Reducing Speaker Volume for Siren Testing

So I am not totally clear and have 2 different projects I am thinking of.

The first is to use a Motorola speaker with a Federal or Whelen siren on the display (so pretty quiet). The speaker is 3.2 ohm/30 watt. A volume adjuster would be nice to fine tune it but I wouldn't need to adjust after setting it. Without knowing the voltage put out by the siren I am not sure how to be sure I would have the correct resistors. Looking for a volume level equivalent to quiet television or office speakerphone.

The other possible (and lower priority) would bet to run an above siren with a 58 watt speaker quieted down for the display.

Thoughts or info?
 
For the voltage produced by the siren, 33 volts AC comes to mind.

The L-PAD design from @Henry455 would be ideal for your application.
I have read this thread several times, done some other research and still not comfortable. I dont want to play around with expensive stuff when I don't understand it all. I totally get low voltage/wattage/amperage for lights. I do not have a good understanding of the siren ac output and speaker properties (been reading up on it but not comfortable enough to test it out without recommendations from those in the know).

I know enough to know I don't comprehend enough to do this properly and safely!
 
Review post #26 it can't be easier- install the resistor inline on one of the speaker leads and your work is done, you can use a simple radio speaker
 
Review post #26 it can't be easier- install the resistor inline on one of the speaker leads and your work is done, you can use a simple radio speaker
I am looking for the reasoning and effects behind something, that does not explain any of it. I have a hard time believing that one resistor is compatable with every siren and every speaker. If so, why have others used different values with results that they are happy with? I have and continue to research it but not coming up with an answer I am comfortable with testing.
 
@Jennifer Rose Towing
I don’t fully understand how it works either. But the L-Pad is designed for the audio world and designed for speakers and amps. So in my mind it works for me reducing my siren output for indoor use. I can’t find where I bought mine from. But I am sure it was relatively cheap. ($20-$40 I am guessing. I wouldn’t have paid more than that for my project)
 
I am looking for the reasoning and effects behind something, that does not explain any of it. I have a hard time believing that one resistor is compatable with every siren and every speaker. If so, why have others used different values with results that they are happy with? I have and continue to research it but not coming up with an answer I am comfortable with testing.
It's straight from FedSig, for well over 10 years I've been using this method testing sirens indoors running for as long as 5-10 mins on a simple 2-way radio speaker. I'm not an electrician so I don't know the science but it's simple, reliable and safe.
 
It's straight from FedSig, for well over 10 years I've been using this method testing sirens indoors running for as long as 5-10 mins on a simple 2-way radio speaker. I'm not an electrician so I don't know the science but it's simple, reliable and safe.
Do you have any bulletin or paperwork where they say that is ok? I would be fine with the specs/info from the manufacturer (or someone here who could give a basic explanation of it all).
 
Have a look at the Federal Signal Unitrol Omega 90 manual at https://www.fedsig.com/resource-document/file/8143 and you will see the following:

98JJLtH.jpg
 
Have a look at the Federal Signal Unitrol Omega 90 manual at https://www.fedsig.com/resource-document/file/8143 and you will see the following:

98JJLtH.jpg
Thank you. That should be fine then for a siren speaker, any idea about a smaller speaker? Says 4-100 ohm but the main speaker I want to use is a Motorola external 3.2 ohm for its size and portability. I figure only w couple of watts to the little speaker would be more then plenty. I'll try to reverse engineer the numbers for the Omega and see what else I can learn.
 

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Thank you. That should be fine then for a siren speaker, any idea about a smaller speaker? Says 4-100 ohm but the main speaker I want to use is a Motorola external 3.2 ohm for its size and portability. I figure only w couple of watts to the little speaker would be more then plenty. I'll try to reverse engineer the numbers for the Omega and see what else I can learn.
I keep telling you it will run a speaker as small/low watt as a 2-way radio speaker
 

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