The sound of doom. As a child of the 70s/80s I grew up knowing full well what these things were for and can well recall as a kid seeing them on poles or atop police stations. Having been in close proximity to a couple running at full pelt in later years I can confirm that they are VERY loud..
made popular in WW2 but spent a far longer period of time on standby all the way up till 1992, all over the uk, controlled by British telecom and could be activated by the police or civil defence, (several thousand at the same time) not easy to ignore..there was an incident in 1986 in Edinburgh where the sirens were accidently activated at 6am one morning leaving the population petrified for several minutes.
@ccoraxfan This siren was deliberately powered up slowly incase it seized up, as it had been stored away unused since decommissioning. In actual fact, it has the most amazing bearings in, and motor wise, is in good shape :).
I used to have three of these, but somebody really must have liked them enough to scale a wall, and take all three to seemingly borrow, long term. As in forever. I never got them back. They also took some telephone signal receivers that were used to receive the alert signals in a cold war. However, having lived near a dockyard as I was growing up, I heard its sirens blaring out every lunch and home time as a signal for the workers, so grew used to them.
The power was increased slowly for the test, and in ordinary circumstances it would have reached full speed quicker, but the wind up sounds really good :-)
I live not 4 miles from Coventry, which was entirely destroyed by the Germans in WW2 with the loss of over 2000 lives. When I hear these Carter sirens, it always sends a shivver down my spine, thinking that all that death and destruction would have been accompanied by the sound of that siren :-( It's such a sad sounding noise and maybe one of the last sounds that so many hundreds of thousands heard.
Hell yeah!! I love that sound, everyone loves that sound, I don't understand why... Cos for a long time it signified death... Maybe all humans are secretly dark and morbid inside? Who cares, sounded sucking sick!
Just subtract 3400 RPM by 20% of 3400 and u get the answer. 10hz difference in AC voltage hertz is 20% RPM difference for 3300-3600 RPM motors. Just luv that sound!
MrBigquads! Thanks for your comments :-). She really is a beauty and has been an absolute joy to restore. She is now fully restored and repainted to her former glory.
I'm now restoring my 3rd Castle Castings siren and I'm trying to work out the history on these... The 3 Castle Castings sirens I have are all powered by Brooks-Crompton-Parkinson motors, which is part of Hawker-Siddeley. The siren in this video is clearly powered by an older variant of Brooks motor, yet it's listed as a Carter&Co type 1H. What I can't work out is the link between Castle Castings LTD and Carter&Co. The rotor castings and rotor housings look EXACTLY the same on BOTH makes of siren
Later used to alert Retained firemen to the station, in cities it WAS for Air Raid Warning , but anyone living in a Village or Town would hear this every week for a test oe when their local Fire Station was being alerted for a Fire.
How about if you pit horn on the side of the holes where the chopper turns and turned it on the side where the horns will point in each direction and put it on top of a telephone pole.
@Zachary Brooks Hi. I'm sorry, this siren is not for sale. I think shipping costs to the US would be huge anyway. Good luck searching for a siren, hope you find one nearer to home! :)
I remember when these things were on on poles everywhere but then over the space of a week, they all got taken down. There must be a warehouse full of them somewhere. I have an old cold war radio receiver somewhere in my house that I was given. Never got to grab a siren though, although I was given a 'grey box' BT siren receiver system many years back. No idea what became of it though so must have thrown that one out.
I used to do this too when I was a kid. Except it wasn't a v8 powered hair horn...it was a fan....and the sound wasn't created mechanically...I made it with my mouth.
Correct until late 60's upto about 72 in this area when they went to pagers, problem was that responding Firemen would be held up because traffic did not give way has they used to do when the Siren went because they knew there would be certain vehicles moving fast towards the station, guess Lifeboat men have the same trouble now when they are alerted by pagers
@danwisbey85 Aha Mr Wisbey- this does look like that old siren you had! Although, I think your rotors had curved vanes like a Castle, whereas these Gents rotor vanes look straight
Hi Duprebs. Nice vid. I'm currently restoring a 1936 Carter myself. Currently all in bits and being blasted, primed and painted. Can't get over the size and weight compared to my Castle. But most of it seems to be in the Brooks Motor!!!!. I was planning to restore and sell but don't think I'll be able to bear to part with it!! Not many about i don't think? you still got yours? Cheers, Paul.
When I lived in Plymouth (England) I was a bout 3 miles away from the dockyard and every monday morning 11am without fail they test the sirens that sound just like this. *just incase one of the nuclear subs has a leak*
@StreetOrgans Just had a look at the Brook Motors rating plate and it says : full load amps 7.5 with full load volts 346/440. Hope that also helps. I looked into the converters, but they are fairly pricey. This video of mine was taken at a local firm that deal with electric motors so they have a full 3 phase supply because I can't run it at home, so I just have to watch my video instead!
ive seen your finished version which has like a little small black block either side of the fans on the bottom if you see what i mean and it has that aluminium skirt on either side exactly the same. ill have to have another look and probs de corrode the data plate- fingers crossed - how much do these sirens go for and how far away can they be heared? if you dont mind me asking, cheers
Sorry, the other half of my reply disappeared! The aluminium ends are the heaters which used to be powered up to stop the impellers from freezing up in Winter. A three phase Castle siren can go for £400+, a Carter could go for more. I believe the could be heard in a radius of 4/6 miles dependant on weather conditions. where are you in the UK?
bluehazer, :-). I had it tested on a local industrial unit that had horses nearby, luckily they weren't there, so the test went ahead. But it was so so loud, but great to hear it!!
not yet, found it under a pile of scrap exhausts, data plate bit corroded but can make out 1944, chap wasn't there to make an offer, still has its original paint and all in one piece, gonna see him asap
@djoska87 Yes, the green was the primer applied after sandblasting. I have just put in a profile picture,this being the restored siren. I do have other pictures, but hope you can see this pic well enough to get an idea of the completed job!
That would be a badass alarm clock.
At full speed, this siren runs at 2840 rpm.
It's 10 holes on one and 12 on the other in case anyone is wondering
How many decibels is that?
I can only imagine the chills people got back during WWII when they heard these sirens sound.
The germans ! The germans !
wait...
Am i german ?
you wont love the sound when you hear it for real..
Reminds me of the THX Intro...
He starts at 1.25
The sound of doom. As a child of the 70s/80s I grew up knowing full well what these things were for and can well recall as a kid seeing them on poles or atop police stations.
Having been in close proximity to a couple running at full pelt in later years I can confirm that they are VERY loud..
Sounds like a plane at low speed
That was a scary enough sound during WW2, but come the nuclear age, to hear the sirens tested was truly terrifying.
These things scare the fuck out of me
That was actually kinda nice to listen to.
made popular in WW2 but spent a far longer period of time on standby all the way up till 1992, all over the uk, controlled by British telecom and could be activated by the police or civil defence, (several thousand at the same time) not easy to ignore..there was an incident in 1986 in Edinburgh where the sirens were accidently activated at 6am one morning leaving the population petrified for several minutes.
@ccoraxfan
This siren was deliberately powered up slowly incase it seized up, as it had been stored away unused since decommissioning.
In actual fact, it has the most amazing bearings in, and motor wise, is in good shape :).
There's always been something so fascinating and frightening about the sound it makes. Is always been so eerie to me when I was younger.
I need one for the neighbors.
I was going to skip to the siren but Otis Redding kept me around.
I used to have three of these, but somebody really must have liked them enough to scale a wall, and take all three to seemingly borrow, long term. As in forever. I never got them back. They also took some telephone signal receivers that were used to receive the alert signals in a cold war.
However, having lived near a dockyard as I was growing up, I heard its sirens blaring out every lunch and home time as a signal for the workers, so grew used to them.
I kind of want one. You know just in case lol
it is amazing that pulsating air can makes such a loud noise
Thanks guys for your comments :-). She's not in bad nick, considering she was made in 1936! A lick of paint and she will be as good as new!
ONE OF THE MOST BADASS NOISES OF THE 20TH CENTURY!
One of these is sounded once a month or so in my town (Dover) and it never fails to give me goose bumps!
The power was increased slowly for the test, and in ordinary circumstances it would have reached full speed quicker, but the wind up sounds really good :-)
Damn men, i don't know why but this sound give me chills!
What did you guys do to my bench grinder?!
Yes it did and was done on purpose. After siting for so long unused, it was powered up slowly incase it seized up!
1:00 COME ON!!!!
That must bring back a few not so nice memories for some people
I live not 4 miles from Coventry, which was entirely destroyed by the Germans in WW2 with the loss of over 2000 lives.
When I hear these Carter sirens, it always sends a shivver down my spine, thinking that all that death and destruction would have been accompanied by the sound of that siren :-(
It's such a sad sounding noise and maybe one of the last sounds that so many hundreds of thousands heard.
Hell yeah!!
I love that sound, everyone loves that sound, I don't understand why... Cos for a long time it signified death... Maybe all humans are secretly dark and morbid inside? Who cares, sounded sucking sick!
I'd like to put one of these on the roof of my house. Then i'd power it up every April Fool's Day and watch the neighbors go crazy.
AWESOME noise!
That's a real beauty!!! Thanks for sharing this!
That is the most horrifying sound ever.
I got one on my 1949 chevy
theres still one where i live on a telephone pole it probably dont work any more but it would be good to it go off.
Just subtract 3400 RPM by 20% of 3400 and u get the answer. 10hz difference in AC voltage hertz is 20% RPM difference for 3300-3600 RPM motors. Just luv that sound!
MrBigquads! Thanks for your comments :-). She really is a beauty and has been an absolute joy to restore. She is now fully restored and repainted to her former glory.
This siren runs at 2840rpm :-)
@110samec
The impellers spin in the same direction, it has a 10/12 port, so as its slowing down it looks like they spin in opposite directions.
If you put your finger in there I swear your finger will be off in 0.002 seconds
Awesome, is exactly like the one I used to own! Same shape, model etc, nice to see how they sound when working! :)
This is the most terrifying sound ever, just hearing it makes my skin crawl :s
I'm now restoring my 3rd Castle Castings siren and I'm trying to work out the history on these...
The 3 Castle Castings sirens I have are all powered by Brooks-Crompton-Parkinson motors, which is part of Hawker-Siddeley.
The siren in this video is clearly powered by an older variant of Brooks motor, yet it's listed as a Carter&Co type 1H.
What I can't work out is the link between Castle Castings LTD and Carter&Co.
The rotor castings and rotor housings look EXACTLY the same on BOTH makes of siren
Imagine if they had an elderly neighbor that was in WWII and he heard that. Some crazy flashbacks
"Did... did I for sure pause the video? *actually hears air siren* OH CRA-"
That is awesome! It is a really nice siren and in amazing condition too for it's age.
Hope you can run it again soon!
@Hondaking: a three phase supply was used at a business local to me who test electric motors.
Beautiful, simply beautiful
I don't why I like the sound of air raid sirens so much.
The sound this thing makes just tears through my soul and activates my primal instinct
How many holes are on each side? I need to know because I'm making one
Later used to alert Retained firemen to the station, in cities it WAS for Air Raid Warning , but anyone living in a Village or Town would hear this every week for a test oe when their local Fire Station was being alerted for a Fire.
my dad had one of those and scared my neighbors lol
SONG IN BACKGROUND: Otis by Jay-Z
Thank you for your instant replay button!
Many thumbs up!
How about if you pit horn on the side of the holes where the chopper turns and turned it on the side where the horns will point in each direction and put it on top of a telephone pole.
That was awesome! I'd love to have one of those!!
@Zachary Brooks Hi. I'm sorry, this siren is not for sale. I think shipping costs to the US would be huge anyway. Good luck searching for a siren, hope you find one nearer to home! :)
I remember when these things were on on poles everywhere but then over the space of a week, they all got taken down. There must be a warehouse full of them somewhere. I have an old cold war radio receiver somewhere in my house that I was given. Never got to grab a siren though, although I was given a 'grey box' BT siren receiver system many years back. No idea what became of it though so must have thrown that one out.
That will keep my ears destroyed, thank you very much.
i like it how it just powers dooooowwwwwnnn...
where can i buy one? im serious.
peace
tony
Now that's a classic sound. Nice!
the most petrifying sound
Some poor old WWII chap down the street heard this, shat himself then barricaded himself in his basement. Worth it!!!
the sound creeps me out O-o
Owesome, gives you the feeling of feer people had in WW2, nice job
It's some kind of eye illusion at the speed it's going at, I forgot it's name.
Three phase/50kw, not sure what the voltage was, possibly 440v?
I used to do this too when I was a kid. Except it wasn't a v8 powered hair horn...it was a fan....and the sound wasn't created mechanically...I made it with my mouth.
Retained boys have a shout !!! happy memories from the 60's
Correct until late 60's upto about 72 in this area when they went to pagers, problem was that responding Firemen would be held up because traffic did not give way has they used to do when the Siren went because they knew there would be certain vehicles moving fast towards the station, guess Lifeboat men have the same trouble now when they are alerted by pagers
@AFoggyPath here is my air raid siren!
Sounds a bit like the engine of a plane
That sound reminds me of a hundred nightmares about nuclear war and tornadoes.
I would so put this on my front lawn at 5 in the morning
@danwisbey85 Aha Mr Wisbey- this does look like that old siren you had!
Although, I think your rotors had curved vanes like a Castle, whereas these Gents rotor vanes look straight
Hi Duprebs. Nice vid. I'm currently restoring a 1936 Carter myself. Currently all in bits and being blasted, primed and painted. Can't get over the size and weight compared to my Castle. But most of it seems to be in the Brooks Motor!!!!. I was planning to restore and sell but don't think I'll be able to bear to part with it!! Not many about i don't think? you still got yours? Cheers, Paul.
would make a good fire horn
When I lived in Plymouth (England) I was a bout 3 miles away from the dockyard and every monday morning 11am without fail they test the sirens that sound just like this. *just incase one of the nuclear subs has a leak*
WANT ONE!
Classic! Love it!
@StreetOrgans
Just had a look at the Brook Motors rating plate and it says : full load amps 7.5 with full load volts 346/440. Hope that also helps. I looked into the converters, but they are fairly pricey. This video of mine was taken at a local firm that deal with electric motors so they have a full 3 phase supply because I can't run it at home, so I just have to watch my video instead!
Possibly the best sound ever employed in getting people out of their cozy love nests and get in a storm or bomb shelter....
ive seen your finished version which has like a little small black block either side of the fans on the bottom if you see what i mean and it has that aluminium skirt on either side exactly the same. ill have to have another look and probs de corrode the data plate- fingers crossed - how much do these sirens go for and how far away can they be heared? if you dont mind me asking, cheers
Sorry, the other half of my reply disappeared! The aluminium ends are the heaters which used to be powered up to stop the impellers from freezing up in Winter. A three phase Castle siren can go for £400+, a Carter could go for more. I believe the could be heard in a radius of 4/6 miles dependant on weather conditions. where are you in the UK?
That is a beautiful sound, although if I'd bee around in the days of the Blitz I probably wouldnt be saying that.
bluehazer, :-). I had it tested on a local industrial unit that had horses nearby, luckily they weren't there, so the test went ahead. But it was so so loud, but great to hear it!!
not yet, found it under a pile of scrap exhausts, data plate bit corroded but can make out 1944, chap wasn't there to make an offer, still has its original paint and all in one piece, gonna see him asap
Such a cool sound
1:35 I love that sound.
Very cool, I'm glad people are taking the time to restore these. Does this particular siren date back to WW2 and how long ago was it decommisioned?
Could you make out the manufacturer of the siren?
@djoska87 Yes, the green was the primer applied after sandblasting. I have just put in a profile picture,this being the restored siren. I do have other pictures, but hope you can see this pic well enough to get an idea of the completed job!
all i can say is absolutly amasing these are so rare i would love to have one just to have it it would be even better if it worked like this one
I want one for my home alarm system. That will keep the thieves away.