ptonsparky
Tom
- Occupation
- EC - retired
We install Sirens for several towns in the area with one of them reporting that occasionally they will start on there own. Not all of them and usually after some POCO line disturbance. Storm or primary line malfunction. I only found out about the problem this spring. We looked at all of them, or so we thought, replaced some blocking diodes that were across DC coils and put in some new SPD on those units.
Today while on a service call in town we heard one of the sirens sounding. To make it short, a squirrel tested the voltage on the primary and blew the fuse. When the POCO replaced the fuse the siren control latched in and ran for a typical 3 minute cycle. This one did not have SPD, lightning arrestor, on it but am not sure that would have helped anyway. Some how it seems the disturbance is pulling in a control circuit and latching in. Some have stayed latched until power is removed via a disconnect. The control is normally through a Radio signal, manual control not automatic.
Any thoughts on where or what I might be using to filter this problem. We can not duplicate it.
Today while on a service call in town we heard one of the sirens sounding. To make it short, a squirrel tested the voltage on the primary and blew the fuse. When the POCO replaced the fuse the siren control latched in and ran for a typical 3 minute cycle. This one did not have SPD, lightning arrestor, on it but am not sure that would have helped anyway. Some how it seems the disturbance is pulling in a control circuit and latching in. Some have stayed latched until power is removed via a disconnect. The control is normally through a Radio signal, manual control not automatic.
Any thoughts on where or what I might be using to filter this problem. We can not duplicate it.