The transmitters/receivers can be paired to different freqs. if they
all ring the same. Our office and the one next to us had that
problem. A couple of DIP switch changes and problem solved.
Pat, K9JAUAt 02:41 PM 2/8/2013, you wrote:
>Hello,
>Be careful with the electronic mothers because sometimes they are on
>a Channel which causes more than one doorbell to ring in a neighborhood.
>For example, my friend, her next-door neighbor, and the lady across
>the street all had ring doorbells when only one was being pushed by someone.
>All of these people would go to the door, of course.
>We have a doorbell which is hard-wired. It sounds like the one on
>The Young and the Restless at Jill's M's house when Young and the
>Restless was new on TV.
>It is not a busher but actually sounds like a long ring.
>It is very ld and can be heard all over the house.
>It can be heard upstairs which is great for us.
>Colleen Roth
>
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: Curtis Delzer <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Date: Friday, Feb 8, 2013 03:02:44 PM
>Subject: door chimes? doorbell?
>
> >
> >
> > I've come across a fundamental problem here in this new home of ours,
> > which is a mobile, and that is the crummy doorbell it has, which a
> > lot of people don't pay much attention too, but we must have. We
> > don't like the typical sounding "ding dong" type, so please could you
> > guys suggest which you may have that you like, etc. My friend,
> > Larry, has one, for example which chimes like the sound for an early
> > old radio network intro, and we truly like the natural chimes much
> > better than those pseudo electronic type, though we'll get those if
> > we must, so anyone, suggest?
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