The Crane E-Ne Revolver bell has a lovely, musical tone according to our reviewer, and it sung well enough to bag itself a road.cc Recommends award from us last year.
Its unusual rotary mechanism means you can fit it wherever on your handlebar suits best. It's very well made with a machined aluminium clamp and brass dome, which looks very classy.
While this bell is not cheap, this Japanese bell make is renowned for the volume and tone of its bells for a reason, and the E-Ne Revolver is no exception. When you turn the outer ring it produces a cheery sequence of ching-ching sounds that are a super polite way of announcing your presence. If that matters to you, and you also want a bell that is easy to fit and looks great, this is the one for you!
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I've just bought and installed the Crane, and it does sound lovely, especially compared to the crappy one that came on my Trek District 4. I won't get a chance to ride that bike until the snow melts, though.
I mostly use my bell to warn walkers that I am approaching so I find it needs to be as friendly a sound as possible
plus it needs more than a single short ding - especially for groups who may be chatting
Which is why a review of bells - and web sites that are trying to sell them - need audio files
I have a trigger bell and love it fits anywhere on a drop bar and nice and loud. Rarely use it however as I find a friendly hello or Morning! is better received.
Shame you didn't review the Knog bell - these bells look fantastic and are very practical. I love the design and I have one in copper which looks smart. They include cable grips if you are fitting to a drop bar bike with cables exiting the handlebar tape which makes fitting close to the tape in really easy which is a bonus.
I was a backer on Kickstarter for the Knog Oi in 2016, and got one in titanium. I agree, it's a great looking bell with a very pleasant ding, but I ended up removing it as it's just too quiet to be practical. It's currently in a drawer somewhere.
A bell is a legal requirement in Northern Ireland. It would though take a highly officious peeler to fine you. Mind you if you were being gobby with them the might toss that fine in for good measure. My dad was fined back in the sixties by an eagle eyed peeler who was walking past at a junction.
a gas air horn is required for the earpod/earphone using pedestrians - the ones who are voluntarily oblivious
My front disc offers similar auditory performance in damp conditions, and yes, I like it like that;)
What's the point of reviewing bells if there's no audio files or videos?
You'll just have to close your eyes and imagine the 'ding'