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Mac
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Found a cool bell at a flea market.

Mon Sep 19, 2011 11:28 pm

I found this bell in the navy-grey condition in the first picture at what seemed to be a pretty reasonable price. I was told it worked (skeptical, of course...) and was used to call the kids in from recess at some school yard.

Took it home, threw a cord on it and plugged it in- It worked! :D ....So I took it apart and went through the wires and nasty screws.....did some sandblasting....little paint....Wala! Once i re-assembled it i realized the tag said it was 24v....What? Will I have killed the motor having run it on 120v? Is the 24v AC or DC?....and what should I get to plus this into regular house current?

Can anyone give me an age on it? Honestly I don't care if it is of particular value...It will look sweet over my garage next to the Federal A.

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Sterling M-5, Sterling Mechanical Siren Timer, Federal Electric Co. Type B, Federal C3 1/2, Secomak VS1, Federal Type A (Coded & Standard), AF Timer, various other sirens \ controls

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AKSoapy29
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Mon Sep 19, 2011 11:52 pm

Well it says 60 cycles, so I'm going to guess AC.
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Mac
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Mon Sep 19, 2011 11:55 pm

AKSoapy29 wrote:Well it says 60 cycles, so I'm going to guess AC.
Good catch... I didn't even think about that. :oops:
Sterling M-5, Sterling Mechanical Siren Timer, Federal Electric Co. Type B, Federal C3 1/2, Secomak VS1, Federal Type A (Coded & Standard), AF Timer, various other sirens \ controls

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AKSoapy29
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Mon Sep 19, 2011 11:58 pm

:) No problem. My dad was telling me about Ac single phase and three phase just a few weeks/months ago. 60 cycles, hence the name Alternating Current.
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Ziginox
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Tue Sep 20, 2011 12:16 am

I wonder how this thing was powered, 24 volts is odd for AC...

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Daniel
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Tue Sep 20, 2011 12:23 am

Most school bell systems up through the 1980's used 24 VAC supplied by a large version of a doorbell transformer. By that time, most schools were moving away from mechanical bells and horns in favor of electronic tones over the intercom (or chimes in European schools).
Lex orandi, lex credendi, lex vivendi.

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Mac
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Tue Sep 20, 2011 12:44 am

Sterling M-5, Sterling Mechanical Siren Timer, Federal Electric Co. Type B, Federal C3 1/2, Secomak VS1, Federal Type A (Coded & Standard), AF Timer, various other sirens \ controls

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AKSoapy29
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Tue Sep 20, 2011 1:40 am

We'll the bell has AMPS on the tag. How many amps does it say? And I have a Pan Tilt Zoom camera mount that runs off of 24VAC. Luckily I have a 24VAC transformer for my battery back up panel, so I used it and it worked great, not the this has anything todo with sirens...
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murrfarms
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Tue Sep 20, 2011 4:08 am

Why spend that much money when you could buy this one for a lot cheaper? The bell only pulls .35A based on the ID tag, so you really can't get a transformer that's too small, unless you get some kind of micro transformer.

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Daniel
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Tue Sep 20, 2011 3:31 pm

I installed a system of 24VAC bells in a school last year. There were four bells, and one Edwards 50VA signaling transformer was enough to run them all.
Lex orandi, lex credendi, lex vivendi.

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