I found this at Northern Kentucky University back in 2023.
Very nice picture there
That is most likely an ET-1080-WS-24.
Indeed: very rare find these days too given how long frosted strobe lenses haven’t been used.
It appears to be rebranded by honeywell; i wonder if there is or was a deltanet system in that building
If it was rebranded by Honeywell, then it might be an ET-1081-WS-24. I do not know how an ET-1081 is different from an ET-1080, but I have some notes here.
Thanks for the Help! The Building also has an Early 7002/T with open grill. I haven’t been to the building in a while but I hope they haven’t scrapped the old stuff.
Does the building have any other notification appliances? Are most of the devices horns or speakers? The ET-1081 might be a slow whoop sounder like I previously suspected, instead of a speaker.
They Have Federal Signal Selectones, Wheelock 7002s, Wheelock ET-1080-24-Rs, and Genesis Speaker Strobes in the other building.
I have a bad feeling the old ones might get removed soon.
Are the ET-1080-24-Rs labeled with the Honeywell logo? Those might also be ET-1081 speakers/sounders.
I can’t remember. I wasn’t into Fire Alarms back then. The reason I took those pictures was because I never saw Fire Alarms like those before.
I now believe this was an ET-1081-WS-24 or ET-1081-WH-24. This must be an extremely rare speaker strobe, as I have not found it online. Honeywell’s ET-1011-WS-24 has model number SC811B1013 and Honeywell’s ET-1081-WM-24 has model number SC811C1003, but I do not know what Honeywell’s model number for this speaker was.
NKU used to have Honeywell FS-90 fire panels. I’d have to look through my books to see if I have any specs or an ID on that speaker strobe. Honeywell has their own part numbers for devices manufactured by other parties. The Wheelock 7002 series horns are identified as Honeywell SC806xxxx or SC807xxxx.
Model numbers for other speaker strobes or horn strobes from Honeywell would also be interesting. Most of the devices I found online were either 15 or 15/75 cd.