DIY Musical Doorbell

by ElectroGuruji in Circuits > Electronics

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DIY Musical Doorbell

DIY Simple Musical Bell Circuit | UM66 Melody Generator
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Learn how to make a simple musical bell using the UM66T melody generator IC.

The Melody Generator will play Beethoven's Für Elise when triggered since it uses the UM66T-19L. There are different versions of this IC, each configured to play a different tune.

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Parts & Tools

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Electronic Components:

Tools:

You can also Buy the PCB: PCBWay

UM66T Explained

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The UM66T otherwise known as the BT66T a CMOS LSI designed for musical applications and has an on-chip ROM containing a musical tune. The device has very low power consumption (around 180mW) since it is fabricated using the CMOS process. The IC includes an inbuilt oscillation circuit. Hence a compact melody module can be constructed with only a few additional components.

Working

An input trigger enables the tone generator unit which in turn drives an external speaker unit. The tone generator unit consists of the Oscillator, Rhythm generator, Tempo generator and ROM. The oscillator frequency is used as a time for tone and beat generators. Its accuracy affects the quality of the music.

Circuit Schematic

A 5VDC power adapter is used as the power supply. Since the UM66T has a maximum supply voltage of 4.5V, a 100Ω resistor is used to reduce the supply voltage to a suitable 3.3V.

When the SPDT slide switch is turned ON, the UM66T is triggered and produces a melody signal that begins from the first note due to the power on reset feature.

An external transistor amplifies the signal and its output is connected to a speaker.

An LED turns on whenever the circuit is triggered

Eagle Schematic: GitHub

PCB Fabrication

DIY PCB Etching
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Order PCB: PCBWay

Eagle PCB Board Layout: GitHub

Printable PDF: GitHub

I fabricated the board using the Iron Method.

I drilled four mounting holes in each corner with a diameter of 3mm.

The PCB size is 5cm X 5cm .

Circuit Assembly

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Place and solder all the components onto the PCB.
Double check components with polarities.
Lastly, solder the Power adapter and speaker to the PCB.

Support These Projects

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Are you an engineer or hobbyist who has a great idea for a new feature in this project? Maybe you have a good idea for a bug fix? Feel free to grab the schematics from GitHub and tinker with it.

If you have any questions/doubts related to this project, leave them in the comments section and I will try my best to answer them.