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Fire Station Alerting Horns, Farmington NH

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  • Опубликовано: 8 ноя 2009
  • If anyone else has or knows of a system that is like this (not gamewell diaphones) please let me know, I did a pretty intensive search for other systems like this and I was not able to find any other active systems or who makes them.
    This is a video of the fire alarm horns in Farmington NH, these are very old, almost original to the fire department itself, having been moved to this location from the previous station in 1974. In the town, major buildings (and street corner boxes at one time) such as large old factories, apartment buildings, schools, the lumber mill, municipal buildings, and other buildings with a higher fire danger are connected via telegraph wire or radio transmitters to a monitoring computer inside an office of the fire station. When a signal is recieved the computer begins to decode the telegraph signal (or instantly knows the radio box signal) and activates the paging system with a pre-recorded message. Then the computer activates a solenoid broadcasting a coded number signal through the horns across the town. If you count the blasts you get a number: 44, 56, 241, 33 etc. the number corresponds to a Gamewell box number at a specific location, the fire dept. actually passes out reference sheets to members and any townspeople who request it. Surprisingly, as opposed to finding the horns annoying, the people like them, and feel it somewhat keeps them in the loop. I have seen many a refrigerator with the box listings on it. As for the range of the horns, they cover most of the town, I used to live about 6 or 7 miles away from the station on the outskirts of town, and with the right weather conditions I could make out the horns enough to correctly decode the signal. Hope you enjoy the video, and don't be fooled, the horns are really loud from where I'm standing you can see me jump when the first round goes off.
    Btw: this was done as a prank / congratulations announcement during a department members' wedding, but it was a good opportunity for me to get video of this. I will be posting a follow up video that shows the alarm computer.

Комментарии • 136

  • @RileyStanchina
    @RileyStanchina  14 лет назад +13

    Yeah, I love how you can hear the blasts roll across the valley.

  • @Xfiremansteve0911
    @Xfiremansteve0911 2 месяца назад +2

    Goffstown NH use to run horns on all 3 of our stations.

  • @Branchporter
    @Branchporter 11 лет назад +6

    Penn Yan, NY also uses a Gamewell system that "honks" out a different code for each pull box. The present horn is one toned, but before the firehouse burned in 1967, there was a cluster of three horns that sounded a pleasing musical chord. It was powerful - if you were close, it would vibrate your whole body, and could be heard for miles. I've looked for a video with a similar triple horn, but couldn't find one.

    • @jjentertainment6011
      @jjentertainment6011 Год назад +1

      Do you know what the siren on top of the horns is used for?

  • @flyoversirens3704
    @flyoversirens3704 5 лет назад +8

    If I were to have designed the Gamewell system, I would have made a standard "Attention Blast." Simply a three to five second blast to get the firefighters attention to prepare to count so they get it the first time.

  • @jakewebber4567
    @jakewebber4567 Год назад +2

    Wernersville State Hospital about 30 minutes outside of Reading, PA has horns identical to these, right down to the pitch. Back in the day there was a fire station on the grounds, and if someone pulled the fire alarm handle, the horns would sound the number of the building (ex. “35” would be 3 short blasts, a pause, and then 5 short blasts, 5 times in a row). It was updated through the years and is now hooked up to the smoke detectors in the buildings.

  • @tgreen603
    @tgreen603 2 года назад +2

    Firefighter in allenstown. I love it when the tones go off! Whether its in the station or on the pager.

  • @walterpayne5177
    @walterpayne5177 7 лет назад +2

    Sunbury, Pa fire department had a similar horn system. When a box was called in the horns would let us know which box it was. The first horn was located on the roof of the Rescue Hose Company and would sound off first, then a few seconds later the second horn which was at the south end of town would go to echo the box coming in to those who lived down there. It would cycle three times before stopping.

  • @darrylseamans4644
    @darrylseamans4644 5 лет назад +1

    Windham, Maine had horns like this atop their station in Boody's corner. You could hear them all the way across town. Two blasts at 9 p.m. were a nightly test and, according to local lore, to announce the beginning of a curfew for teenagers. Any other time you heard them there was a fire call. At 1 in the morning it was eerie to hear them going off. Usually they'd be accompanied at that point by sirens from South Windham and other towns providing help in case they required mutual aid. When I attended the primary school across from the fire station, blasts from the horn would get us running over to the windows to watch the trucks leave the station. Very exciting stuff for the kids and also annoying for the teachers who tried to get us to calm back down and pay attention to our lessons!

  • @wtb3nkfd54
    @wtb3nkfd54 14 лет назад +2

    Union Fire District in South Kingstown RI has horns on 7 out of 8 stations, 4 of them are non-diaphone.
    Double set on Wakefield station, single horns on West Kingston, Tuckertown and Matunuck stations. Diaphones on Peace Dale (double) Tower Hill (single) and Snug Harbor (single) stations.

  • @audinos4827
    @audinos4827 12 лет назад +1

    Up until the early 90's, there was a Federal Electric air horn system in Mt. Shasta, California, which dated from the early 40's. Ten horns (two large, eight small) on the police station and two sets of three horns each (one large, two small) in other parts of town were controlled via phone line by a mechanical clockwork encoder with removable cams for various codes. The ten horns are still there but no longer used.

  • @rodneyperry6942
    @rodneyperry6942 7 лет назад

    they had a system quite similar to this one, in Herkimer, NY. they had a horn at the station and 1 at the edge of town and they kinda held a duet when they went off at noon. and yes, just like you guys, it was coded. i don't think they use it anymore, as when I've been to my grandmother's house last week, i don't recall hearing it. its one of those things i have as a memory from my childhood

  • @RileyStanchina
    @RileyStanchina  11 лет назад +1

    The fire station is the "central station" for many of the fire alarm systems in town, meaning the alarms are monitored at the fire station. However, there is no full time dispatcher or other person with the task of monitoring alarms. So if the crews are asleep, or out on runs, the alarm would go unanswered. This is a fully automated system that activates the pagers, and when working properly, tells the off duty personnel where the alarm is.

  • @kayterssss
    @kayterssss 3 года назад

    Martins Ferry and Yorkville OH had this system. I don’t know why Yorkville quit using theirs. My parents worked in the town starting in the late 70’s and don’t remember it being used and my dad moved there in late 1990 and I only remember a siren being used. Martins Ferry used theirs up until a little past when the county went to 9-1-1 systems in the late 1990’s. I think they used it primarily because the city is mostly rural. Definitely worked, on a real clear day you could hear it 2-3 towns over.

  • @RileyStanchina
    @RileyStanchina  14 лет назад +2

    Yup, we have the same size air tank, and used to have a cord operated valve as well. Sounds like an almost identical system. Thanks for your input.

    • @knowledgeispowermediaprodu7094
      @knowledgeispowermediaprodu7094 2 года назад

      When I was a youngster growing up in a rural part of Oregon, I can remember hearing that super loud siren, like a tornado siren, going off to alert the volunteers. We always got so excited to see all the action! By action, I mean the trucks and you guys pulling out, sirens blaring, we would chase y'all down the street cheering!

    • @KevinLyons-gn7eu
      @KevinLyons-gn7eu 5 месяцев назад

      It appears to be a diralhorn fire whistle

    • @KevinLyons-gn7eu
      @KevinLyons-gn7eu 5 месяцев назад

      @@knowledgeispowermediaprodu7094 what station what is that horn used? Is it still there today?

  • @jk09345568
    @jk09345568 4 года назад +1

    This is still an awesome vid in 2020.

  • @jenn1872
    @jenn1872 8 лет назад +2

    Warren State Hospital uses the same type of code signalling for fires and other emergencies ... I don't know all the codes, but the one that I do know is 2 long blasts that stand for "all clear"
    they will blast out a a 3 number code ... that tells them the building, the floor in the building and the section of the building ... mostly used for fires or fire drills, but if there is a tornado warning that triggers the eas, they will sound off short blasts with it nonstop for I think 2 or 3 minutes

  • @joshuasheriff4160
    @joshuasheriff4160 10 лет назад

    waldwick nj used to have a Gamewell Diaphone on the police tower it was taken down in the year 2000 but i hope they get new ones.

    • @markrosen5282
      @markrosen5282 4 года назад

      Midland Park has horns as well. ruclips.net/video/eTF-uujLFUw/видео.html

  • @FireLt4104
    @FireLt4104 14 лет назад

    We had the same thing in Newington, NH it was a tied in with the Keltron, a box tripped in and it would blast the horns for 4 rounds of the box. It was loud enough I could hear it at night when I lived in Atlantic Heights in Portsmouth! the pager would trip, and i would listen while i got dressed to count out the blasts...When a box like 178 or 197 rang in, it woke EVERYONE in town. There was also a pull cord on the actuator valve that you could pull to manually sound the horns.

  • @HobbyOrganist
    @HobbyOrganist 10 лет назад +1

    I believe I may have one of the gamewell boxes from this town, the inner box shell has "FARMINGTON" stenciled on it's top in old paint

    • @RileyStanchina
      @RileyStanchina  5 лет назад

      Do you still have it? If so what is the box number?

  • @RileyStanchina
    @RileyStanchina  14 лет назад +1

    @Firfighter80 It was the reception of a dept. members wedding, it was kindof our own "wedding church bells" if you will. We sent out a disregard announcment over the radio before doing this.

  • @Z1CAUSEDEATH
    @Z1CAUSEDEATH 10 лет назад

    When i moved to the town I'm at now back in 89, that was the very first thing we heard. Our town used to have a triple horn setup right smack dab in the middle of town. It was so loud that I wouldn't walk by it at all. It used to sound off what kind of call it was alerting and where. I don't miss it. and I still have air horn phobia

  • @ivancoley11
    @ivancoley11 4 года назад

    Those horns sound old fashion

  • @jamesfraser7297
    @jamesfraser7297 5 лет назад

    The first fire deprtment I joined had an air operated horn like this. It also sounded at dinner time 1 was a still alarm, 42 was for a fire out of town, 32 was for a fire in Calais. After that it was all box alarms. Calais and Milltown also had this system, so it somtimes got confusing.

  • @kylefirebuffandsirenswqvc7882
    @kylefirebuffandsirenswqvc7882 8 лет назад +6

    incoming box alarm

  • @Heyde1979
    @Heyde1979 14 лет назад +1

    I love a fire dept that still blows the box number out

  • @Mrberlinnh
    @Mrberlinnh 12 лет назад

    Berlin, New Hampshire has a horn like this. It blows every day at 12:00 noon (twice as a test) and also blows to call in off duty firefighters. I'm not sure what system it is, but it sound something like this one. The one in Berlin is loud, you can hear it in the next town up, Milan, if you listen closely.

  • @paulhaggerty9933
    @paulhaggerty9933 9 лет назад +2

    They are Clark-Cooper Air Horns, Model 810. Probably using 110 PSI Per Blast. These horns have a range of 4 Miles. I just reinstalled the Lyndhurst, NJ Fire Department, Clark-Cooper Air Horn's. Model 810 yesterday. The reason why we put them back into service, is due to Hurricane Sandy. But took 3 years for the town to budget a New Air System. They will be activated between the hours of 08:00 & 20:00 Hours. There is alot of reasons, why we went back to this. If you want to know email me.

    • @doverpoint1
      @doverpoint1 9 лет назад

      Do you know how many dB's these are at 100 feet?

    • @paulhaggerty9933
      @paulhaggerty9933 8 лет назад

      +Lily Dane They are a 114 dBI, at 100 Feet and Frequency in hertz, is 240

  • @roxxma
    @roxxma 13 лет назад

    Burlington, MA had the same system well into the Seventies, when it went to an all professional force. They used the horn into the 90s to signal school cancellations.

  • @joshuamarcus1
    @joshuamarcus1 12 лет назад

    Holy hell!! I could just imagine the complaints you guys must get on those horns! We have an "air raid" type siren system (that is not very loud) that goes off for fire dispatches only. Any other type of dispatch the county hits our alternate tones for alert without the siren and we hear complaints on that when it goes off.

  • @audinos4827
    @audinos4827 14 лет назад

    These are probably Cunningham Air Whistles installed by Federal Signal sometime in the 40's. These were very popular in northern California and some are still in use.

  • @juanzingarello4005
    @juanzingarello4005 9 лет назад +2

    Growing up in Middletown NY there were two fire houses in town that would periodically honk these horns. And one other firehouse with a siren. Now you don't even hear them anymore. I guess technology like digital notification and communication systems made these obsolete.

    • @radiosnmore1225
      @radiosnmore1225 6 лет назад

      Juan Zingarello I LIVE 20 MINUTES AWAY AND THEY HAVE AN STH 10 THAT REPLACED THE DIAPHONES

    • @Hellsarchon
      @Hellsarchon 5 лет назад

      Oh the one posted in West Glens Falls beautiful fire horn

  • @FireLt4104
    @FireLt4104 14 лет назад

    The same circuit that allowed the keltron card to send the signal to the tapper activated the valve coming from the compressed air tank to the horns. the air tank was HUGE, at least 12 feet tall and 3.5 feet in diameter. Very similar to the Diaphone system.

  • @HardDriveGuruOfficial
    @HardDriveGuruOfficial 14 лет назад

    This sounds eerily similar to the fire alarms at school! I like these better though - they're of a higher quality.

  • @jtd321
    @jtd321 13 лет назад

    The Town of Bar Harbor, Maine has a System like this with 2 horns, except i'm pretty sure they don't go off for a alarm anymore, They go off at 12PM and 9PM every day.

  • @SCFire980
    @SCFire980 13 лет назад

    Painted Post Fire Dept., New York has a loud horn blast. I found out one day because they have a stupid traffic light out in front about 100 ft. away. Well, one day it went off while I was waiting for the light to turn Green. I about shit my pants that summer day with my windows rolled down when it went off. OMG!

  • @benjamincormack3217
    @benjamincormack3217 7 лет назад +15

    I prefer sirens

    • @johnwashburn7423
      @johnwashburn7423 7 лет назад +2

      I prefer sirens but the advantage of horns is that they can bleat a code that gives the firefighters an approximate idea of where the incident is.

    • @noahcuce100
      @noahcuce100 5 лет назад +1

      Same

    • @annieslots2941
      @annieslots2941 5 лет назад

      Me too

  • @rorysalarms8110
    @rorysalarms8110 2 года назад +1

    Are the horns still being used today

  • @audinos4827
    @audinos4827 11 лет назад

    Branchporter: there is a video of the fire horn in Dunsmuir, California, which has three tuned horns. Unfortunately, one of them isn't working, but two- and three-horn combinations were once common in northern California.

  • @xthemwordx
    @xthemwordx 14 лет назад

    ok. i was thinking something like that, but i think i just couldn't count. that's cool. thanks for explaining.

  • @patrickrogers9499
    @patrickrogers9499 10 лет назад

    The Borough of Freehold , N.J. has a dual head Gamewell Diaphone system still in place atop their firehouse . Used to live there and that thing would shake the car windows when you drove by ! Don't know if they still use it at all anymore or not . They used to blow it a night back in the 60's , 70,s and the 80's !

    • @ElyseHorvath
      @ElyseHorvath 10 лет назад

      Also at the Neptune first aid they have a regular gamewell diaphone

    • @turbonegroegg
      @turbonegroegg 9 лет назад

      Patrick Rogers We just moved into the Borough last september and had no idea what that horn noise was. So I guess its safe to say theyre still blowing that thing to this day.

  • @jakeeves2149
    @jakeeves2149 7 лет назад +1

    the Canada airbourn fire services uses these in frontenac countey to alert the public if there is a large forest fire or a large explosion

  • @anthonyvansaders8234
    @anthonyvansaders8234 9 лет назад

    The Rockaway Borough NJ Fire Dept which I am on has three horns that we still use for fires and other calls

  • @cripticgatekeep
    @cripticgatekeep 12 лет назад

    Out here in Victor Montana we have something similar to your system. Our pagers have the same beeping tone. But when our pagers go off the siren on top of the hall start going off.

  • @fireems6231
    @fireems6231 11 лет назад

    BayHead NJ--a small Ocean County coastal town--has those horns. The next town over--Point Pleasant--had the gamewell diaphones---a different sound.

  • @roadrebel94
    @roadrebel94 12 лет назад

    Smiths Grove Kentucky Volunteer Fire Department has a horn system we dont use it any longer but we do still have it installed

  • @djsmexyy
    @djsmexyy 12 лет назад

    Clinton NY has this type of siren, makes you jump outta yer skin.

  • @paulwatson7534
    @paulwatson7534 7 лет назад

    Village of Bennington Vermont used to have the same system. I don't know if they still use it. I grew up there and it was still in use in the 70s

  • @audinos1840
    @audinos1840 9 лет назад +5

    Most of these horns were made by Cunningham Air Whistle, which still makes them today.

    • @michaelgatien4277
      @michaelgatien4277 4 года назад

      which cunningham air whistle models does Bar Harbor, ME have?

  • @elvismanrocks
    @elvismanrocks 3 года назад

    That sounds like a ship in stress!😂

  • @annieslots2941
    @annieslots2941 5 лет назад +1

    Sounds like a hockey goal horn

  • @jamespiroli823
    @jamespiroli823 3 года назад

    We had one in Aliquippa Pa in the 60's and 70's

  • @RileyStanchina
    @RileyStanchina  14 лет назад +1

    @NEXT300 Attention all Farmington Fire monitors, respond to your station for an incoming box alarm. (repeat)

  • @FireLt4104
    @FireLt4104 14 лет назад

    the horns sound out the same way the tapper on a punch tape or a house bell sounds out. For example, Box 135 would sound one blast, a 5 second pause, then 3 blasts, a 5 second pause, then 5 blasts followed by a 10 second pause. then it would repeat this same cycle 2 or 3 more times depending on a departments policy.

  • @fireexplorer24
    @fireexplorer24 12 лет назад

    There's a horn in Westfield, NY it has a one horn system and its three toots for a medical call and 5 for a fire

  • @goodDrummerman
    @goodDrummerman 11 лет назад +1

    So does everyone in the city wake up when this alarm goes off?

  • @Harvick29ism
    @Harvick29ism 12 лет назад

    Rensselaer, NY does it for non-EMS Calls.

  • @danielmcgorray5245
    @danielmcgorray5245 11 лет назад

    I remember living in Eggertsville NY during early 1960's hearing their Gamewell horns
    at Eggertsville Hose, Alternating with a model 2 siren, on a pole near the 27 cors( Amherst ny, very scary to a kid listening at night time, alerting volunteers. Took
    them out of service in 1981.
    out

  • @firepower782
    @firepower782 13 лет назад

    That's wild. Really cool.

  • @iceman977th
    @iceman977th 11 лет назад

    Never seen a horn on a fire hall before. Always been a rotary/electrical siren. Very different for sure.

    • @mrwonderful2142
      @mrwonderful2142 Год назад

      We had them all over northern new England forever up until around Y2K
      The ones in my town also blasted daily at noon and 5pm

  • @fire214
    @fire214 11 лет назад

    Yes the City of Rensselaer NY uses this system as well......

  • @smhklb
    @smhklb 14 лет назад

    Monsey, Rockland County, NY used to have something that sounded like this. Don't know if they still do. Haven't lived near there for over 21 years now.

    • @jwills22
      @jwills22 3 месяца назад

      The Jews got it shut off

  • @willtreen9473
    @willtreen9473 9 лет назад

    At Banner Elk, NC, we have an air raid sirens that goes off.

  • @jk09345568
    @jk09345568 11 лет назад

    Wow. Yes it does sound like a ship's horn.

  • @eng60nvfd
    @eng60nvfd 12 лет назад

    Winsted ct used to have a system just like this the number of blasts corresponded to the box number so everyone knew where the call was

  • @Westcoastguy
    @Westcoastguy 3 года назад

    My dad used to live one minute walk from there.

  • @RomeoSierra011
    @RomeoSierra011 6 лет назад

    I recently reopened a Volunteer station and was thinking it would be nice to have an old school siren or horn like this just for nostalgia. A link to the system you have would be great. Of course I'd want to program it so it would not go off in the midldle of the night.

  • @jk09345568
    @jk09345568 4 года назад

    Maybe the reason is that some of them are very old.

  • @dudleyFF1018
    @dudleyFF1018 13 лет назад

    Dudley MA still has this type of system

  • @paulhaggerty9933
    @paulhaggerty9933 8 лет назад

    Sorry about that error! They are 114dBi at 100 feet and 240 Hertz..

  • @shiphorns
    @shiphorns 13 лет назад

    Sounds like a matched pair of 8" Cunningham Air Whistles, probably sold to the FD by Federal.

  • @RileyStanchina
    @RileyStanchina  14 лет назад

    @FireLt4104 Exactly correct, ours sound four times (the same number of times the old telegraph code wheels turn coincidentally)

  • @AmandaStaller
    @AmandaStaller 12 лет назад

    i live in pennsylvania and we have this system. i live about 70 yds away from our town horn. it goes off one time and then the fire sirens go off. lately kids have been repeatedly hitting the horn around 2 in the morning and i am getting really agitated by it. it just went again.

  • @NEXT300
    @NEXT300 14 лет назад

    What does the radio say before the horn sounds? its sorta distorted

  • @RubyBoognish
    @RubyBoognish 11 лет назад

    These things are ALL OVER upstate New York. Almost every city I go to up here I see the pullboxes on about every other pole around the cities.

    • @markrosen5282
      @markrosen5282 4 года назад

      Many of them that you see nowadays are digital, will read out the code digitally. A lot of departments in NY have done away with the gamewell signals systems.

  • @BumberenzoManilupinoCity
    @BumberenzoManilupinoCity 7 лет назад +4

    It sounds like a truck horn

  • @onegoodname102
    @onegoodname102 3 года назад

    Idk if this is still active but canastota New York has the same one I have it on video

  • @xthemwordx
    @xthemwordx 14 лет назад

    so how exactly does the coding work. how can you tell what the numbers are.

  • @audinos4827
    @audinos4827 11 лет назад

    Closter is a town which has a diaphone.

  • @chucknorris3984
    @chucknorris3984 5 лет назад

    I'm pretty sure Monongahela fire in southwest PA has the same setup.

    • @jaysmith1408
      @jaysmith1408 5 лет назад

      Charles R978 borough of mon? Have to go check, thanks!

  • @roberttrains
    @roberttrains 10 лет назад

    Crokett CA Fire Uses a Old steam whistle at the CH refinery for there call out... The CH always has Steam being produced for there equipment and that Whistle....

  • @Zickcermacity
    @Zickcermacity 11 лет назад

    I live within range of three vol houses that had unique horns like these. I could tell which one it was by the pitch and direction it came from.
    Haven't heard them in over 20 years. Technology of some sort killed them. :(

  • @CODMarioWarfare
    @CODMarioWarfare 11 лет назад

    I think most NH are like that. Meredith has the same.

  • @beakins4
    @beakins4 11 лет назад

    Ok question, we just use pagers, whats the loud horn for?

  • @zanjani13
    @zanjani13 14 лет назад

    awesome vid man 5*

  • @joshuasheriff4160
    @joshuasheriff4160 10 лет назад

    WESTWOOD NJ USED TO HAVE ONE BUT THEY ONLY USE THE FIRE SIRENS NOW

  • @minkyblack
    @minkyblack 11 лет назад

    does that go off in the middle of the night?

  • @PlausableApple4
    @PlausableApple4 13 лет назад

    Sweet!

  • @RileyStanchina
    @RileyStanchina  11 лет назад

    Three, facing in different directions.

  • @TheDan4279
    @TheDan4279 12 лет назад

    it sound like ship horns

  • @SuperSpeedy0603
    @SuperSpeedy0603 12 лет назад

    what kind of alarm is this, my fire dept has the same one but like a sec shorter

  • @sonyamoore75
    @sonyamoore75 11 лет назад

    We have the same types of panel and box these are from sanford systems

  • @jk09345568
    @jk09345568 11 лет назад

    @FastLikeSquirrel! Oh. Does it sound like those Russian Attack Horns? Yeah I know I am a Modern Warfare 2 Alarm Freak. On this game when you do the Russian siegmant you hear these horns. They sound like that creepy low moan sound you are talking about.

  • @audinos4827
    @audinos4827 11 лет назад

    How many horns are up there?

  • @PaulieMac77
    @PaulieMac77 6 лет назад

    Screw living near that if it goes off in the middle of the night you'd shit yaself

  • @HankySpanky51
    @HankySpanky51 12 лет назад

    Holy Crap !!!

  • @luvmedearly77
    @luvmedearly77 11 лет назад

    Dang that's gotta be annoying... Sirens of passerby emergency vehicles are bad enough (especially at night). We even turn off our sirens in res. neighborhoods after the sun goes down. Maybe that's suppose to shoe off all the "less than desirables" out of the community. If so, good job (I think)

  • @mayeffit725
    @mayeffit725 9 лет назад

    Suncook had the same annoying horn. I wish it were diaphone...actually, I wish they would get rid of them altogether.

    • @mayeffit725
      @mayeffit725 9 лет назад

      Sorry, that should say HAS one. (Suncook is in southern NH between Concord and Manchester).

  • @york43k
    @york43k 10 лет назад

    Cazenovia Ny has the same horn

  • @paulhaggerty9933
    @paulhaggerty9933 8 лет назад

    They are a 114 bDi

  • @Parkerrhode
    @Parkerrhode 7 лет назад

    Lynnfield MA has the same thing

    • @actionfire4036
      @actionfire4036 7 лет назад

      Parker Rhode mclean and groton have the aame thing only grotons is different