Buzzer and Digital Clock In-A-Box - Ring up to 72 events across a 7 day week. That's enough for 3 shifts, 24/7/365. Example, having the buzzer go off at 7AM, 7 days a week, is one event. Not seven.
Kit includes:
- One Made-In-USA Pyramid 7000 master clock timer, with variable bell lengths
- One 24VDC to 120VAC relay, pre-wired and installed for you, inside the 7000
- You can set it up with three buttons.
- One Edwards 120VAC 102dB adjustable industrial grade steel case work shift horns.
---- add up to 9 more on this circuit
- 50' of twin stranded speaker cable to connect the bells (go out to 500' if you like!)
- Mounting hardware for the 7000 master clock timer.
- One 4" tall super-bright red on high contrast black background 4 digit digital display
---- add up to 9 more on this circuit. Each digital clock needs a 110V plug near it.
- 90 days of factory technical support, one year product replacement warranty.
Call Pyramid, or call Employee Time Clocks.
- Add more buzzers and more clocks as needed.
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 voltageIt
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=relatedMore
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.