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What’s the battery life for the Arlo doorbell under normal use?
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The documentation cites about 1 year average life. It uses 2 AA batteries.
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The documentation cites about 1 year average life. It uses 2 AA batteries.
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Thanks!
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I will note that I installed my Arlo Doorbell 5 days ago. The unit came with Duracell batteries. I installed them and it was reporting 100%. After a bit of testing it reported 95%. I wrote it off as perhaps some older batteries. However, a couple days later i noticed it down to 65%. Today, the 5th day later, its reporting 35%. I dont quite understand why this would be draining so fast. If this continues there is no way this product will be useful to me as the cost of AA batteries will exceed the device itself. I do have motion control turned on to trigger my Camera, but i'm only getting a couple clips a day so i dont think its the motion draining them.
Anyone else notice this or can report their battery life?
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I do have traditional wired chimes tied into it. It rings them just fine, but i'm wondering if it isnt causing some kind of issues with the AA batteries in the unit. Its too bad they didnt just allow it to also be powered by the existing doorbell wires as an option. I'd be curious what the next few days bring for you.
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Installed Sunday night, just checked today (Friday) and it's reporting 98%. My doorbell faces sideways from the street, so it might be better protected from motion.
Last I looked, traditional doorbells run on AC power (usually 16VAC @ 10VA). The unit would probably need a converter to run the onboard electronics, as those are DC-powered.
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Don't forget the signal strength/quality between the doorbell and base. Poor signal will cause battery depletion.
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Yeah. I have two base stations for added coverage. But in the case of my doorbell, its about 12 ft away from the nearest base station. I was still at 35% today, which is good to see, but i'm still wondering how and where the other +60% went as it has now been the 7th day.
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Concerned.
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I’m tryin to connect to my existing digitel chime (set toggle to 1) as instructed. When wired the bell doesn’t light or work (no Batteies installed). When I remove wire and use batteries the bell lights up and works just fine. Tested voltage (22V). Manuel reads doorbell will work between 8 to 24 volts. I’m going to try to leave the batteries in with it wired but Manuel doesn’t state that. Only one having this issue?
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The batteries are required for the doorbell to work. They must be installed, even if you hook up to the existing wires for a chime.
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The omission about the need for the batteries to be installed is significant. As mentioned, you MUST have them installed for the existing digital chime to work. Just make sure that once you release the button that the chime does not remain energized. I personally like the Arlo Chime better than my existing mechanical one.
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Well I have had my Arlo Doorbell installed since Nov 8. Today I received a notice that my batteries are tired. Less than 25% left. In less than one week I will have to replace the batteries. Not what I was expecting. To top it off the button is a kind of hard to depress. I might just return it for a new one and have my fingers crossed I got a dud.
@Retired_Member wrote:
What’s the battery life for the Arlo doorbell under normal use?
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What's the WiFi signal strength for the doorbell? Where do you have it mounted (on what surface)? What is the exterior wall construction?
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I have a Google mesh network. the signal strength is two out of 3 "bars" The door bell is mounted just outside our front door where the old door bell was located. Standard wood frame house - single story. Exterior wall is wood frame with what is called hardi plank siding.
@jguerdat wrote:
What's the WiFi signal strength for the doorbell? Where do you have it mounted (on what surface)? What is the exterior wall construction?
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Note that your home WiFi has no bearing unless it's interfering with the base/doorbell signal. Try moving the base away from the router or otherwise reposition it to see if that helps.
Also, make sure all firmware is up to date.
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Again, your home WiFi has no bearing. It's possible that that nearby access point was interfering with the base/doorbell signal.
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I realized that after I mentioned it, but I do have 2 base stations and one of them happens to be within 10ft of the doorbell.
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