STH-10: Difference between revisions
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|produced= 1955-Dec. 5, 2005 (Single phase model discontinued on Dec. 4, 1995) | |produced= 1955-Dec. 5, 2005 (Single phase model discontinued on Dec. 4, 1995) | ||
|succeeded= [[Eclipse]] | |succeeded= [[Eclipse]] | ||
| | |preceded = [[Model 7]] (1987) | ||
|output= 115<ref name="manual"> | |output= 115<ref name="manual"> | ||
{{cite manual | {{cite manual |
Revision as of 16:47, 11 June 2024
STH-10 | |
[[File:|200px]] | |
Company | Federal Signal Corporation |
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Produced | 1955-Dec. 5, 2005 (Single phase model discontinued on Dec. 4, 1995) |
Type | Electromechanical |
Sound output | 115[1] |
Preceded by | Model 7 (1987) |
Succeeded by | Eclipse |
Documentation | Manual Product sheet |
The STH-10 was an omnidirectional, electromechanical siren produced by Federal Signal Corporation. It was a very simple 12 port, single tone siren with a 20.5 inch rotor, that was partnered with the STL-10. The STH-10 was succeeded by the Eclipse-8 in 2006. Production of the single phase model, or STH-10B was ceased on December 4th, 1995. Production of the three phase model, or STH-10A was ceased on December 5th, 2005.
The STH-10 was created as an alternative siren from the STL-10, mainly for fire departments or non-civil defense uses, however, some places used it as one or both (as a Civil Defense Siren and Fire Siren).
- ↑ (PDF) Service Manual, Outdoor Warning Sirens, Models 2, 5, SD10, STH10, STL10. Federal Signal Corporation. Retrieved October 22, 2017.