Self Totaling WorkShift Timer with Horns
Rings buzzers when you want, reliably, and makes a lot of noise
- The buzzers are 102dB at 10'
You can add up to 2 more buzzers to this system.
- Self-totaling or non-totaling - you select what you need.
Call us if it is the non totaling version, this has to be changed before shipping.
- 100 employee capacity
- One IN and One OUT Punch Revision Zone
- stops people from punching IN early, or OUT late.
- Automatic Lunch Deduction feature
- Calculates in either hours and minutes (3:45) or military and 100th's (15.75)
- Pay to the minute, or round to the nearest 15 minute interval ("Quarter Hour Rounding")
- Prints day of week, or date
- Totaling is able to be turned off!
-capable to set to only to register the IN and OUT punches
- One Year Guarantee, Lifetime Technical Support
- Works fine with weekly, bi-weekly, semi-monthly and monthly pay periods
- Programmable Max Hours - after xx (like 14, then the next punch would automatically be IN)
- Includes Signal Module - rings bells
- Optional: Full power reserve - run the clock for hours during power outages
- The XL1000e is capable of being a fully automatic consecutive print time clock, replacing "clipper" type clocks, including the Amano CP3000 and CP5000
- In Non-Totaling mode, the machine prints one entry per line.
- One other note:
This machine can print totals in standard hours and minutes
or hours and 100th's.
It only prints IN and OUT times in the standard time format (1:15 and not 13.25)
This has been going on for years: People keep asking "How loud are your bells?"
Unfortunately, it's like describing a dinner at a restaurant. It depends on the environment.
Is it an empty room like a gymnasium? Does it have lots of rooms, or lots of background noise like a woodworking shop? Is this a warehouse with lots of rows of shelving and boxes of fabric?
Bells and buzzers all seem to max out at 102db. 102db is very loud.
110db is extremely loud, check out the YouTube video below.
In our experience, installing 2 to 3 bells or buzzers is much more effective than just one. Put one by the timer, then run wire out the another, 50 to 100' away. It won't be louder, it will just be more likely to be heard above all the background noise.
So, yours truly did some research recently (2016), this is interesting,
Using an Android phone decibel app, this is what we found:
**A bedroom at night in the country, windows closed: 28 - 32 db
**A bedroom at night in the city with the windows closed: 42- 46 db
**Office environment, people chattering: 62db
**American Airlines 737 inside. just behind the wing during takeoff: 86db
**Same jet, landing with the reverse thrusters on: 88db That ROAR you hear..
**Same jet, cruising for 3 hours, it's 82 to 86db. That's (partially) why flying is so tiring.
Shop buzzer's: 102db (Edwards, the ones we sell)
Other brands "hum" at 82 to 86.
Our bells test out at 98 to 103db depending on voltage
It seems that no one offers anything louder than 103db, unless it goes on a train, ocean liner, or fog horn. In some cases loudspeakers are used on farms; we don't have them, but our equipment will ring them. This is 110db, a train horn on an obnoxious person's pickup truck. In a working environment, this would clearly cause accidents.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TiWNw0A1Ijg&feature=related
More bells or horns does not make it louder, it just makes it more pervasive - easier to hear through the machinery, across the rooms, over conversations and running equipment like compressors, lifts, packing tape, all that.