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In 1970, Space Age Electronics introduced the first visual notification appliance, the AV32 light plate (which was installed over an existing horn) and V33 remote light. Meanwhile, in 1976, Wheelock introduced the first horn/strobe notification appliances with its 7000 series. The majority of visual signals throughout the 1970s and 1980s were ...
A Wheelock AS horn/strobe. In 1995, Wheelock introduced the AS, a combination horn and strobe. The AS was first created with a vertical position strobe on the right side of the horn, except for 110 candela models, which used a horizontal strobe. In 1997 when the NS was introduced, the strobe on all AS models was moved to the horizontal position.
A SpectrAlert Advance ceiling mount horn strobe. The SpectrAlert Advance was introduced in 2006 to replace the Legacy SpectrAlerts. [citation needed] Its main features were an updated mounting plate wiring design that allows for easier installation, contains more candela options, and has an updated design. The Advance came in the same models as ...
A fire alarm horn strobe (top), remote annunciator (middle) and pull station (bottom), connected together in a fire alarm system A fire alarm notification appliance as widely used under North American standards
Coded panels were the earliest type of central fire alarm control, and were made during the 1800s to the 1970s. A coded panel is similar in many ways to a modern conventional panel (described below), except each zone was connected to its own code wheel, which, depending on the way the panel was set up, would either do sets of four rounds of code until the initiating pull station was reset ...
The S2 Strobe was also introduced to allow strobes to be added to existing buildings with older Vigilon, 34000, 32000 or older systems. In the early 2000s, a revision was made to the Vigilon, featuring a green, smaller, 8 line LCD, however the layout of the LEDs is the same as the previous EN and BS Vigilon systems.
A hide-away strobe light fitted into a headlamp. The strobe light is the coiled glass tube in the bottom of the headlight assembly, near the center of the highlighted region of the picture (click picture to enlarge). The vehicle's stock lighting may also be modified to add flashing and strobe effects.
A high-intensity white strobe is used on structures that are taller than 700 feet (210 meters). These lights provide the highest visibility both day and night. Unlike a medium strobe, a high-intensity strobe does not provide 360° coverage; this requires the use of at least 3 high strobes at each level.