British General Electric Sirens: Difference between revisions
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'''Single rotor siren''' | '''Single rotor siren''' | ||
[[Category:Sirens]] | |||
[[Category:Single Toned Sirens]] | |||
[[Category:Dual Toned Sirens]] | |||
[[Category:Electromechanical Sirens]] | |||
[[Category:Omnidirectional Sirens]] | |||
[[Category:WIP]] | |||
__INDEX__ |
Revision as of 21:33, 24 August 2024
British General Electric Sirens | |
[[File:{{{image}}}|200px]] | |
Company | British General Electric Company |
---|---|
Produced | 1930s-1940s? |
Type | Omnidirectional Electromechanical |
Frequency | 50 Hz |
Horsepower | 3 hp |
Voltage | 240 V AC |
British General Electric was a company formed in 1924 and was a manufacturer of various radios and vacuum tubes during the early to mid 20th century. During World War II, the company was commissioned to produce air raid sirens to warn the public of incoming Axis air raids. Unlike many siren manufacturers at the time, BGE went with a vertical omnidirectional design, instead of the typical horizontal sirens. After World War II, these sirens fell out of use as Australia has little use for sirens, and few units remain today. Little information exists on these sirens, and their exact model names are unknown. It appears that these sirens were produced by several manufacturers, and were supplied by British General Electric.
Models
12/14-port dual rotor siren
BGE produced a unique vertical dual rotor siren, which has a distinctive appearance. This siren uses a dual rotor design, with the top rotor being 12-port, and the bottom rotor being 14-port. This results in a 12/14 port siren. The siren runs on a 3HP dual sided AC motor, which runs at 2880RPM, 50hz, and was designed for three-phase AC. The siren was produced by several different companies, but all were supplied by BGE. Since the siren runs at 50hz, the siren resembles a 10/12 siren when operating. The siren heavily resembles a dual rotor Fedelcode or XT22 with the housing removed.
Single rotor siren