Alarm clock with vibrating/ light option for deaf only

I never tuck it under pillow, I tucked it between bed matteress and bed matteress support board. It's pretty strong vibration whatsoever. NO worry about cord get wrapped around neck. :lol:

Catty

interesting. That probably would not wake me. I would have to try it.
 
interesting. That probably would not wake me. I would have to try it.

If you have black vibrator disk part of Sonic Boom clock. It's strong. I dunno about white one but worth a try. If your clock have setting to pulses the vibrator, you'll notice it. Be sure to place it on hard surface of bed mattress support because vibration would absorb across the frame making mattress vibrate along with it plus the pressure against the vibrator disk from your body weight will increase sensitivity. It won't break the disk tho cuz its shell is tough.. . I usually locate it where my head/neck located above mattress.

Catty
 
and wired around the face and choke. Or less sleep while more anixous by not try to lose or not get wire around their face.
Do you sleep in the middle of the king size bed? No girlfriend? :hmm:
 
Nice....

but....... (I don't mean being a "butter")

I prefer NO BEEPING sound. Something that I hate the most is the switch settings off/sound/vibrate/vibrate&sound. I prefer Off/Vibrate period. Purely deaf only alarm clock like I said on first thread, something quick and simple without wiggling/jiggling the dicey switch. Remember if you switch wake up setting it tend to wears out and become dicey.

If I can't find any purely Deaf alarm clock, It would means I will have to tear it apart and modify it then put it all back together which will voids warranty. Any speakers/piezoelectric buzzers and multi-selectable switch would be thrown into trash. Simple off/vibrate switch would be used in place. Remember it's called KISS method. :lol:

What's the point of loud sounds if you're stone deaf and those who have CI implant in both ears hear virtually nothing!! (Remmy CI implants are like an earplug to ears when not wearing Sound Processors during bedtime) When you're deep sleep or if your "REM" sleep approaching waking up period, Alarms emits loud sound won't benefit at all. Only vibration/light would wake Deafie up. Simple as is.


Radio Shack did sell exactly what Deafie wanted back in 1980's. It was perfect perfect "Deaf" alarm clock on the market and was the most reliable one!. Today's market sells timer clock that plugs into wall instead of table top one and is without a snooze option. (I admit it's a weaklings, because old Radio Shack timer clock can handle 1375 watts output comparing today's timer clock only can go up to 500 watts. no biggie to me.).


Catty

The Sonic Boom I mentioned doesn't make ANY sounds at all ... it can, but you have to turn on a switch which is located someone that you can't "Accidentally bump it". It also has a snooze function (not all of the Sonic Booms do, so double check !)

When you take it out of the box, you'd set it to either "VIB" or "VIB & LIGHT" and the sound "OFF". It's also important to plug the Sonic Boom (and ANY signaller) into a surge protector to prevent power surge damage but also electrical noise interference which can cause signallers to randomly trigger, which is annoying, but easily fixed with a proper surge protector recommended for computers/tv and other high end electronics!

I've had and used my SB1000 everyday for more almost 18years and it still works perfectly.
 
The Sonic Boom I mentioned doesn't make ANY sounds at all ... it can, but you have to turn on a switch which is located someone that you can't "Accidentally bump it". It also has a snooze function (not all of the Sonic Booms do, so double check !)

When you take it out of the box, you'd set it to either "VIB" or "VIB & LIGHT" and the sound "OFF". It's also important to plug the Sonic Boom (and ANY signaller) into a surge protector to prevent power surge damage but also electrical noise interference which can cause signallers to randomly trigger, which is annoying, but easily fixed with a proper surge protector recommended for computers/tv and other high end electronics!

I've had and used my SB1000 everyday for more almost 18years and it still works perfectly.

Interesting, My old Radio Shack table top timer clock runs for more than 25 years and it went through power surge several times. No issue whatsoever. It dont need power surge protector. Yes, my SB 1000 (black model) was damaged by power surge 9 years ago. I only had it for 4 years.. My wife have white SB1000 and still using it but she have issue with it. Switch is funky right now and it played dice on her too. I didn't want to use surge protector because it tend to block Sonic Alert signal through household wiring.

I found one table top digital timer with 7 days functions but no snooze.

I may have to keep looking or buy one good reliable alarm clock with snooze and do what I mentioned above posting, remove speaker and multiple switches which voids warranty so I can have what I want.

Catty
 
My alarm clock has a 9 min snooze that I press on top..easy to get to without opening my eyes lol and its pink...lol
 


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