FreezingInAlaska Says:
Nov 19, 2008 - the one was on two hrs earlier, i think bc of a fire, bc i heard fire trucks right after the first
Thunderbolt1000T Says:
Nov 19, 2008 - That could have been a 3T22 then. They're supposed to sound the Hi-Lo signal for fire calls, but that particular siren may have a stuck damper. Where was this at?
FreezingInAlaska Says:
Nov 19, 2008 - Lebanon County, Pennsylvania
FBHSswimmer2006 Says:
Nov 19, 2008 - i use to live in Westmoreland County and some of our sirens were 3T22s and i think that only one of them sounded the Hi-Low for a fire call but the rest of them only did Attack or Alert, depending on how the fire company had it set up.
EvanToTheFutureDude Says:
Nov 19, 2008 - Sounds like a 2T22 or 3T22 siren
Toledo2T22 Says:
Nov 19, 2008 - Personally I Think it is a 2t22, I used to live across the Ottawa River (Toledo Ohio to Fort Wayne Indiana) and Washington township VFD had a 2t22. I love the sound of 2t22 in attack mode for a fire call. Except in the middle of the night.
Thunderbolt1000T Says:
Nov 19, 2008 - That's weird how they tested that siren in Alert twice. BTW, that's a Federal Signal 2T22 or 3T22. 2T22's were some of the most reliable sirens ever made. They don't require as much maintanence as a lot of other sirens.