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-   -   TOT wireless doorbells (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/showthread.php?t=58816)

tony sayer June 1st 08 04:11 PM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
In article , Bill
scribeth thus
In message , tony sayer
writes

Such are the limitations of licence exempt equipment..


Indeed, but there are limitations and then there is damn right rudeness,
inconsideration and sheer stupidity..........


And thats Joe pubic for yer;!..


And Josephine more and more..

For everything else theres PMR;)...



--
Tony Sayer



Steve Terry[_2_] June 1st 08 04:50 PM

TOT wireless doorbells
 

"tony sayer" wrote in message
...
In article , Bill
scribeth thus
In message , Doug Paulley
writes
On Sat, 31 May 2008 08:28:09 +0100, Ian Jackson
wrote:

That's one reason why the spoilsports invented CTSS codes.

... and presumably why many walkie talkies now have CTCSS code
identifiers

Didn't stop someone in Bedford totally breaking up a training session
sending two riders in opposite directions down a long dual carriage
way............

On a serious note, the guys that do this with normal push to transmit
operation are not too bad, but the ones that run permanent carrier for
maybe an hour at a time are a pain as they jam a channel for that time.
I have listened to a few locally and they have no idea of the problems
they cause other users. I was listening to the coach at the local rugby
ground during a match and he lost comm's with other members of
management a couple of times due to the local bike man riding past and
blocking the channel.


Such are the limitations of licence exempt equipment..
For everything else theres PMR;)...
Tony Sayer

The bike training course in St Albans used to use proper Pye PFXs
on 456MHz
They shouldn't be using public 446PMR, those that do are putting their
riders at unnecessary risk.

Steve Terry






Bill June 1st 08 09:40 PM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
In message , Steve Terry
writes
The bike training course in St Albans used to use proper Pye PFXs
on 456MHz

Sheesh, I wonder how they got those licensed? I would have thought PFXs
well beyond it now. Not to mention the availability of batteries.
There again good to see them using their own freq' rather than a shared
service.

They shouldn't be using public 446PMR, those that do are putting their
riders at unnecessary risk.

Very much so, firstly accidental interference to themselves from legit
users and secondly deliberate jamming from fed up legit users!




Nice to see the way threads drift off course,
very much OT even for UK.doorbells ?????????????

Steve Terry






--
Bill

Steve Terry[_2_] June 1st 08 11:56 PM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
"Bill" wrote in message
...
In message , Steve Terry
writes
The bike training course in St Albans used to use proper Pye PFXs
on 456MHz


Sheesh, I wonder how they got those licensed? I would have thought PFXs
well beyond it now. Not to mention the availability of batteries.
There again good to see them using their own freq' rather than a shared
service.

At the Dunstable Downs Amateur radio rally at Stockwood park, Luton,
a couple of weeks ago, a dealer had new PFX batteries for sale!
But yes PFXs are antiques now.

They shouldn't be using public 446PMR, those that do are putting their
riders at unnecessary risk.


Very much so, firstly accidental interference to themselves from legit
users and secondly deliberate jamming from fed up legit users!

Ofcom should make them use proper UHF PMR frequencies,
obviously some are available.

Steve Terry



Paul Ratcliffe June 2nd 08 12:52 AM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
On Fri, 30 May 2008 10:10:14 +0100, Adrian C wrote:

And, as a kid I never got the chance to use a universal remote outside
Dixons shop windows to set all the TV volume levels to 11

Some peeps here will have done, I bet ;-)


Carver, M. I seem to remember did something very similar.

Paul D.Smith June 2nd 08 11:53 AM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
"Dave Saville" wrote in message
news:[email protected]
I went round to a neighbours yesterday to help with his PC. He has one
of those remote wireless (I assume) doorbells. As it happend he was
not in, but *his* next door neighbour poked her head out of her front
door. Turns out they have one as well.

She told me that her bell often sounds when his button is pushed but
"not my tune and not his either" she added "sometimes mine sounds with
my tune but there is nobody there".

Anyone?
--
Regards
Dave Saville

NB Remove nospam. for good email address


Thanks for a timely post. I actually wanted to know about this because I
was considering trying to find one with a single bell push but two receivers
so I get a ring at the front and the back of the house. I don't think I'll
bother unless I can find a nice "more secure" one.

Paul DS.


Paul D.Smith June 3rd 08 09:30 AM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
Apparently some (Friedland) can be taught to use new codes which sounds like
what the OP's neighbours need to do.

Paul DS.

"Pyriform" wrote in message
...
Dave Saville wrote:
I went round to a neighbours yesterday to help with his PC. He has one
of those remote wireless (I assume) doorbells. As it happend he was
not in, but *his* next door neighbour poked her head out of her front
door. Turns out they have one as well.

She told me that her bell often sounds when his button is pushed but
"not my tune and not his either" she added "sometimes mine sounds with
my tune but there is nobody there".

Anyone?


Such bells often have different codes and associated tones so you can
distinguish between callers to the front door and the tradesman's entrance
(for example)... I think a bit of dip switch tweaking is called for (or
however it's set up on that model).

I've often considered building a high power device which emits a rapid
series of all known bell codes so I can conduct drive-by "bellings" in an
updated version of the old childhood game...


Clint Sharp June 4th 08 04:35 PM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
In message , Ian Jackson
writes
What did gif2exe do?

Added a header to gif files to make them executable.
--
Clint Sharp

Ian Jackson[_2_] June 4th 08 10:08 PM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
In message , Clint Sharp
writes
In message , Ian Jackson
writes
What did gif2exe do?

Added a header to gif files to make them executable.


OK. Then what happened next?
--
Ian

Clint Sharp June 4th 08 11:12 PM

TOT wireless doorbells
 
In message , Ian Jackson
writes
In message , Clint Sharp
writes
In message , Ian Jackson
writes
What did gif2exe do?

Added a header to gif files to make them executable.


OK. Then what happened next?

Well, you typed the name of the file you'd just created with gif2exe and
then the computer displayed the picture you'd added the header to.
--
Clint Sharp


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