Maas-Rowe Digital Chronobell demo at First UMC, Benton, Arkansas
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- Опубликовано: 17 авг 2011
- A quick but neat video featuring the Maas-Rowe Digital Chronobell system we use at First United Methodist Church in Benton, AR for the hourly chime heard throughout the downtown area. It also plays hymn tunes on occasion, usually around noon.
Very fascinating clock chiming instrument! I've noticed that 3 notes are struck to count the hours, that's really cool! I'm originally from CA, and there are a lot of churches and colleges in CA that use the Maas-Rowe carillon Westminster Chimes, and some Schulmerich Westminster chimes as well.
WOW! thank you so much. You are the only person I have found to have actually uploaded the full Westminster chime. thanks again!
2:00p in Benton, AR/High noon 12:00p in the West.
0:39
This Was Used At One Place In McKinney, Texas Somewhere In Downtown.
A first generation CD7 unit. You should see the new Maas-Rowe music controller which now stores the music in flash memory, no more Compact Discs. You can download new hymns/music online to a thumb drive and then load them into the controller. There is a demo video on RUclips. Search for "DCP Introduction " or " thebellguy "
This sounds like the chime i would hear almost every Sunday at the St. John’s cathedral in downtown Fresno CA well if you are there when it happens and if you ever been to the church
on google earth, in the steeple of the church, I saw round things in there, I think those are speakers
Yes they are... they're amplified through a P.A. system.
in the church, is there a cast iron bell in the steeple too besides speakers?
where's the video of it outside of hearing the bells from the steeple in that church?
were there speakers anywhere in the build or tower?
There is a small monitor loudspeaker in the audio amplifier unit (on the right) as well as loudspeakers mounted in a tower or on the roof of a building. There can also be additional loudspeakers located within a building.
ok so there is an amplifier in the room as well as the chimes???
what does UMC stand for?
@Cayden Noles it's prodistant whereas the Catholic Church also have bells and electronic carrillon systems.
Why would I purchase a device that reproduces an electronic carillon from the 1950's when I could buy one from another manufacturer that sounds like actual bells?
It was never meant to sound like cast bells. With Schulmerich having been recently bought by a patent attorney in Verdin country, this is the end of an era. Maas-Rowe is still family owned and has been for 90 years. This is not 1950s technology.
These are recordings from of the Maas-Rowe Grand Symphonic Carillon which is CURRENT technology.
This year Maas Rowe turns 💯 years old. A century of keeping perfect time with beautiful music 🎶.
@@christophercotton9048 Yes, which day this month I do not know. I have inquired. Hopefully the President of the company remembers! ;)
I mean which day of which MONTH this year I do not know.
California tower