Thu Jun 09, 2022 10:56 am
The 10V2T didn't really fit in with their modern lineup as far as the SPL per value was concerned. In addition to it not having a battery backup counterpart, they haven't advertised the single-phase version of these in a while now. They had that as an option a while back and probably still carried it for customers who demanded that kind of setup, but it puts Sentry in a bit of an awkward if they are building a siren with two 5 HP motors when the 3V8 with its smaller chopper is also being driven by a 5 HP motor. The three-phase only nature of the siren model made it unpalatable for areas that either didn't have the three-phase to run them available at the site and had to pay to get the electricity there or simply didn't want to deal with the service costs if they would have to pay higher rates for the power over a 240VAC single-phase line. For big single-phase sirens most places get either a 15V or 20V. Sentry does offer VFDs for their sirens and we have seen at least one township get 14Vs that run on VFDs. They could have offered it for the 10V2T as well, but running a three-phase siren on a VFD to give it power from a single-phase source is not the most ideal. Another thing to think about is the siren model had its own chopper size that was different from the rest. If I had to take a wild guess the 15V, 20V, and 16V use the same choppers since there's only a 1 dB difference between the AC sirens and it's pretty well known at this point that the 16V was derived from the 15V originally. The 15V is two 7V8s and the 20V is two 10Vs. If the 10V2T used a different chopper then dropping the model means Sentry doesn't need to spend the extra money to produce them.
I do suspect that they may introduce a new siren in the near future, possibly based on the 3V8, to replace the 10VxT model. The 10VxT is basically an M-10 flipped on its side with horns attached to the stator. The old dual-headed M-5 was based on the M-3, and that chopper eventually went into the 3V8. Sentry could apply the same design to the M-5 and create a new model, let's call it an "8VxT", that could achieve similar performance to the 10VxT if they give it extended horns. It kills three birds with one stone. They already have a DC motor that can drive the chopper and could be stacked to effectively make a mini 16V, a single-phase option since the 3V8 already comes with one to begin with, and it would give them a siren that could do close to the same amount of work with less "siren" as far as the smaller chopper is concerned. If they use what already exist in their product stack the siren would be 8 HP in DC form and 10 HP in AC form, but I think if they wanted to they could take the HP down a notch on the AC side of things. The M-5 at some point under Sterling was upgraded from the sluggish 5HP motor to a 7.5HP one, and those newer ones with the upgraded motor ran much better. They could probably get away with using a dual shaft 7.5 HP AC motor to run that model as a three-phase siren, and with the lower HP requirement they might be able to source a single-phase dual shaft motor for it. While they already have a 7.5 and 8 HP model of siren in production with the 7V8 and 7V8-B I think using two smaller choppers would have a chance of yielding higher SPL. I've heard a 16V1T-B and 14V-B in person before, and the 16V is defiantly louder from like 500 feet away. I threw the idea of to them in one of their posts on Facebook a while back, and they gave it a thumbs up. I've been glued to their page ever since trying to see what else they have in the pipeline.