old guy, probably has to deal with his shit 24/7.
Yeah, the old guy was actually trying to explain and discover how the thing worked in detail and the skinny guy just hooks the thing up and fires it. Not only was that a big safety risk it was also very dickish
That skinny dude is Chris Boden he is a badger he thinks he knows everything much better and he's wants to make that clear in a nasty way. Without him I had already been subscribed to this channel.
He also will endure no competition on youtube. so he has once said nasty things about PhotonicInduction.
yech, 2010 youtube shows, I'm gonna watch Photonicinduction.
Yes, when the man started to explain what he was reading on the nameplate ( 15:28 ), he just goes ahead and plugs in the siren. Out of respect, you should not do that. I hate to criticize, but I don't care how little information that other man knew on sirens, he should have heard him out, not turn on the siren whilst he is talking.
loll, Really guys, the tension between you two is way too obvious! Take it easyyyy
This is an ACA P-20. Our town used to have one, but it was replaced by a Whelen Vortex R4 because the chopper broke in it.
The skinny guy needs some milk.
Or stop using meth LOL 😆
Thanks for the milk 😊😘
You have an ACA PN-20, from the mid-late 1980's.
90s
Sorry if I'm late but it is a rm 130 I think
It red
@@MaxtheSirenHunter It's a PN-20.
They are the same so it’s either a ASC RM-130 or a ACA PN-20
My grandson is OBSESSED with Tornado SIRENS!! Not the tornadoes as he is only 5 but loves the sirens (I know, lucky me,) and we watch any kind of video the has a tornado siren in it! He wants to be a Storm Chaser when he grows up so who knows ,maybe he will? Anyways thanks again for sharing your videos :)
Out of all the siren vids i've seen on youtube, you guys are the only ones that actually seem to know what you're talking about! Love the vid!
Oh man, I just cannot watch you put your hands into that impeller while the battery is still connected. That is BAD BAD BAD. Don't do that!! What if that button box fell over and that momentary switch closed for just a split second? A DC motor will take your hand off in that tiny period of time.
+hugeshows Precisely what I thought the whole time!
hugeshows it’s at most just break his finger all of the blades are dull
There is a very very small potential of that happening
Paul is just in his own little world isn't he? I am surprised he didn't catch his fingers.
I got my fingers bit by a model 5 once. Not fun.
Hey guys the Air is drawn into the centrifugal fan in the centre via the outside ring and the exhaust and siren sound is concentrated by the conical flutes into the pie grid in the centre. There will be some sound emanating back out the Air due to the pressure pulses created internally but not much. anyone that argue's against that has no idea of siren and speaker theory. . So to recap Air is drawn in via the outer ring and sound projected out through the triangular pie grid in the centre.
This is too cool. I have a few warning sirens myself and they are a lot of fun to mess around with. Just recently I did a complete overhaul of a Thunderbolt siren - you guys should definitely see about acquiring one! Ask Jeff at WSS, I talked to him recently and he still has a ton of Thunderbolts sitting around. You guys would have a lot of fun with it, especially since they run on AC power.
Great video, keep up the good work!
How to loose a hand 101! This is a great video to demonstrate the need for lock out protection!
You know it is very difficult to understand people when others talk over them. When Paul mentioned what he is looking for "The chrysler victory....", Chris proceeded
to speak over him and we can't understand what you are looking for. This happens many times on talk shows especially on TH-cam, and its very annoying.
Nice video guys. Thanks for sharing it.
All the best,
Tom
The siren is made by ACA, or Allerting Communications of America.
Lily Dane Yep, an ACA PN-20 at that
Yep.
Lily Dane it was later by asc and it was called the RM-130
Yea, I know that. The RM series was later discontinued and was replaced by the Tempest series.
@JustInn014 We painted it back in 2004. It was originally grey.
the air intake creates the deep hollow sound and the exhaust creates that high pitch scream...
Glad to see someone with a passion for these. Subbed
Bug Grinder...
Sirens of this type commonly operate with a 240v-440v 3 phase ac motor which allows for slow starting torque and high speed eventually, much more reliable than DC. And, Chris needs a corrective interview with the safety supervisor.
RM-127. I believe made by American Signal Corporation (formerly ACA) it produces 127 db at 100 feet
Just to let you guys know, this siren is an ACA (Allerting Communications of America) PN-20 (Pentrator 20 horse power).
@leeofbacup he he he, yeah. We have a new production crew and they're all in training. Though if you want to donate your services to help us make a real intro we'd certainly appreciate the help! :)
I prefer the dual note ones.
At least twice as good.
Man I haven't seen that Morrison Forklift logo in years. I used to do side work for them in Michigan a while ago.
@danz409 We've already left Kalamazoo. The taxes were simply unbearable. We're working on locating and securing a new facility somewhere in the SW Michigan area.
Horn mounted. Power on.
It's what we were expecting.
@pullingfabio It's not dust, it's the original grey paint. ;)
You could probably make one with a table-top router motor. 😁🤪 I'd love a Federal Thunderbolt 1000!
They use these types of sirens as tornado warning devices in Texas. I was in Amarillo once when one went off across the street. It was so loud I could hardly think straight....
This is a Nice Siren.....Never seen a RM-130 Before....but the Design looks like a Transition Between the Past Penetrator P-10/P-15 and the Modern T-128
The power of these comes not in how many dB, but in how far those dB reach out. A firecracker going off may be 140 dB, but at 10 feet away it's just a loud pop because it's only a small amount of air. So this may not be as loud as you might think, even though it sounds loud from far away.
The horns aren't shaped very well on this particular siren. All the sides are basically flat at the business end, which reduces the overall power of the noise. Horns with the flared ends will transfer more power into the open air, and will be audible much farther away. The Chrysler Victory siren horns are flared, which helps propel the siren's sound up to 25 miles away. Another guy built himself an oversized air horn with a proper flare, and it was clearly audible 2.5 miles away, and would probably have stretched to 4 or 5 miles pretty easily.
@ilikepie123rs actually guys this is an ACA(alerting communicators of america)(right before they changed names to ASC[American signal Corp]) PN20 or RM-130.
this siren is a model American Signal RM-130
Nice upload. I was cringing at the thought of the power switching on at around the 8 minute mark when he shoves his whole hand in the rotor. Even the other dude was cringing.
yall should really get two ratchets next time, ya know what im sayin? You guys have a very tense relationship and I love seeing you actually, honestly butting heads and genuinely not liking each other very much lol. The vibe really reminds me of Jamie and Adam on mythbusters. It is entertaining in the sense that you guys very clearly have a tumultuous relationship at best, but it also does really borderline being too real and tense in a way as well lol makes for an interesting convo for sure
Nice RM 130! You need to get a Thunderbolt 1003 By Federal Signal !!!
DO NOT EVER wind it up with your hand you can chop your hand off, Not Safe!
Those other rings are for the heating pads to melt snow.
Nice Video.
I'm a Air raid siren Geek!!!
Hello, I am a siren enthusiast and that is a ASC RM-130 siren
The rotation sign just means which way it turns when the motor is fired up,
but without the chain you can rotate it anyway.
Oh the current is so high because there are 4 windings as field coils and then 16 or so connected to the commutator and the brushes.
Depending on the 24 V DC starter motor used you could be possibly pulling 80 to 120 Amps or more.
cool and very interesting video!
Don't put your fingers in a siren!
The 550-AT siren is the siren that has 2 horns in each side. like in Calhan Colorado. It is on TH-cam, just type in Calhan Siren.
Good luck with the Chrysler air raid siren. Only one, maybe two are still in running condition. The rest were literally left on their placements to rust away. That said, even if you could get one in moderate body condition, a lot of them have had the engines removed. If would probably be easier to build your own from the manufacturing specs.
I remember this video from that long ago. Can’t believe it has been that long already.
There's a Chrysler siren on eBay right now, October 2017.
But yeah, this one is still pretty big, and obviously plenty capable. But I'm baffled as to why a chopper only that size, whose motor doesn't look really much bigger than maybe a clothes washer motor (or the size of motor on a motorized excercise bike like an Exercycle brand) would need so many amps!
Anyway, this was really cool, guys! I've always wanted to see the chopper in one of these!
awe, I wanted to hear it assembled too to see if there is any difference in sound.
It's an ACA PN-20!
This is like the most bone-chilling noise.
Elizabetha Dragomir
that looks absolutely like a ACTUAL SIREN!
KcsGreyGhost cause it is. It’s called a ACA RM-130 or also known as a ACA PN-20
What about that literal car-sized Chrysler siren? That was cool.
+GamerhackTV Hmmmm...Chrysler V8+ siren = loud siren.
Jumbo Jet engine + siren = ?
David Vermillion OMG. GO TO BOEING
There was a serene on the telephone pole right in front of my house growing up. It got tested every other weekend. That's what you get when you grow up in a military town during the cold war.
Lived in Columbus, Ohio with its Thunderbolts and STL-10s. Best. Siren. System. EVER.
you guys should get a thunderbolt siren, that would be a very good siren to demonstrait!
Come to Siren Con!!! 2024! Rhinelander, WI.
this is a very awesome video i always wondered what was inside of these types of sirens, ive seen others before, very awesome
Don’t forget to put on your ear protection when you’re testing the siren
Given the casual attitude toward safety displayed in this video, I would not at all be surprised if that skinny dude has killed or maimed someone else or himself by now.
There's a Chrysler siren on top of a building in Kansas City it's disconnected but I heard that the power is still connected it just won't sound off during a test of the city but the problem is that it's a three phase power
I know where there's a Chrysler Victory Siren. It's not for sale, but come to California and I can introduce you to its owner.
I could never work on sirens I'm too tempted to touch the rotor whilst its spinning.
This is an American Signal Corp. (ASC) RM-130. It was made after 1990.
Hey there's a Chrysler bell on the top of a Self storage building in Kansas city missouri
Seems to be a pn20 due to the swirly cd logo whereas the asc rm130 would have a blue rectangle
This is an ACA PN-20. Probably made late 80s or early 90s.
Guys you do realize that the lower the voltage, the more amps the motor will require? That is why the breaker trips...
if anyone wants to know im pretty sure thats a asc rm-130 and that logo that you see is an asc logo
Hilarious....
Paul has more stuff attached to his waist line then a construction worker and won't let Chris power the unit back up as he tries to read a date, and spits out the gear reduction.
Great team work fellas.
Why hello there, Physics Duck!
OMG even without the horn and at a third of the voltage that thing sounds loud
@HavazikFerric
It's a battery for an industrial electric vehicle.
an ACA PN-20’s chopper has 9 port, while the ASC RM-130 has 10 port.
It looks like you have an ASC RM-130
Finley someone knows what it is!!!
Hay it's a rm 130 . This is nothing special to me because I live in midland mi and the city system contains these and t 128
frotz661 it’s a ACA PN-20
It is just red
It is the siren name like cookies
Awesome video. Please do a Federal thunderbolt!!
You guys are *good*! Thanks for doing the vid!
I just saw something cool.
So I can tell it goes over 120 decibels, or the pain threshold of sound.
The siren is a ASC RM-130. It actually isn't an air raid siren ,it is a tornado siren.
You are so damn right. Especially the AWSOME Chrysler Air Raid Siren...
Power connected, fingers in stator. Of course.
i am was 1 years old when this video came out.
i am now 12
Oh OK, I knew there were still some in place that hadn't been removed but I always wondered if there were still any that were operational.
Ha, "giant"? Now that I've seen the chopper on that, and when I compare that to even just a Federal Signal 3/5/7 or STH-10/2T22/3T22, I can see that even those are a good bit bigger! I didn't realize that before. I wonder why those don't seem to have as often been classified as air-raid worthy.
(Cont.)
Hello Kitty Lover Man! Compare it to a Chrysler Bell Victory Siren
The swirly logo is an allerting communicators of america (ACA) logo
This is true. I know of about 3 that are by my house in LA
dont you guys have a good size welder? i've started a car on a large homemade welder supply (when i say large it was 1/3 the size of the supply you had but i think it would be heaver)
It's like watching my husband and his Dad bicker about random stuff.
holy shit guys, video editing exists for a reason.
Yeah but have you tried a Noctua A12x25?
I know this has been up for awhile, but .... You said "The chopper outputs through these channels....". When you got to the impeller, well, I would think that the air being 'pumped' out, comes IN through the the sides and the 'gap' discussed at 9 minuets into the video. IMHO :-D
No.
This, the noises = My anxiety throught the roof.
Facinating though