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Civil defense siren - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Civil defense siren

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thunderbolt 1000/1000T Civil Defense siren. 127 dBc @ 100 ft or 30 m
Thunderbolt 1000/1000T Civil Defense siren. 127 dBc @ 100 ft or 30 m

A civil defense siren (also referred to as an air raid siren, tornado siren, tsunami siren, or other outdoor warning siren) is a mechanical or electronic device (modern-day sirens are electrically-powered) for generating sound to provide warning of approaching danger and sometimes to indicate when the danger has passed.

Initially designed to warn of air raids in World War II, they were adapted to warn of nuclear attack and of natural phenomena such as tornadoes. The generalized nature of the siren led to many of them being replaced with more specialized warnings, such as the Emergency Alert System.

Sound is generated by a motor driving a shaft with a special fan (known as a rotor or chopper) on one or both ends. It will have only one fan if it's a single-toned siren, while if it's a dual-toned siren, it will have either one fan on each end or two fans in a stack on one end, with one fan having a few more blades than the other. Around each fan--or chopper or rotor--is a housing with a number of rectangular holes to match the number of fan blades. This housing is known as a stator. The end of each blade has a plate whose shape is matched with the rectangular holes and circular curve of the stator. The blades draw air in at the end and force it out through the slots in the housing in rapid pulses, as the plates on the end of the blades interrupts that flow, which is what produces the sound. Some mechanical sirens, such as this Thunderbolt, also employ compressed air that is blown at the rotor to "supercharge" the sound from the siren, which causes the sound to be sharper and much louder than it would be with the chopper and stator alone.

Modern sirens can reach up to, but not commonly, 135 decibels when measured 100 feet (30 m) away from the siren; the loudest confirmed siren ever produced was the Chrysler Air Raid Siren, producing 138 dB at 100 feet. The Chrysler Air Raid Siren used a 180 hp V-8 Hemi engine to drive the siren and weighed 5543 lb.[1]

Many warning sirens have a sound that is distinct from that used by emergency vehicles due to use of two simultaneous tones, usually in a 5:6 frequency ratio (a minor third).

Some newer sirens have the ability to broadcast voice messages over large areas, depending on winds and noise. These electronic sirens are similar to electromechanical sirens; however, they rely on a series of large loudspeakers to produce sound. However, there is some question about the ability of a system of electronic sirens to broadcast a voice message with sufficient intelligibility over long distances – not only does the sound echo off some surfaces, the sound could have multiple arrival times from widely-spaced siren sites.

However, the relative simplicity, efficiency, and easily-serviceable design of modern electronic warning systems, in addition to the ability to broadcast any type of warning signal desired, makes them an attractive alternative for many municipalities.

Contents

[edit] Historical warning tones

An air-raid siren in Nice, France is still operational.
An air-raid siren in Nice, France is still operational.

During World War II for a "Red Warning" of approaching danger, the siren produced a tone that rose and fell regularly between one high and one low tone.

A "White Warning" (All Clear) was a single continuous tone. Another alternating tone signified a "take cover" warning for immediate danger.

After World War II, two further warnings were introduced for nuclear attack – a "Grey Warning" indicated approaching nuclear fallout with a 2½ minute warning of long steady tones divided by equal periods of silence, the silence being created with a manual shutter or electric solenoid.

A "Black Warning," also for manual sirens, was either a Morse code 'D' (–··) or three quick tones, indicating imminent danger of fallout.

These warnings were not used in the United States.

[edit] Current warning tones

[edit] Usage in the United States

ACA P-50 Civil Defense Siren. 135 dBc @ 100 ft or 30 m
ACA P-50 Civil Defense Siren. 135 dBc @ 100 ft or 30 m

Today, the most common tones produces by sirens in the United States are "Alert (Steady)" "Attack (Wail)" and "High-Low (Hi-Lo)."

While the tones used vary in some locations, the most common tone, the "Alert" is widely used by municipalities to warn citizens of impending extremely severe weather, particularly tornadoes. The sound of the "Alert" is a steady continuous note. In towns by the ocean, the "Alert" may also be used to warn of a tsunami.

The "Attack" tone may also be used to warn of severe weather, but it is widely believed that this tone is to be reserved for an impending attack on the United States. This tone is best described as having a rising and falling sound ("wavering").

Finally, the "Hi-Lo" fire siren tone can sometimes be used by local volunteer fire departments to alert firefighters of an emergency. This tone is also used in some cities to warn of the potential for flash flooding. The "Hi-Lo" tone is a continuous alternating higher pitched and lower pitched sound, similar to police sirens in Europe.

In some locations, sirens are also used to alert the public to releases of hazardous materials, such as chemicals from a derailed train car or a manufacturing plant.

[edit] Sirens in integrated public warning systems

Sirens are sometimes used as part of an integrated warning system that links sirens with other warning media such as the radio and TV Emergency Alert System, NOAA Weather Radio, telephone alerting systems and wireless alerting systems in the United States and the Emergency Public Warning System in the Canadian province of Alberta. This integrated approach enhances the credibility of warnings and reduces the risk of their being dismissed as false alarms by corroborating the warning messages through multiple media. The Common Alerting Protocol is a technical standard for this sort of multi-system integration.

Siren installations themselves have many ways of being activated. Commonly used are DTMF broadcasts over phone lines (direct connection or standard PSTN) or over radio broadcast. This does leave room for exploitation, but there are protections from false alarms. These sirens can also be tied into other networks such as a fire departments volunteer notification/paging system. The basics of this type of installation would be a device (possibly the same pager the firefighters have) connected to the controller/timer system of the siren. When a page is received, the siren is activated.

[edit] Types of sirens

[edit] Mechanical sirens (direct driven)

Federal Signal SD-10
Federal Signal SD-10

A mechanical siren uses a rotor and stator to "chop" an air stream, which is forced through the siren by radial vanes in the spinning rotor. An example of this type of siren is the The Federal Signal "2T22",[2] which was originally developed during the Cold War and produced from the early 1950s to the late 1980s. This particular design employs dual rotors and stators to sound each pitch. Because the sound power output of this type of siren is the same in every direction at all times, it is described as omnidirectional. The Federal 2T22 was also marketed in a 3-signal configuration known as the Federal 3T22, which had capabilities for a "hi-lo" signal.

While some mechanical sirens produce sound in all directions simultaneously, other designs produce sound in only one direction, while employing a rotator mechanism to turn the siren head throughout 360 degrees. One such siren is the American Signal Allertor.[3] This siren also produces two pitches simultaneously in a musical interval, but in this case the rotor and stator incorporate separate sections for producing each pitch.

An example of such a siren being produced today is the Federal Signal Model 2001 series. Introduced in the late 80s, it is capable of battery backup. There are two separate motors in the 2001. One powers the siren rotor, while another powers the rotator mechanism.[4]

One rare type of mechanical siren does not rotate or produce equal sound output in all directions. The Federal Signal "Thunderbeam" siren[5] employs a slowly rotating disc below the siren, which directs the siren's output throughout 360 degrees. This same method, applied differently, produces the distinctive sound character of the Leslie loudspeaker, but the rotation of the disc in the Thunderbeam is far too slow to produce the "warbling" sound associated with the Leslie loudspeaker.

[edit] "Supercharged" electromechanical sirens

Federal Signal Thunderbolt 1003
Federal Signal Thunderbolt 1003

The Federal Signal Thunderbolt series is the most recognizable of all warning sirens due to its unique shape and design. It creates a very distinct tone, made specifically to get the attention of people. "Thunderbolt" sirens use a separate blower to force air through the rotor and produce greater air movement with each pulse, thus they are described as supercharged[citation needed].

Specially-designed horns having an exponential profile amplify the sound, causing the air at the end of the horn to be displaced the same distance as air in the throat of the horn with the passage of each wavefront. This lends a unique "distorted" character to the sound of these sirens as the throat of the horn is overloaded.

Within the Thunderbolt product line, three different configurations were offered. The Thunderbolt 1000 is a single-tone siren, and the Thunderbolt 1000T is a dual-tone siren. The Thunderbolt 1003 is essentially the same as the Thunderbolt 1000T, except that it employs solenoid-actuated slide valves to create a "hi-lo" signal primarily used as a "fire" signal.

Other "supercharged" sirens (having a separate blower for supplying air) include the American Signal (ASC) "Hurricane".[6]

A variation on the 'Supercharged' electromechanical siren is the pneumatic Hochleistungssirene (HLS), produced by the German firm Pintsch-Bamag, and later by the German firm Hörmann. Soon afterward, Hörmann improved on the design to create the HLS 273, which did away with the massive siren head of the original in favor of a more compact head and cast aluminum exponential-profile horns.

These sirens stored an enormous reservoir of compressed air, recharged periodically by a diesel engine-driven compressor in a vault in the base of the massive siren unit. The later HLS 273 located the large (6000 liter) air tank underground beside the machinery vault, instead of in the mast itself as in the earlier HLS units.[7]

[edit] Electronic sirens

American Signal AL-8000 in O'Fallon, Illinois
American Signal AL-8000 in O'Fallon, Illinois
Federal Signal EOWS-612 siren in Irving, Texas
Federal Signal EOWS-612 siren in Irving, Texas

Electronic sirens produce their sound in a fashion that is fundamentally different from electromechanical sirens. Instead of a motor-driven rotor spinning inside a stator, electronic sirens consist of an electronic tone generator, a high-power amplifier, and a horn speaker typically incorporating one or a multiple of electrodynamic transducers.

Typically the loudspeaker unit incorporates horn loading, which causes them to be similar in appearance to some supercharged electromechanical sirens.

Many of these loudspeakers incorporate a vertical array of horns, in order to achieve a practical yet effective high-power audio source with pattern control in the vertical plane. Each cell of the loudspeaker horn is driven by one or a multiple of compression drivers, which are typically purpose-built for siren applications.

One type of purpose-built compression driver for this type of loudspeaker handles 400 watts of electrical power and features an enormous magnetic structure with two donut-shaped magnet slugs stacked on top of each other to provide enormous flux.

For siren applications, high-fidelity sound is a secondary concern to high output, and siren drivers typically produce large amounts of distortion which would not be tolerable in an audio system where fidelity is important.

As with electromechanical sirens, there are both omni-directional and rotating categories, though Whelen Engineering produces sirens which oscillate through 360 degrees, rotating in one direction and then in the other to allow a hard-wired connection between the amplifiers and the siren drivers. Also, these sirens can be set to rotate any amount from 0 to 360 degrees, allowing sirens to broadcast only in (a) certain direction(s).

An example of a rotating electronic siren is the Whelen Engineering "Vortex",[8] American Signal Alertronic 4000[9] and Federal Signal Siratone 408, 612,[10] & 816, whose design incorporates four vertically-arrayed loudspeaker cells exiting into a common manifold. This horn design accomplishes pattern control in the vertical plane and focuses the output into a high-penetration beam.

Examples of omni-directional electronic sirens are the Federal Signal "Modulator" series,[11] Whelen Engineering WPS2700, WPS2800, and WPS2900,[12] and American Signal I~Force, in which compression drivers located in each cell exit into the center of the cell.

The contour of each cell forms the horn profile in this case, though other omni-directional sirens simply array directional re-entrant horn modules in all directions to produce a continuous coverage pattern, such as the ATI Sound Blaster series,[13] and Federal Signal DSA series.[14]

[edit] Defunct manufacturers

  • CLM Industries – Maker of Toronto and Chicago warning sirens during the Cold War. One was most famously featured in the 1980 Chicago based film, The Blues Brothers, used as a vehicle mounted PA system. Toronto and Chicago have removed the majority of these sirens and, in the case of Chicago, they have been replaced by newer Federal Signal models, such as the 2001 and Modulator sirens.
  • SoundMaster – was a siren company that manufactured sirens similar to Alerting Communications of America (ACA), which then became American Signal. SoundMaster formed after a member of staff for ACA (a lawyer) found scrapped plans from ACA in a dumpster behind an ACA office. SoundMaster started producing sirens based on these plans and sold them to municipalities in Ohio. The company was shut down after an ACA engineer noticed one of the scrapped sirens installed and traced the origins of the plans. Today only a handful of SoundMaster sirens exist[citation needed].

[edit] Civil Defense sirens around the world

One of the many public address systems setup in Sydney, Australia as a result of APEC Australia 2007. Manufactured by Bosch.
One of the many public address systems setup in Sydney, Australia as a result of APEC Australia 2007. Manufactured by Bosch.

[edit] Major cities currently using outdoor Sirens

A typical air-raid siren in Haifa, Israel. Sirens of this type are ubiquitous in Israeli towns and cities, and have been used for air raids and missile attacks in previous conflicts.
A typical air-raid siren in Haifa, Israel. Sirens of this type are ubiquitous in Israeli towns and cities, and have been used for air raids and missile attacks in previous conflicts.

[edit] Australia

A series of around 40 electronic sirens making up a large scale public address system is installed in the Sydney central business district. While installed in the months preceding the 2007 APEC conference, they are designed as a permanent fixture. Aside from this, there are also usually small scale sirens, like the Model 5 or Model A which are found at fire stations for call-outs. These are also used at Sydney's beaches for shark alarms. When the alarm goes off, everyone must leave the water with no delay. Alarms are also used around prisons for break-outs.

[edit] Canada

In Canada a nation-wide network of sirens was established in the 1950s to warn urban populations of a possible Soviet nuclear attack. The system was maintained until the 1970s, when advancements in military technology reduced the Soviet nuclear missile strike time from 3-5 hours to less than 15 minutes. Sirens can still be found in many Canadian cities, all in various state of repair. In Toronto, for instance, the network has been abandoned to the point that no level of government will take responsibility for its ownership.[15]

Sirens have recently been built within 3 kilometers of the Darlington and Pickering nuclear power plants in the province of Ontario. (Both plants are within 30 kilometers of each other.) These sirens will sound in the event of a nuclear emergency that could result in a release of radioactivity.[16]

[edit] France

In France the Emergency population warning network is called the "Réseau national d'alerte" (RNA). The system is inherited from the air-raid siren network (défense passive) developed before the World War II. It consists of about 4,500 electronic or electromechanical sirens placed all over France.[17]

The system is tested every month, the first Wednesday at 12 noon.

In small municipalities hosting a centre for fire-fighters first intervention, the siren is also sometimes calling volunteer fire-fighters when their intervention is required, but the signal is different, and the system is increasingly being replaced by pagers.

[edit] India

Mumbai has around 450 sirens, located in all parts of the city. Some 200-250 are still functional. The government is thinking of reparing sirens, and installing new ones.

In Mumbai civil defence, sirens were used during the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, warning civilans about air raids by the Pakistan Air Force. At night, sirens were also used to indicate blackout, when all lights in Mumbai were switched off. The sirens are tested every day at 9 am and at 5 pm. They are controlled by the Indian Defence Services. Sirens are also use to denote a minute's silence at special occasions.

[edit] Israel

Air raid sirens used are typically sounded to warn of air raids or missile attacks on civilian population. The "all-clear" signal is used three times yearly to denote a minute's silence, once on Israel's Holocaust Remembrance Day and twice on Day of Remembrance. Nearly all the sirens in urban areas are German-made HLS (supercharged) sirens, model F71.

[edit] The Netherlands

Siren on a pole as used in the Netherlands.
Siren on a pole as used in the Netherlands.

The Netherlands tests its air raid sirens once a month, every first Monday at 12:00 pm. There are about 4,200 sirens placed all across the country.[citation needed]

[edit] Switzerland

Switzerland currently has 7750 mobile and stationary civil defence sirens, which can alert 99% of the population[18]. There are also 750 sirens located near dams[18]. Every year, on the first Wednesday of February Switzerland's sirens are tested. During this test, general alert sirens as well as the sirens near dams are tested to see if they are in working order[18]. The Population is informed of the test in the days before it by radio, television, teletext and newspapers[18]. The siren tests do not require the population to take any special measures.

[edit] Swiss Alarm Signals

The tones of the different sirens is provided on the last page of all phone books as well as on the Internet .

  • The general alert siren goes off when there is a possible threat to the population. Sirens for this alert have a regularly ascending and descending tone lasting a minute and repeated after a two-minute interval. The population is instructed to inform those around them to proceed inside. Once inside, people are instructed to listen to emergency broadcasts made by the DRS, RSR, RTSI and/or RTR[18].
  • Flood alerts consist of twelve low continuous tones each lasting 20 seconds. The flood alert is activated once the general siren is sounding. If heard by the population in danger zones (near dams, therefore) they must leave the danger area immediately or find shelter[18].

[edit] United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, Sirens are mostly sounded on receipt of a Severe Flood Warning for an area from the Environment Agency. Sirens are also used for public warning near gas or Nuclear power plants, Oil refineries and Chemical plants. They Consist of about 1200 sirens, a mix of older motor driven sirens usually from WW2 and the Cold war and newer electronic sirens. They are located in almost every village, town or city that is near the sea or has a river running through it.They are tested once yearly between the months of August and September.

[edit] United States

In the United States, sirens are usually used to warn of tornadoes and flash floods, as threats of military attacks on the United States are rare. They are usually also present in areas within a ten-mile radius of nuclear power plants. Many cities in the US and other countries around the world periodically sound their sirens as a test, either weekly or monthly or yearly at a day and hour set by each individual city.

[edit] Major U.S. cities using outdoor sirens

Note: Chicago is home to Federal Signal, Milwaukee is home to American Signal and Cańon City, CO is home to Sentry Siren.

[edit] Minor U.S. cities using outdoor sirens

[edit] In popular culture

  • Civil defense sirens are used in the Silent Hill series of survival horror video games (and in the film adaptation) to signal a shift between the town's multiple dimensions. The Siren series, which was created by former members of Team Silent, also uses a civil defense siren as a central component of its story.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

[edit] Manufacturers


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