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Discuss Doorbell Wiring - Ring Pro and Honeywell in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

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Hi All

Apologies if this is not in the right forum or if I've joined the forum when I'm not supposed to as I'm not an electrician just an avid tinkerer.

With that said. I'm planning to wire in a new doorbell system. I ripped out the old wired system and switched to wireless which was less than an optimal solution. For that reason I'm planning to go back to a wired system and if possible upgrade to a ring pro system.

The new system will be based on the Honeywell DW915s wired and wireless chime thing which I believe is a wired chime which doubles up as a wireless extender which allows another compatible chime to be paired to it. (Please correct me if I'm wrong). The initial plan is to use this chime as a wired chime, powered via the batteries so it will be wired direct to the bell push. The reason being was firstly that's what the old system was like and secondly to wire it to the main would likely require a new consumer unit because the old one is the old style wire fuse type which I will be updating at some point but not any time soon.

The problem with this initial plan is that the run of cable from the bell push to the position I want the chime to be placed is about 30m, accounting for tidying the cable into the edges etc. From my research online 0.5mm bell wire seems to be inappropriate for this kind of distance and impact performance. Having looked online, I can't seem to find thicker solid 2 core wire, everything seems to be stranded cores. The solution I've come across is to use 1mm 2 core FP200 fire alarm cable which is 4x times the price of bell wire and also has an earth core which would be redundant. What could I do to solve this issue.

The second part of the new system will be to install the Ring Pro which will be done when the consumer unit is updated. I know the Ring Pro requires a mains power and comes with a transformer. Based on where the mains circuit will be. the cable run is around 20m (quite likely less), from what I've read online I should be able to use 0.5mm bell wire for this without any problems to performance (correct me if I'm wrong). My plan is to have the ring pro chime through the honeywell DW915s which I believe can be done based on a review on Amazon from someone who said they did it, albeit I'm not sure how the wiring would be done. It seems to be quite challenging finding a circuit diagram showing a ring pro connected to an existing chime in the UK. I'm think the transformer from Ring is capable of also powering the Honeywell DW915s.

Is this plan feasible and what would be the best thickness of wire to use and where can I source it. Does the wire have to be solid core or would stranded core be sufficient.

Thanks
 
Have you considered upgrading your wifi? I too live in a house with all brick walls and my BT system (others are available) is fine all over.

I have hardwired access points where the WiFi is weakest so it is actually fine. Although I am curious how the mesh WiFi performs speed wise because I know with range extenders the speed drops quite a bit and mesh WiFi is in my view a range extender on steroids lol. In actual fact its the 5ghz band that is weakest, the 2.4ghz band is fine. I've done an analysis of the WiFi where the doorbell would be positioned and it seems to be fine. I have seen the Ring Elite though which has LAN capability but insanely expensive lol. The only other alternative is the Byron which doesn't have the same capabilities as the Ring and those capabilities that are missing are deal breakers lol.

Sounds like a lot of work for just a doorbell, have you considered an extra large door knocker or asking visitors to ring you when they arrive.

I'm not actually doing it for my benefit. It's for the benefit of my grandparents who are not tech savvy. I bought a wireless doorbell with 2 chimes, because my grandma hated the ugly visible wire that was there and so did I. Big mistake on my part because it is so unreliable. At the very least, I'm going to hardwire a new doorbell in, the addition of the video doorbell would be nice but not essential at this point.
 
You can cheat a little, by increasing the voltage of the power supply,
to make up for the losses.So lets say you wire it all up, put in say 12v,
then measure whats available at the chime, if it's down to say 10v ?
Then go back to your power supply and increase the 12v to 14v.
 
Hi.
Did you get your Ring Pro wired in tandem with a Honeywell 915?
I am trying to do the same thing.

Hi, my plan was not to do this until the new year which gives plenty of time to thoroughly investigate the matter, which is exactly what I've been doing.

I contacted Ring Support and was advised the Honeywell DW915S is not compatible with the Pro or the Elite because of the circuitry. It maybe compatible with the Ring 2 though. From the conversation I've had with Ring Support although the Pro and the Elite require a 16-24vac mains connection to function. In order to function with a hardwired chime, said chime also requires a 16 - 24vac supply. Connecting a DC chime will damage the Pro and the Elite. The documentation with the DW915s shows that it only requires an 8 - 12vac mains supply without batteries.

The same day I also contacted Honeywell support about the compatibility of the DW915s and the Ring Pro. They came back to me a good few days later. Honeywell said they were unable to provide wiring diagrams for specific devices. They did specifically state that the DW915s will work fine with any 8 - 16v transformer be that DC or AC and that batteries should always be used unless you don't have an illuminated ring on your doorbell. This information isn't clear in the Honeywell literature.

Based on the new information I've received I'm thinking the reviews I've seen on Amazon stating the DW915s was wired into a Ring doorbell, I've incorrectly assumed the Ring Doorbell being referred to was the Pro.

I've gone back to Ring Support with the information from Honeywell and requested that they re-test the DW915s for compatibility based on the information from Honeywell and asked the question outright if based on the information from Honeywell whether the Pro or the Elite would be compatible.

Hope that helps.

You can cheat a little, by increasing the voltage of the power supply,
to make up for the losses.So lets say you wire it all up, put in say 12v,
then measure whats available at the chime, if it's down to say 10v ?
Then go back to your power supply and increase the 12v to 14v.

The 0-24v transformers I've seen appear to be incrementally fixed at 8v 12v 24v depending on the voltage required. So how would it be possible to increase said voltage if wired into the 12v to the required 16v in this case because the next point is the 24v.
 
Ive been looking at connecting a Ring Pro to a DW915S as well for the following reason :- The Ring Pro has a feature/problem in that when someone presses the Ring button, the remote Chime gives out a sound, but then if the Ring Pro button is pressed again immediatly, the Chime does not make a sound. I checked with Ring and they said that the Chime will only make a sound after the Blue light on the Ring Pro has gone off from the first press of the button. This can be up to a minute.
 
If the windings on the transformer are tapped to provide 8v, 12v and 24v, then you can connect between the 8v and 24v taps to get 16v.

Good shout, I didn't realise that could be done. I have however managed to track down a transformer with a 16v tap (also didn't know they were called taps)

Ive been looking at connecting a Ring Pro to a DW915S as well for the following reason :- The Ring Pro has a feature/problem in that when someone presses the Ring button, the remote Chime gives out a sound, but then if the Ring Pro button is pressed again immediatly, the Chime does not make a sound. I checked with Ring and they said that the Chime will only make a sound after the Blue light on the Ring Pro has gone off from the first press of the button. This can be up to a minute.

I have just ordered the DW915s on ebay as there was a voucher for 15% off, so managed to get it for less than ÂŁ33.00, which is cheaper than anywhere else. Sadly I won't be in a position to fit it to a Ring until close to next summer when I change out the Consumer Unit. If I get any further updates from Ring on this matter I will try to update the thread.
 
As an update for anyone following.

I emailed Ring Support and asked would the Ring Pro or Elite work with the Honeywell DW915s. Their response was that the device was incompatible and when they say incompatible they mean Ring don't guarantee stable performance. The issue from my understanding was that the Ring Pro and Ring Elite required main powered chimes at 16 - 24vac despite in the case of the Ring Elite being powered by POE.

I contacted Honeywell and they advised the DW915s could be powered by 16v and needed the batteries in as well even if it is mains powered. (See above for more info)

I went back to Ring and asked based on the fact that Honeywell have advised that it (DW915s) can work with any power supply up to 16v and requires the batteries to be fitted as well.

Ring have responded with and I'll quote directly from the email

"If the manufacturer says that it would work, you can try it on your own risk.

Please note that this model was proven as incompatible from our end by our tests and the specifications provided by Honeywell, and Ring will not be responsible for any possible damage, that could be inflicted on the device."

Now I understand the reason behind the disclaimer however I have to say it has made me think twice.

Based on the correspondence I have had from Ring, my understanding is that the DW915s was incompatible due to the voltage requirements and that incompatible meant guarantee stable performance. Now the language in this most recent correspondence does make me wonder what damage could possibly be caused. I understand the need for a disclaimer however it is a bit strong.
 

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