Newhouse Hardware MCHBV Campanello meccanico wireless a due note e pulsante porta con visualizzatore integrato, taglia unica, bianco/ottone

Brand:Newhouse Hardware

3.2/5

46.48

Campanello meccanico a due note e pulsante porta con visore integrato. Non sono necessarie batterie o cavi con questo campanello. Il pulsante della porta ha una finitura in ottone e il visore integrato facilita l'installazione. si prega di notare: questo campanello funziona meglio per case, appartamenti, monolocali o uffici più piccoli. Potrebbe essere difficile sentire questo suono da oltre 30 piedi di distanza.

Il pulsante della porta misura 3,5 pollici dall'alto verso il basso, 2,38 pollici da sinistra a destra e 5/8 pollici di profondità (esclusi l'asta e il visualizzatore nella parte posteriore del pulsante). Nota: quando si stampa il manuale di istruzioni su questa pagina dell'articolo, assicurarsi che sia stampato in "Dimensioni effettive e non" Adatta in modo che la scala del modello di montaggio sia corretta. Nota: questo campanello funziona meglio per case, appartamenti, monolocali o uffici più piccoli. Potrebbe essere difficile sentire questo suono da oltre 30 piedi di distanza. Il campanello misura 7,62 L x 3,25 W x 1,5 H pollici. Placca porta finitura ottone. Non sono necessarie batterie o cavi. Campanello meccanico a due note e pulsante porta con visore integrato.
Batteries Required? ‎No
Color ‎White/Brass
Country of Origin ‎China
Customer Reviews 4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 196 ratings 4.1 out of 5 stars
Included Components ‎Door Chime, Door Button
Item model number ‎MCHBV
Item Package Quantity ‎1
Item Weight ‎13.7 ounces
Manufacturer ‎Adamax
Material ‎Plastic, Metal
Part Number ‎MCHBV
Product Dimensions ‎7.62 x 3.25 x 1.5 inches
Size ‎One Size
Style ‎With Built-In Viewer
Warranty Description ‎1-Year Limited Warranty

3.2

8 Review
5 Star
62
4 Star
15
3 Star
7
2 Star
5
1 Star
11

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Scritto da: B. Davis
A good replacement
The media could not be loaded. We have a 1980’s condo that has an metal entry door with a mechanical (non-wired) doorbell mounted on the door right below the glass peephole. So installation was fairly easy but I needed to spend $10 and get a 1-in Bi-Metal Arbored Hole Saw which I picked up from Lowes after much research. Do yourself a favor and get this as it took 30 seconds to cut the hole. I did not use the template. We already had an older doorbell just like this which was original to the condo circa 1985. Problem was the original hole for the old one was about half the size - so it needed to be drilled out larger- as well as a bit lower so the housing for the button mechanism on the outside of the door didn’t hit the bottom of the peephole. As others have mentioned, the biggest pain (and my reason for 4 not 5 stars) is the metal piece which is attached to the button. It’s scored but nearly impossible to cut down to size unless you have a hacksaw and a vice. Nippers didn’t do a thing to cut it. The tip of it has a hole predrilled in it that makes snipping off the first section easy but after that there are no holes so I took a pair of pliers and held the thing steady while someone else twisted it inwards and bent it enough so that the outer plastic cover could be put on. So it’s now bent but hidden inside and the button works perfectly. Done. Another option would have been to drill a couple of holes in it so you could weaken the metal and snap it off. The bell is plenty loud. I just need to touch up paint one side in a small area where the plastic cover didn’t sit in exactly the same place as the old one. I’ll upload a video of the bell sound with this review. I also used a label maker to add Last Name and house number. Looks much better than hand writing it in as suggested in the instructions.
Scritto da: char
Did not fit my dimensions.
Did not fit.
Scritto da: Douglas Galinat
Designed only to go on the door
Our old one went on the wall this one the shaft is too short to reach through the wall. The old one the shaft could be shortened for smaller thicknesses. This one only fits thin doors.
Scritto da: Abbey Bates
Great for 70s builds
We moved into a condo that was built in the 70s and with all the reno that needed done, we couldn't afford a new door. After we painted the original door, the old unit went out of commission and we needed something to cover where it was. This worked perfectly. And we decided to follow the instructions and "print name on the other side of this card" and leave the card the way it came in the box. ????
Scritto da: Thikacat
Extremely difficult to install.
Two stars because it works. Installing it was just awful. I read all the feedback and felt this would work on my 1986 condo door. I was aware that others had had difficulty installing this so I bought the special drill bit one person recommended. Didn’t work on my door so I bought a step drill bit, which did the job, but very slowly. $32 of hardware to install a $15 bell. Wow. Instructions are terrible. Template is wrong, pilot holes in a steel clad door?? Um, that won’t work. The bar is indeed impossible to snap off as instructed as people said, so I measured it and drilled it off before installation. (The bar came twisted and didn’t line up, so I had to fix that first.) This took two and a half hours — over two days as I had to recharge the drill.
Scritto da: Kim m.
Old hole could be issue
Has to line up with holes or the push button will stick
Scritto da: Margaret Marlow
GOOD REPLACEMENT FOR AN OLD BROKEN DOOR CHIME OF SAME DESIGN
DOES THE JOB AND LOOKS GOOD
Scritto da: Robert S.
Seemed to be an exact replacement
I thought I would not be able to find a replacement doorbell for my 1980 rental property, but this worked very well and matched exactly!

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