A harsh buzzer that has its pitch going up and down. I never heard an old mechanical air raid siren.AG,
Wondered how that circuit would sound.
A mechanical air horn that rotates once every 5-10 seconds. After an initial ramp-up in volume due to the air compressor coming up to speed, there is a slight doppler change in pitch, and a much more noticeable sinusoidal variation in loudness with each rotation cycle.I never heard an old mechanical air raid siren.
The simulation clearly shows the audio frequency (pitch) slowly going up and down.Late to the party, but still confused. The multivibrator timing components have a one second time constant, so approximately 1 second in each of two states. I think the intent is for either the siren oscillator pitch **or** volume to increase for one second, decrease for one second, repeat. The problem here is that the words "raise" and "high level" can apply to either characteristic, frequency or amplitude, with two very different consequences.
TS: What do you mean by "high level": high frequency or high volume?
ak
| Thread starter | Similar threads | Forum | Replies | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S | Raid 1 on microSD | General Electronics Chat | 11 | |
| T | ERR: Could not mount root RAID d | General Electronics Chat | 10 | |
| X | Apple Xserve Raid Customization | General Electronics Chat | 15 | |
|
|
Forcing a RAID pair during repair | General Electronics Chat | 8 | |
|
|
IBM SCSI (posibly raid controler) driver | Automation, Robotics & Control | 0 |