Irritating Doorbell Problem

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dalangdon

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Jul 2, 2016
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Location
Seattle, WA
One of the tasks I've been working on at my Mom's house is her doorbell. The old one was strictly a "ding" affair, with no pizazz at all, and she couldn't hear it.

So I went to Home Depot and bought a Zenith Doorbell that costs entirely too much, and has a cheesy pre-recorded "westminster" pattern, but is LOUD, and will get her attention.

The trouble is that the new doorbell will only play while the button is pressed in, which I suppose makes sense from an electrical standpoint, but I can't see how it is supposed to work. The included some sort of capacitor kind of thingy for the doorbell button, which I put in, but it doesn't help.

Any ideas?
 
Nope, not wireless. It hooked up to the old wires, and I replaced the button at the door.

And yes, Toggles, If you want it to play the whole eight notes, you have to hold it in for that length of time (or at least close) I think maybe it's defective also, but I wanted to make sure it wasn't the transformer or something.
 
I don't know what it is with doorbells. When my roommate in Minnesota bought the house, I bought him a nice doorbell as a gift. I forget why we needed a replacement, but it was a pretty one with a wood tone cover and those brass things that hang down, even though it was electronic. It was supposed to play an 8 tone Westminister, but no matter how he tried all he could ever get it to do was ding-dong. That was Home Depot too, maybe we should have gone back at the time.
 
I had doorbell problems for years...everything from sounding cheap, sometimes ringing when the button pushed & sometimes not & going off by itself during thunder/electrical storms. Problem solved...Big Old Fashioned Iron Door Knocker...looks cool, sounds cool & no more getting scared by a ringing bell in the middle of the night.
 
its usually the capacitor. They dont take power outages or fluctuations very well and are sometimes bad right out of the box. Check the wiring against the diagram too.
 
Low voltage bell -

That's exactly the doorbell I have. I find that people tend to just push the button once, expecting the traditional "ding-dong" sound from inside so it doesn't get too annoying. It is quite loud though and it's been fun to see the reactions of unsuspecting guests standing near it when it rings. "I squirted pee when that thing rang!" was about the best!

It has a very "vintage" sound to it and even better - it was dirt cheap! It's lying in the garage now, awaiting new drywall to be mounted to, but it's going back up as soon as the wall is ready ;-)
 
This house has a traditional mechanical chime type of bell, with the 3 foot long sound tubes (2 of them). Scares the heck out of the cats when it goes off. But I can't hear it when I'm in the back shop, so I bought a repeater with three remotes at Home Depot about 7 years ago. The main sending unit runs off the 24 volt signal to the main door bell. The repeaters are plugged into any 110 volt outlet. They are loud and sort of tacky sounding electric buzz dong, but at least I can tell when someone's at the front door when I'm in the back of the property. Oh, and they scare the heck out of the cats as well. Can't have everything! I have three of the repeaters - one in the master bath, one in the patio kitchen, and one in the back shop.
 
Ding Dong Dilemmas Part Deux

I really think it's something in the wiring in the house: I went out to ACE and bought a simple two note doorbell with real chimes. I hooked it up in the front door configuration (ding dong) and all I got was "ding" (which was the trouble with the original doorbell)

Could this be a transformer issue? Should I just burn down the house and start over?
 

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