what would cause the second chime of a doorbell to sound muted?

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I've got a doorbell that works, it is the normal two chime "ding dong", but it goes "ding chunk" where the second chime seems muted. I looked at it and it's mounted right, it gets hit with enough force. What would cause this?










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    I've got a doorbell that works, it is the normal two chime "ding dong", but it goes "ding chunk" where the second chime seems muted. I looked at it and it's mounted right, it gets hit with enough force. What would cause this?










    share|improve this question























      up vote
      1
      down vote

      favorite









      up vote
      1
      down vote

      favorite











      I've got a doorbell that works, it is the normal two chime "ding dong", but it goes "ding chunk" where the second chime seems muted. I looked at it and it's mounted right, it gets hit with enough force. What would cause this?










      share|improve this question













      I've got a doorbell that works, it is the normal two chime "ding dong", but it goes "ding chunk" where the second chime seems muted. I looked at it and it's mounted right, it gets hit with enough force. What would cause this?







      doorbell






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      asked 5 hours ago









      rogerdpack

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          1 Answer
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          Turns out that there was an intereference hitting into it--the cord coming into the doorbell box "from the wall" was bent up and barely touching the chime bar. So bent it down a little and working doorbell again.






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          • 2




            It's also common (though not the case here, it seems) to have a front/rear doorbell setup where one set of terminals goes "ding-dong" and the other just goes "ding."
            – Ecnerwal
            4 hours ago










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          up vote
          3
          down vote













          Turns out that there was an intereference hitting into it--the cord coming into the doorbell box "from the wall" was bent up and barely touching the chime bar. So bent it down a little and working doorbell again.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 2




            It's also common (though not the case here, it seems) to have a front/rear doorbell setup where one set of terminals goes "ding-dong" and the other just goes "ding."
            – Ecnerwal
            4 hours ago














          up vote
          3
          down vote













          Turns out that there was an intereference hitting into it--the cord coming into the doorbell box "from the wall" was bent up and barely touching the chime bar. So bent it down a little and working doorbell again.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 2




            It's also common (though not the case here, it seems) to have a front/rear doorbell setup where one set of terminals goes "ding-dong" and the other just goes "ding."
            – Ecnerwal
            4 hours ago












          up vote
          3
          down vote










          up vote
          3
          down vote









          Turns out that there was an intereference hitting into it--the cord coming into the doorbell box "from the wall" was bent up and barely touching the chime bar. So bent it down a little and working doorbell again.






          share|improve this answer












          Turns out that there was an intereference hitting into it--the cord coming into the doorbell box "from the wall" was bent up and barely touching the chime bar. So bent it down a little and working doorbell again.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 5 hours ago









          rogerdpack

          3431520




          3431520







          • 2




            It's also common (though not the case here, it seems) to have a front/rear doorbell setup where one set of terminals goes "ding-dong" and the other just goes "ding."
            – Ecnerwal
            4 hours ago












          • 2




            It's also common (though not the case here, it seems) to have a front/rear doorbell setup where one set of terminals goes "ding-dong" and the other just goes "ding."
            – Ecnerwal
            4 hours ago







          2




          2




          It's also common (though not the case here, it seems) to have a front/rear doorbell setup where one set of terminals goes "ding-dong" and the other just goes "ding."
          – Ecnerwal
          4 hours ago




          It's also common (though not the case here, it seems) to have a front/rear doorbell setup where one set of terminals goes "ding-dong" and the other just goes "ding."
          – Ecnerwal
          4 hours ago

















           

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