New York City EMS PA170 Siren History and Demo

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 20. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 8

  • @AlexanderM-h3b
    @AlexanderM-h3b Před 21 dnem

    From the Advent of electronic sirens my favorite is the manual wind down I think it is the most effective and the FDNY used it exclusively

  • @shawnramsey8264
    @shawnramsey8264 Před měsícem

    Old school was the best

  • @zahplay4keeps2395
    @zahplay4keeps2395 Před měsícem

    this siren got real old it dont work anymore

    • @The718Motorpool
      @The718Motorpool  Před měsícem +3

      I think if I had it running a few minutes and let it get warm. It would’ve worked a lot better.

    • @AlexanderM-h3b
      @AlexanderM-h3b Před 21 dnem

      Yeah these aren't electronic drivers for the sound these are old vacuum tube drivers

  • @tjinytjiny6615
    @tjinytjiny6615 Před 23 dny

    That was not the tones out of NYC EMS AMBULANCES in the 70s. There was no wail, just hi lo and a yelp.

    • @The718Motorpool
      @The718Motorpool  Před 22 dny +1

      From what a very reliable source from New York City EMS told me these were in the buses from 76 to 79

    • @tjinytjiny6615
      @tjinytjiny6615 Před 22 dny

      @@The718Motorpool Grew up in NYC. I heard ambulance sirens 24/7. NYC EMS went from the breadbox type ambulances which had mechanical sirens, to the very few bread boxes with electronic sirens. Then they went to type 1 ambulances, which they stayed with. The siren you displayed couldn’t have been in widespread use. I never heard it. EMS in the 70s got very little funding, very few new ambulances. The next widespread siren from the mechanical ones were the 2 tone hi-lo/yelp ones that became the standard before they went to a code 3 siren. I also worked for them for a year.