Honeywell 719

Self Contained Alarm Siren

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The Honeywell 719 is a self contained alarm siren that combines an alarm speaker and a siren driver in one complete device. While some se...
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$32.00
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$24.99
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Description

The Honeywell 719 is a self contained alarm siren that combines an alarm speaker and a siren driver in one complete device. While some security systems may have a siren driver built into the actual alarm control panel, most security systems require a separate siren driver which produces the audible alarm out of a speaker. The advantage of the 719 self contained alarm siren is that you don’t need (2) separate devices.

The 719 self contained alarm siren works great with the Honeywell VISTA Series alarm control panels. The alarm siren has an operating voltage of 6-12VDC and a power rating of 15 watts. The unit's operating current is 700mA at 12VDC, or 300mA at 6VDC. There are (3) wires coming out of the 719 siren which you will need to connect to your alarm control panel. The white wire is 12V negative and should be hooked up to terminal 4 on a VISTA Series alarm control panel as terminal 4 is the (-) alarm output terminal.

There are actually (2) separate positive wires, as the 719 siren is a dual tone self contained siren. The yellow positive wire is for the normal steady alarm tone, and the red wire is for the alternative warble alarm tone. Connecting the wire of your choice to terminal 3 on the VISTA Series alarm control panel will determine how the siren sounds during a burglary alarm. No matter which positive wire you choose, the 719 siren will sound the temporal pulse when a fire alarm is tripped. Therefore, you will be able to listen to the alarm siren to know which type of alarm was tripped.

The 719 alarm siren is a very loud siren. When powered by 12VDC, the alarm siren's sound output is 115dB at 12VDC from 10 feet away. If you require a louder siren, then you might also consider the Honeywell 702 self contained siren, which has a sound output of 118dB.

The Honeywell 719 alarm siren is smaller than the Honeywell 702 which makes it more discreet. However, just like the 702 siren, you can install the Honeywell 719 inside or outside. The self contained siren is made of weather resistant highly durable plastic. The high impact plastic housing protects the siren from vandalism so you can install the Honeywell 719 with confidence.

Specifications


  • Product Type: Hardwired Siren
  • Decibels: 103 dB
  • Current Draw: 700mA
  • Operating Voltage: 6 to 14 VDC
  • Power: 15 Watt
  • Outdoor Use: Yes
  • Dual Tone: Yes
  • Tamper: No

Brand: Honeywell

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So the operating current is listed incorrectly at 550mA in the item's description at the top of the page. Can you please fix that? I have the product in my hand with 103dB printed on the box. Also, is the "Honeywell official knowledgebase" accurate or is the publicly accessible web page accurate: https://www.security.honeywellhome.com/canada/product-repository/719_719-sounding-devices https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/4584d5384da3270f8d79d08abeab11eeca186cbefc40deadeaee844c22a9bfe8.png https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/2f911a71c79ea67ee6df7ce17605763b700cd93d1fc9f9b9182e8c82a1611295.png
https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/f6a4b6b6385da2e8e1bdc1fd63d28145fc3385a964affcad48eb405e5dbc228d.png https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/08deb014ae7a884b04070241a90beaa040abb00f90c2120559e59e19f25a5430.png Once again, this information came straight from MyWebTech, Honeywell's official knowledgebase.
Just ordered and received the Honeywell 719, and the post below is not the only thing the description got wrong. The sound output is 103dB at 10' at 12VDC (not 115dB) and the operating current is 700mA at 12VDC (not 550mA). It is 12dB less than the description states, and 103dB is too quiet to put in an attic by a gable vent for an "outdoor" siren in my opinion. The goal is to get my neighbors attention, even if they're inside. I will be returning this siren and getting the Honeywell 748 for something louder.
Hi Shane, We actually had some bad information posted before and we just edited it to be correct. You would need to choose steady or warble based on the positive wire you land to your panel's positive bell output.
How does the siren know which alarm is being outputted if both the stead and warble is connected to the alarm output?
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