Fire Alarm Test #46

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • This is a test of an EST 1 system in a municipal garage. Alarms are all Wheelock 7002T-24 horn strobes. Pulls are 270A-SPOs, smokes are newer Edwards conventional smokes. I hope you enjoy!
    I now have a discord server! Make sure to click the link below to join and interact with other people with the same interests! See you there!
    Discord: / discord

Komentáře • 85

  • @imafairy7250
    @imafairy7250 Před 2 lety +8

    Your videos are awesome! Keep up the good work! Those 7002T-24's must be loud!

    • @a.r.aproductions1569
      @a.r.aproductions1569  Před 2 lety +6

      They were very loud! Thank you for the kind words! It means so much!

    • @MrKal222
      @MrKal222 Před 2 lety +1

      It's supposed to be loud

    • @catsgame9282
      @catsgame9282 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MrKal222 it's not as loud as simplex truealert

    • @alexandersalarms5380
      @alexandersalarms5380 Před 2 lety +1

      @@catsgame9282 can confirm

    • @catsgame9282
      @catsgame9282 Před 2 lety +1

      @@alexandersalarms5380 how loud are spectralert classic is compared to simplex truealert

  • @LNERMallard
    @LNERMallard Před 2 lety +24

    0:36 Overlooking his post as he had been for over 25 years, there stood the old Wheelock. His strobe had yellowed and his voice had become raspy in his old age... nevertheless he soldiered on, blaring his warning signal and flashing his light, warning all souls under his watch of impending conflagration.

  • @Luke202-z8b
    @Luke202-z8b Před 22 dny

    always love how mechanical horns are a great source of musical cords

  • @seanpatrickleary8555
    @seanpatrickleary8555 Před rokem +5

    The Old Central School in Stoneham, MA also had those Wheelock 7002 fire alarms. Same design, sound effect, etc!

  • @aidanthetoiletelevatorfire7554

    Man, I love those 7002Ts! Those are starting to become rare!

  • @siphonralarms9411
    @siphonralarms9411 Před 2 lety +3

    I love these alarms, I know I’m not the only one

  • @So1
    @So1 Před 25 dny

    This is exactly how my old school alarms sounded lol

  • @willbill808
    @willbill808 Před 11 měsíci +4

    I never found 7002Ts that loud. Startling when they kick to life in a quiet room- definitely, but really not loud unless your within like 5 feet of the horn.

    • @Djevan41598
      @Djevan41598 Před 9 měsíci

      Aren’t the 7002Ts from the 1980s early 1990s

  • @devinbadger765
    @devinbadger765 Před 2 lety +4

    some of the horns sound like they ready to give up on life

  • @LividCruiser
    @LividCruiser Před rokem +1

    They sound like angry bees flying around 😂

  • @haroldrivera8790
    @haroldrivera8790 Před rokem

    Omg I love the sound! the 7002t is making a song.
    The other 7002t did the low volume and high volume.

  • @RaccoonAlarmsVosgra
    @RaccoonAlarmsVosgra Před 2 lety +1

    Those are some healthy horns

  • @djifirealarms
    @djifirealarms Před 2 lety +1

    Very cool system

  • @colemedico3575
    @colemedico3575 Před 2 lety +1

    Now the one in the hall way sounds loud and it sounds like it under power

  • @FrontierGD
    @FrontierGD Před 2 lety +1

    7002ts are rare nowadays, the only one’s i’ve seen are the ceiling mount ones at a shopping center, and one at a boston market.

    • @Luke202-z8b
      @Luke202-z8b Před 22 dny

      there are a few apartment buildings i would pass by around my area that have an army of 7002Ts, it is really amazing to see although all the strobes were worn as hell

  • @RJARRRPCGP
    @RJARRRPCGP Před rokem

    I often see these with FCI-FC-72 FACPs in Vermont.

  • @tornadochasingsiege
    @tornadochasingsiege Před 2 lety +1

    i like how they had a home smoke detector next to a commercial fire alarm 😂🤣

  • @Caleb_holcomb11
    @Caleb_holcomb11 Před rokem

    It sounds like the 7002T is at the end of its life 😅 lol

  • @Fire_alarm_guy
    @Fire_alarm_guy Před 2 lety +1

    my school only has 2 of them im gonna order a 7002t at some point

  • @ExoRailfan705
    @ExoRailfan705 Před rokem

    When they get replaced make sure to get those!

  • @vintagesimplexfirealarmsof6440

    that sounds like a minecraft pillager/illager raid sound in the beginning

  • @achannelwithnopurpose1977

    Those horns seem to be having a bipolar pitch issue. Power supply issues?

    • @ClearToRailfan
      @ClearToRailfan Před 10 měsíci

      I’m guessing FWR. aka the mechanical horn’s worst enemy

    • @achannelwithnopurpose1977
      @achannelwithnopurpose1977 Před 10 měsíci

      @@ClearToRailfan the particular panel installed (Edwards EST-12Z3) actually outputs filtered dc and strangely can also do the coding March 120

  • @imafairy7250
    @imafairy7250 Před 2 lety +2

    0:36 Why was the horn mounted like that?

    • @a.r.aproductions1569
      @a.r.aproductions1569  Před 2 lety +3

      I’m actually not sure. I was wondering that myself. Maybe because the other area I was in didn’t have people in it as often as the side it was facing. It’s been like that for decades

  • @firesecuritypro2079
    @firesecuritypro2079 Před 2 lety

    Nice

  • @bigfoot13s80
    @bigfoot13s80 Před rokem

    Sounds like bees attacking

  • @ttclover7909
    @ttclover7909 Před 2 lety

    put back fire alarm test #1

  • @Earth_Number_12
    @Earth_Number_12 Před rokem +1

    They are arguing to see who’s the loudest one Comment bellow on which 7002t won

  • @claytonblaylock747
    @claytonblaylock747 Před 2 lety +1

    Frank if you are reading this please respond to us, we are getting very worried

  • @erikmorozov1740
    @erikmorozov1740 Před 4 měsíci

    0:08

  • @FyrFyter
    @FyrFyter Před 2 lety

    Manual fire alarm activation is typically achieved through the use of a pull station (USA & Canada) or call point (Europe, Australia, and Asia), which then sounds the evacuation alarm for the relevant building or zone. Manual fire alarm activation requires human intervention, as distinct from automatic fire alarm activation such as that provided through the use of heat detectors and smoke detectors. It is, however, possible for call points/pull stations to be used in conjunction with automatic detection as part of the overall fire detection and alarm system. Systems in completed buildings tend to be wired in and include a control panel. Systems for use during construction can also be wireless or mechanical, it is recommended by the Structural Timber Association in the UK that for timber-framed constructions, interconnecting wireless systems be used.
    A fire alarm pull station is an active fire protection device, usually wall-mounted, that, when activated, initiates an alarm on a fire alarm system. In its simplest form, the user activates the alarm by pulling the handle down, which completes a circuit and locks the handle in the activated position, sending an alarm to the fire alarm control panel. After operation, most fire alarm pull stations must be restored to the ready position using a special tool or key for the panel to be reset. Primitive manual stations, requiring only a single action or hand motion to activate, can be subject to unwanted activation by jarring or accidental contact. Early strategies to cope with this problem included requiring the operator to break a pane of glass to release an internal spring-operated mechanism. Manual pull stations that require two hand motions, such as lift up and pull down, or push in and pull down, have since replaced the break-glass and single-action models in many modern installations.
    Coded pull stations
    In the past, pull stations controlled the entire system. These coded pull stations were much bigger than modern pulls and had a code wheel in them. They had a gear mechanism that was wound up when the station was pulled, and (unlike modern pull stations) the handle did not stay down. The gears would turn a small wheel with a specific number of teeth, which determined the coding. The teeth would push up on a contact, which would open and close a circuit, pulsing the code to the bells or horns. This code was used by building security to determine where the alarm was originating from. For example, consider a pull station in the fourth-floor elevator lobby of an office building with a code of 5-3-1. When the station was pulled, the security officers in the building would look up 5-3-1 in a master list of codes. After finding the location of the pull, they would check to see if there is a real fire. If there was, they would evacuate the building and call the fire department.
    System tests could be conducted in one of two ways: In a coded pull station, there is either a test hole on the front (usually activated with an Allen wrench) or a test switch on the inside. Turning the switch one way causes the notification appliances to sound continuous (or in the case of single-stroke bells, ding once). Turning it the other way and then activating the pull allows a silent test to be done in which the station's mechanical parts are checked to ensure proper function. Once pulled, the station would do at least four rounds of code before resetting itself. Coded pulls were typically used in new fire alarm systems until roughly the 1950s, and then occasionally into the 1970s. Until the early 1990s, some panels were made with an extra zone to accommodate any existing coded pull stations. Nowadays, coded pull stations are rarely seen in working fire alarm systems.
    Modern pull stations
    Many modern fire alarm pull stations are single action and only require the user to pull down the handle to sound the alarm. Other fire alarm pull stations are dual-action, and as such require the user to perform a second task before pulling down, such as lifting or pushing in a panel on the station or shattering a glass panel with an attached hammer. Perhaps the most recognizable pull station is the "T-bar"-style pull station, so named because the handle is shaped like the letter "T". This style is manufactured by many companies, most notably SimplexGrinnell.
    Resetting a fire alarm pull station after it has been operated normally requires building personnel or emergency responders to open the station using a key, which often is either a hex key or a more traditional key. Opening the station causes the handle to go back to its original position, allowing the alarm to be reset from the fire alarm control panel after the station has been closed.
    In some places, particularly at college dormitories and schools, students set off fire alarms as a prank or simply because they want to (out of anger, curiosity, revenge, or to postpone a test). These false alarms can convey risk to alarm fatigue if they occur repeatedly, causing occupants to dismiss the importance of alarms or ignore them completely. In areas where false alarms are a recurring problem, pull stations may be covered with a clear plastic cover (sold under the "Stopper" trade name) that will cause people to notice the person by sounding an alarm when tinkered with or opened, creating a focus on the fire alarm. Because of these and other issues, setting off a fire alarm when there is no fire or other emergency is illegal in most jurisdictions.

  • @TheMagicSchoolBusV2
    @TheMagicSchoolBusV2 Před rokem

    ??????