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Mirrycle Incredibell Triple Bicycle Bell (Silver)
Show more by Mirrycle
Average Rating: 3.5 star rating (10 Reviews)
Our Price: $8.15
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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  • Dome Diameter: 37mm (1.3")
Product Description:
Incredibell Triple Bells fit the three most common handlebar sizes: 22.2mm, 25.4mm and 31.8mm.
  • Dome Diameter: 37mm (1.3")
Customers' Reviews:  
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5.0 out of 5 stars.  DING!, January 21, 2009
By glostah (Gloucester, Massachusetts)
This bell is great. If you're looking for a bell that gives a ice clear crisp DING!, then this is it. It's saved me from a few mishaps while out on my daily ride. One guy heard me through his rolled up window while on his cell.

The only problem is if you ride in the rain, the bell's plastic base will hold enough water to muffle the ding, but I fixed this by drilling a small drainage hole through the bottom plastic base.

18 of 18 people found this review helpful

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5.0 out of 5 stars.  Fits Road Bike, July 22, 2009
By J. Breneman
Introductory Review:

I own a road bike (Raleigh Cadent 2.0), and use it mostly for commuting, though a couple of times a week I will train on it. I wanted a small, reliable and practical bell for alerting pedestrians (they don't always heed my voice, and a bell should catch their attention more being that people seem hard-wired to respond to bells and horns).

Pros:
- Small Size does not interfere with look or functionality of handlebars.
- Bracket fits different sized handlebars and does it WELL and SNUG.

Cons:
- Thumb-action ringer does not appear to be the sturdiest, we will wait and see how long it lasts.


It only takes a small screwdriver, cross or flat-tip, to put on to your handlebars,and the plastic mount appears sturdy, as does the tin bell itself. The size and bracket offers a variety of mounting options, which is a plus particularly for drop-handlebars.


--I will update this review later as I use the bell more--

11 of 11 people found this review helpful

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5.0 out of 5 stars.  Fits Road Bike, July 22, 2009
By J. Breneman
Introductory Review:

I own a road bike (Raleigh Cadent 2.0), and use it mostly for commuting, though a couple of times a week I will train on it. I wanted a small, reliable and practical bell for alerting pedestrians (they don't always heed my voice, and a bell should catch their attention more being that people seem hard-wired to respond to bells and horns).

Pros:
- Small Size does not interfere with look or functionality of handlebars.
- Bracket fits different sized handlebars and does it WELL and SNUG.

Cons:
- Thumb-action ringer does not appear to be the sturdiest, we will wait and see how long it lasts.

It only takes a small screwdriver, cross or flat-tip, to put on to your handlebars,and the plastic mount appears sturdy, as does the tin bell itself. The size and bracket offers a variety of mounting options, which is a plus particularly for drop-handlebars.

--I will update this review later as I use the bell more--

11 of 11 people found this review helpful

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4.0 out of 5 stars.  Nice little bell, August 24, 2010
By Douglas Nelson (WAUKESHA, WI, US)
This bell is a good value. It is small and easy to install. It takes a little practice to get a good sound but then it's easy to use and effective.

1 of 1 people found this review helpful

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5.0 out of 5 stars.  Mirrycle Bell, April 16, 2012
By DJ
Great little bell for letting people know you're approaching without the need to say " ... on your right ...", or other phrases that surprise and confuse. It's light weight and easy to use.

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4.0 out of 5 stars.  Incredi-bell!!!, March 20, 2012
By Old Hippie (St. Louis, MO.)
With a little research, I found out this is the same bell installed from the factory on my 2011 Raleigh Sojourn `touring road bike'. My first thought would be to those who gave a low rating. If it can be made by man - it can be broken by man! You don't need to bang on it or treat it harshly for a clean, crisp DING. All you need to do is gently pull down on the lever & let go. So easy - a caveman could do it.

What separates this little bell from the rest is - it fits on any handlebar size - including road bikes! Most bells like this will only fit on kid's bikes or possibly a narrow mountain bike handlebar. It's becoming law now in more & more places that bicycles be equipped with some sort of bell or squeeze horn. I prefer a friendly "ding".

Actually...what I really prefer is not to ride anywhere pedestrians & cyclists share the same path. But the world hasn't figured that one out yet. Need a good little bell for any type of handlebar? This is the one. I ordered this one to install on a Tommaso Imola Road Bike

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1.0 out of 5 stars.  dry bell!, March 1, 2012
By gombino
Looks great sounds great HOWEVER, SOUNDS AWFULLY FAINT WHEN WET and that is a pitfall being that it is a bycycle bell so when ur brakes are wet and the wheather is wet, boing! ur safety "step aside!" announcer is also affected

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4.0 out of 5 stars.  Good bell, good price, November 14, 2011
By D. Morris (Montana)
The bell has a external plastic hammer rather than internal mechanics to make it ring. It really only gives you one "ding" at a time, but I've found that to be plenty to get people to look around and notice me peddling along. It seems sturdy and I hope it lasts though I'm a little worried that the plastic could bend and become less resilient over time. I can't say either way yet since I've had it for only four months and have used it a mere three or four dozen times. It's designed to fit a wide variety of handle bar sizes, so you shouldn't have a problem fitting it on. Does the job.

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2.0 out of 5 stars.  Plastic spring doesn't last, August 30, 2010
By Gary L. (Carrollton, TX United States)
This has a metal bell with a plastic clapper you pull back with your thumb and release. The bell then makes a single "ding" sound. Trouble is, after a few months of use you have to pull back farther and farther on the plastic spring to get it to make a sound. The plastic just doesn't cut it as a spring, and slowly loses it's ability to act as a spring. I've had this bell for three months, use it several times a week, and figure at the rate it's going I've got another month before it needs to be replaced with something else.

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1.0 out of 5 stars.  Cheap and not loud, August 30, 2010
By R. D. Hoag (Carmel by the Sea, Ca United States)
I should have looked closer at this.. it's made out of cheap plastic with a small metal bell that you can only hear a few feet away. The bell dinger is this piece of plastic that is sort of spring loaded.. you push down on it and it springs back up to hit the bell and make a ding sound.. I really don't expect this to last terribly long and you can't hear it anyway, so probably will thow it in the trash.. junk.

And get this.. it was sent in a cardboard box 5" x 5" x 40" long with some paper stuffed in with the bell on a display card.. I couldn't believe they would put this 1-1/2" bell in a box this big.. maybe they want to discourge people from sending it back?

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