Tornado Sirens

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Can you hear the tornado sirens in your area?

Can't hear it
9
56%
Barely hear it
2
13%
Somewhat hear it
0
No votes
Hear it decently
0
No votes
Hear it Well!!!
5
31%
 
Total votes: 16

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TexasStooge
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Tornado Sirens

#1 Postby TexasStooge » Mon Apr 07, 2003 12:43 pm

Well, I can hear the sirens very well in my area.
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#2 Postby StormCrazyIowan » Mon Apr 07, 2003 12:46 pm

In the town I used to live in, I could hear them well, it was a small town, but now I live in a bigger one, and all I can hear is a faint sound.
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#3 Postby wx247 » Mon Apr 07, 2003 1:25 pm

I can hear them too well when they are testing them...just right when a storm is raging! It is a block or two away. :o
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#4 Postby JQ Public » Mon Apr 07, 2003 1:44 pm

i voted i can't hear them b/c we don't have any :)
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#5 Postby southerngale » Mon Apr 07, 2003 2:20 pm

JQ Public wrote:i voted i can't hear them b/c we don't have any :)


same here JQ...we're on our own! We could sure use them though. :o
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#6 Postby chadtm80 » Mon Apr 07, 2003 2:23 pm

JQ Public wrote:
i voted i can't hear them b/c we don't have any

Same here
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#7 Postby vbhoutex » Mon Apr 07, 2003 3:14 pm

JQ Public wrote:i voted i can't hear them b/c we don't have any :)


Same here JQ!!! Took them out several years ago.
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#8 Postby StormCrazyIowan » Mon Apr 07, 2003 3:18 pm

Hmmmm, I actually don't know for sure if Davenport has one or not! I hear sirens sometimes during rough weather, but it could just be a fire, this place is big enough! I know Buffalo has them though, I remember from when I lived there, everytime I heard it I ran outside :lol:
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#9 Postby weatherwunder » Mon Apr 07, 2003 7:20 pm

Our siren for our area is about 3 blocks from our house. So we hear it well.

When the go off, everyone runs inside, and I run outside with the camera!!
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#10 Postby ColdFront77 » Mon Apr 07, 2003 7:56 pm

I don't believe there are tornado sirens here in central Florida. I am positive that there aren't any in southeastern Massachusetts.
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#11 Postby MScoast » Mon Apr 07, 2003 8:06 pm

where I live, in north Biloxi, you can't hear them very well. Most of them are in the city...about 5-7 miles away.
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#12 Postby bfez1 » Mon Apr 07, 2003 8:19 pm

Same here, we don't have any but I did hear them broadcast thru the radio once. You know, the emergency broadcast system that says this is just a test, well it was the real thing that time.
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#13 Postby breeze » Mon Apr 07, 2003 9:00 pm

I live in a small, unincorporated town with no
sirens - thanks the Lord for weather radio!
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#14 Postby wx247 » Mon Apr 07, 2003 9:26 pm

:o Wow! I thought every town had storm sirens. I guess I just took it foregranted because every town I have lived in has had them. :o
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#15 Postby JQ Public » Mon Apr 07, 2003 10:38 pm

Nope north carolina doesn't have any. I am really surprised that parts of texas even if they are on the coast don't have them? Weird. I am even a little suprised that parts of florida don't have them. Cool poll texastooge :)
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#16 Postby wx247 » Tue Apr 08, 2003 8:23 am

I agree...good poll.
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#17 Postby polarbear » Tue Apr 08, 2003 2:16 pm

Many areas that have outdoor sirens often had them installed during the Cold War or were used for fire calls. Some communities in recent years have purchased them for weather warning purposes. Most of these cost in excess of $10,000 per unit. Smaller communities are less likely to spend this kind of money on outdoor sirens. Coverage is usually highest in urban and downtown areas, where as rural areas are less covered. The average coverage by these sirens is approximately a one mile radius.

Outdoor sirens are part of a multi-part warning process. They are only meant to give audible warning to people that are located outdoors, not in. NOAA Weather Radio is still the best, most reliable and fastest source for receiving severe weather warnings. I believe around 90-95% of the Contiguous U.S. is now covered by these transmitters. Range of each transmitter can range from 20 to 40 miles (depending on power output at the transmitter). Radios sold today come with either alerts through SAME or EAS tones or the standard 10 second 1050 Hz alert tone. They can sound audible alerts when normal audio is muted or "turn on" automatically so you can hear the warning message. The NWS will continue to improve the computer generated voices.
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#18 Postby Guest » Tue Apr 08, 2003 2:38 pm

Don't have them here where I work and I live out in the boonies so only warning I get is TV - radio or internet.

PMH
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#19 Postby StormCrazyIowan » Tue Apr 08, 2003 2:40 pm

Well in Buffalo, where I grew up, it wasnt actually a weather siren, they just let off the fire siren when bad weather was coming! All the firemen have scanners so when it goes off they know it is storm related.
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