Oh, well no wonder I for one don’t know that message if nobody has seemingly captured it on video yet. The “ballpark” version is quite unique though, & the fact that it’s used on multiple properties implies that it’s a standard Philadelphia-specific script, much like Boston’s specific standard voice message scripts.
Most manufacturers have standard message files for normal applications and segments that can be stitched together to customize messages. I have the usual Notifier messages in male and female voice and a couple languages. You can also use a recording app or type-to-voice app to create your own wave files.
Kaydenfaw20909090909
I don’t have any of those messages, but I do have old notifier VROM messages.
Not only are the soundfiles difficult to get ahold of, its inconceivablely rare to find a fike cybercat system anywhere in america.
I’ve recently obtained this handful of some Male and Female Gamewell-FCI Voice Messages.
These came from the old Potter 802 programming software I found in the Wayback Machine.
http://www.pottersignal.com/product/software/PVE-802_setup.exe
Default Male Message: “Male Evac 7.wav”
Was the tones on the archive or just the messages? There is this rare Gamewell FCI E3 440hz temporal 3 chime tone I’ve been trying to get raw audio from but with no success.
No clue, EST can get really random custom voice evacuation messages from building to building and panel to panel.
Actually, the 802 Series program files does have a 440Hz Chime Tone.
I hope this is the one you were looking for:
Yep that’s it, I recognize it from this video: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/jzC34HZTtLE
Can I get a link to that software? I want to see what’s in it.
Sorry for the late reply, here it is:
http://www.pottersignal.com/product/software/PVE-802_setup.exe
You have notifier multilingual messages? Is there a google drive with them?
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1U4XB5ZnH-kSR2uzxYHdnWkmvVHoMDpGA/view?usp=sharing Lol so apparently I made the first gamewell FCI E3 CO tone.
I had to put that whole thing through English auto translation because I don’t know Japanese well enough to know what they say in that language. I only know 1/2 German and that’s it.
I managed to find the Silent Knight Male “Bomb Threat” message in the Wayback Machine from an old 6820EVS listing in May 28, 2022:
Honeywell removed it from the resources tab, but the file is still hosted since 2022.
https://prod-edam.honeywell.com/content/dam/honeywell-edam/hbt/en-us/software-and-tools/firmware/Message9.wav
However, the other lesser-known male messages remain unobtainable for now unless I contact Honeywell of someone in the community has copies.
As I thought was possible (& it is) you can also get others by simply replacing the number at the end of the link.
I tried that already and didn’t work (I already have most of the messages there), did you get the “Anti-Terrorism” message by doing that?
It does exist in the Wayback Machine as “message14.ske1” on the old Silent Knight website, but when I run it in Audacity by importing the Raw Data, it sounds garbled and noisy, even though I can still hear the words.
No, but I was at least able to get messages 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, & 9 (none of which are the message in question): 3 & 7 don’t work for some reason.
That’s because those kinds of files are intended for the voice panels themselves to use, rather than the original raw audio that programs like media players & Audacity can play.
I was attempting to convert them which is why I tried that, Fire-Lite also once had 4 Spanish messages for the ECC-50/100 they had on their old site.
I didn’t have the opportunity to download them as they were hosted years ago, but the widely playable OGG and WAV versions were sadly not archived on that Wayback Machine page (I can’t remember where it’s located, I’ll try to post the page later).
However, they are hosting them here, but they are in SKE1.
Just in case, I still downloaded them so even if Honeywell decides to gatekeep them again, I could buy a Fire-Lite or Silent Knight panel that does support the SKE1 format, upload the messages with the software, and capture the live audio output, just like I plan to do with the G.E. ANS.