Feltwell
Member
- Messages
- 6,377
- Location
- Shropshire, England
Hello,
I've picked up a probably 1920's electric doorbell which works on the usual "make & break" principle - the current excites a coil which pulls a sprung lever over, but this then breaks the circuit so it springs back again and so it bounces back and forth causing the bell to ring, the usual stuff:-

It works fine on DC current on batteries, I've had it running at 7.5v no problem. Wired-in to mains doorbell transformer outputs are AC however? I would have thought that it would still work OK, can anyone see why not? You can get ones that output at 8 volts that should be OK.
I've picked up a probably 1920's electric doorbell which works on the usual "make & break" principle - the current excites a coil which pulls a sprung lever over, but this then breaks the circuit so it springs back again and so it bounces back and forth causing the bell to ring, the usual stuff:-

It works fine on DC current on batteries, I've had it running at 7.5v no problem. Wired-in to mains doorbell transformer outputs are AC however? I would have thought that it would still work OK, can anyone see why not? You can get ones that output at 8 volts that should be OK.