Last reviewed June 20, 2026
Review · Leslie

Leslie S-3L Supertyfon Locomotive Horn Review (2026)

The Leslie S-3L Supertyfon is the classic 3-chime diesel-locomotive air horn. We aggregate specs, the #25/#31/#44 bell chord, pricing and who it's really for.

By Train Horn Hub Editorial June 17, 2026 Updated June 17, 2026
Diesel locomotive, the kind of mainline engine that carried Leslie Supertyfon air horns
Pros
  • +Genuine locomotive pedigree — the most common diesel-era 3-chime Leslie ever built
  • +Authentic, instantly recognizable 'railroad' chord from the #25/#31/#44 bell set
  • +Heavy die-cast aluminum construction designed for decades of mainline service
  • +Supertyfon tooling is back in production under HornBlasters, so parts and rebuilds are supported
  • +Loud — rated 144 dB at 100 PSI, with the deep low chime that smaller kits can't reproduce
Cons
  • Not a consumer kit — the horn ships bare, with no compressor, tank, valve or wiring
  • Demands a serious high-volume air system (large tank + high-CFM compressor) to sound right
  • Heavy (roughly 25-30 lb) and physically large, so mounting on a normal truck is a project
  • Genuine vintage S-3L units are collector items with inconsistent pricing and condition
  • Leslie never published chord frequencies, and the dB rating's test distance isn't disclosed
  • Modern production focuses on the RS-3L variant, so a true S-3L often means the used market

Methodology

This review aggregates publicly available information from manufacturer specifications, retailer listings, and verified user reviews. We do not perform hands-on testing. Last reviewed June 17, 2026. For the Leslie S-3L Supertyfon we drew on the HornBlasters Supertyfon product and history pages (HornBlasters acquired the Leslie Supertyfon tooling in late 2021), the Gotham Rail & Marine model reference for bell configuration, collector-market auction listings for vintage pricing, and general corporate background on Leslie Controls. Where a number is a manufacturer or retailer claim rather than an independent measurement, we say so. Full source list is at the bottom.

Quick verdict

The Leslie S-3L Supertyfon is not a train-horn “kit” — it is an actual diesel-locomotive air horn, and for decades it was the single most common 3-chime Leslie riding on North American locomotives. That heritage is exactly why enthusiasts want it: the #25/#31/#44 bell set produces the deep, slightly-dissonant chord that most people picture when they imagine a freight train leaning on its horn. We rate it 4.2/5. It loses points not for quality but for practicality — it arrives as a bare casting with no air system, it is heavy and large, and a genuine S-3L increasingly means shopping the used and collector market. For the right buyer, though, nothing from the consumer aftermarket sounds quite like it.

What it is

The S-3L is a three-chime member of Leslie’s Supertyfon family, the line that debuted in 1951 and quickly replaced Leslie’s earlier Chime-Tone horns. The “S” denotes Supertyfon, the “3” the number of chimes, and the “L” the bell-length series — the longest, lowest-pitched bells Leslie offered, which is what gives the S-3L its characteristic low-end growl. Three power chambers feed three flared bells fanned out along a cast manifold; air rushing past the internal diaphragms produces three notes sounded together as a chord.

Leslie Supertyfon 3-chime locomotive air horn (current-production RS-3L), die-cast aluminum
Photo: manufacturer’s product page (used under fair use for editorial review).

It is important to be clear about what the S-3L is for. This is a locomotive horn first and a vehicle horn second. It was engineered to be fed by a locomotive’s onboard air supply at sustained pressure, and to be heard at grade crossings miles away. People absolutely do mount Supertyfons on trucks and rat rods, but doing it well is a fabrication-and-air-system project, not an afternoon install. If you want plug-and-play, a packaged kit like the HornBlasters Conductor’s Special 228H is a far easier path; the S-3L is for buyers chasing authenticity.

Specifications

Leslie published relatively little consumer-style spec data over the horn’s life, so the figures below combine the original locomotive design with the current-production Supertyfon dimensions documented by HornBlasters, which now owns the tooling. Treat the dB and range figures as manufacturer/retailer claims.

SpecValue
Type3-chime locomotive air horn (Supertyfon series)
Chime / bell setBells #25, #31, #44 (the “L” long-bell series)
Sound output144 dB at 100 PSI (test distance not disclosed)
Operating pressure~90–140 PSI; rating quoted at 100 PSI
Effective rangeClaimed up to ~3.5 miles
Air inlet1/2” NPT
MaterialDie-cast aluminum body and bells
Dimensions (current production)~26.5 in L × 17.5 in W × 9.25 in H
Weight~25–30 lb depending on casting
Power sourceVehicle/locomotive compressed-air system
ManufacturerLeslie Controls; Supertyfon line now produced by HornBlasters
Warranty (current production)1-year manufacturer’s defect warranty

One honesty note: Leslie famously tuned its chords slightly off-key on purpose, on the theory that a mildly dissonant chord cuts through ambient noise better than a clean major triad. The exact frequencies of the #25/#31/#44 bells were never published as a consumer spec, so we won’t invent Hz values — the bell numbers are the reliable, verifiable identifier of the S-3L chord.

What it includes

This is the part that surprises first-time buyers. A Leslie S-3L — vintage or new-production — is sold as the horn alone.

  • The cast aluminum 3-chime horn with bells #25, #31 and #44
  • A 1/2” NPT air inlet for connection to your own air system
  • No air compressor
  • No air tank
  • No solenoid valve, air lines or fittings
  • No wiring, switch or relay
Leslie Supertyfon 3-chime horn showing the three flared bells of the #25/#31/#44 set
Photo: manufacturer’s product page (used under fair use for editorial review).

Everything needed to actually make noise is a separate purchase. Budget for a high-output compressor, a tank large enough to sustain pressure through a long blast, a heavy-duty solenoid valve sized for the horn’s appetite, and the relay/wiring to trigger it safely. If you’ve never wired a horn before, our train horn relay wiring guide and installation walkthrough cover the basics.

Pros

  • The real locomotive sound. The S-3L was the workhorse 3-chime Leslie of the diesel era — its chord is the authentic article, not an approximation.
  • Serious build. Die-cast aluminum bells and manifold built for years of mainline duty, not a stamped trumpet set.
  • Still supported. With HornBlasters now manufacturing the Supertyfon line, the tooling, rebuilds and replacement parts didn’t disappear with the original maker.
  • Genuinely loud, low and far-reaching. A 144 dB claim at only 100 PSI, with deep low-bell content small kits can’t match.
  • Collectible. Genuine vintage units hold value and carry railroad history many enthusiasts care about.

Cons

  • Bare horn only. No compressor, tank, valve or wiring in the box — the air system is entirely on you.
  • Air-hungry. To sound right it wants a large tank and a high-CFM compressor; an undersized system makes it sputter.
  • Big and heavy. Roughly 25–30 lb and over two feet long; mounting on a typical pickup is a fabrication job.
  • Sourcing. True vintage S-3L units come from the used/collector market with variable condition and pricing.
  • Thin published data. No official chord frequencies, and the dB figure’s measurement distance isn’t stated.

Alternatives

  • Leslie RS-3L Supertyfon — the closest sibling and what’s actually in current production. Same #25/#31/#44 bell chord, but on the more compact “R” clustered manifold that’s friendlier to mount. If you love the S-3L sound but want a new unit, start here.
  • Nathan AirChime K5LA — the five-chime icon of the modern locomotive horn world. Bigger, more complex chord and even more presence; also bare-horn-only and even hungrier for air.
  • Nathan AirChime K3LA — the three-chime Nathan, the natural cross-shop against the S-3L for buyers comparing the two great American locomotive-horn makers.

For pure loudness rankings across both real locomotive horns and consumer kits, see our loudest train horns guide.

Install / compatibility notes

Leslie Supertyfon 3-chime horn manifold and mounting orientation
Photo: manufacturer’s product page (used under fair use for editorial review).

The S-3L connects through a 1/2” NPT inlet, which is a clue to its appetite: this is a large-port horn that expects real airflow. A workable vehicle setup generally means:

  • Air supply. A high-output 12V or 24V compressor feeding a tank in the multi-gallon range, so pressure doesn’t collapse mid-blast.
  • Pressure. Plan for an operating window around 90–140 PSI; more pressure means more volume but check your tank and fittings are rated for it.
  • Valve. A heavy-duty solenoid valve with a large orifice — an undersized valve chokes the horn and kills the low chime.
  • Mounting. Solid, vibration-resistant brackets bolted to structure, not sheet metal, given the weight and the forces a horn this size generates.
  • Drainage. Mount with the bells angled slightly down so water doesn’t pool in the chambers; see our notes on where to mount a train horn.

Electrically it’s no different from any air horn: the solenoid is switched through a relay so the cab button only carries trigger current. If you’re sizing tubing, our air line size guide explains why a horn like this wants larger line than a compact trumpet set. And because it’s a big air consumer, expect your compressor to cycle — review compressor duty cycle before you buy the air side.

On legality: a horn this loud is for off-road, show, or controlled use in many places, and some jurisdictions restrict aftermarket horns on public roads. Check your state’s rules before installing.

Sources

Verdict

The S-3L Supertyfon is the real thing — a legitimate diesel-locomotive 3-chime horn for railfans, restorers and serious enthusiasts who want authentic railroad sound and will build a proper air system around it, not a plug-and-play kit for the average truck.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers to the questions people ask most about this topic.

How loud is the Leslie S-3L Supertyfon?
Retailer specs for the current-production Supertyfon 3-chime list 144 dB at 100 PSI, with claims of being audible up to roughly 3.5 miles. The test distance behind that dB figure isn't disclosed, so treat it as a manufacturer/retailer claim rather than an independent measurement.
What's the difference between the S-3L and the RS-3L?
Both use the same three bells — #25, #31 and #44 — so the chord is essentially the same. The difference is the manifold layout: the classic S-3L spreads its bells along a cast manifold, while the RS-3L uses the more compact 'R' clustered arrangement that's easier to mount. New units today are generally the RS-3L; a true S-3L often comes from the used market.
Does the S-3L come with an air compressor and tank?
No. Like all locomotive-style horns, the S-3L is sold as the bare horn with a 1/2" NPT inlet. You supply the compressor, tank, solenoid valve, air lines and wiring separately, and it needs a high-volume air system to sound its best.
Can I put a Leslie S-3L on my truck?
Yes, but it's a project. At roughly 25–30 lb and over two feet long, with a big appetite for air, it needs sturdy mounting and a serious compressor-and-tank setup. Many local laws also restrict horns this loud on public roads, so confirm legality and plan the install before buying.
How much does a Leslie S-3L cost?
Genuine vintage S-3L units trade on the used and collector market, where condition drives price and figures vary widely, while the closest current-production Supertyfon 3-chime (the RS-3L) sells as a stand-alone horn for considerably more. Compare condition carefully before buying.