In our IoT Podcast Hotline voicemail this week, we received a question from someone who recently switched from a Ring doorbell to a Nest Hello. The Ring supports additional chimes so you can hear the doorbell around the home, but the Nest Hello doesn’t. Well, it does, but Nest doesn’t actually sell remote chimes.
Instead, you can use any Google Home speaker or display to act as a remote chime for the Nest Hello. And if the Google Home device is a smart display, you can also see the person at your door.
The instructions to set up a Google Home device as a Nest Hello chime seem quite simple, but there are some potential gotchas that can make the process a little more challenging. Here are the steps:
- First (and this one of the gotchas since it’s not intuitive to this process), enable Personal Results in the Google Home app. To do this, tap the Google Home device(s) you want to act as a doorbell chime, click the settings icon for that device and then look for the “More” option to find the Personal Results switch. Note that this will allow your Google app data from Gmail, Calendar, Photos, etc.. to be accessed from the Home device. Some people may not wish to allow this, of course.
- Switch over the Nest app and tap the Settings icon. Look for the “Visitor Announcements” option and enable it. When I did this, the Nest app directed me to the Google Assistant app, saying to acknowledge and prompts. I never got the prompts, but perhaps you will.
And that’s it! Keep in mind that your Google Home “remote chime” will only sound when someone actually rings the Nest Hello doorbell. You won’t hear any chimes or announcements based on motion detection.
Again, there’s no official remote chime device made by Nest, but as part of Google, the integration is there between the Nest Hello and Google Home products. To hear the question in full, as well as our discussion about it, tune in below to this week’s IoT Podcast.
This is a great solution even when you have the existing mechanical or electronic chime still connected from your original doorbell.
It is a bit subtle, but Nest allows you to connect multiple Google Home devices simultaneously. I use it to have a chime in my home office which is located in the far corner of our home where I can’t hear the regular chime.
I have clients that have used it for additional chimes on multiple floors of their home or other rooms too far to hear the existing chime.
When the chime “rings” you get an audible voice announcement “There is someone at the door” or if you have the face recognition service activated the name of the person “James is at the door”.
Unfortunately, Nest ignores the K.I.S.S. principle – there is no way to have a simple ringing sound like an actual doorbell if that is all you desire. Voice announcement is the only option.
Im interested in getting the doorbell but I have 2 Google minis, I only want it to ring to one as the other is upstairs in a bedroom where someone could be sleeping.
Is this possible
You could put a relay in parallel with the bell coil and use the dry contacts to connect to a wireless door bell push. Would need a little soldering. Then you could add as many remote chimes as that system will allow. You still need a flat battery cell in the bell push, but if you go one step further you could short out the button and use a DC – DC voltage converter to power the bell push when the nest energises the relay.
We offer another solution at http://www.ohmkat.com, which is a patented plug and play chime that works with Nest video doorbells (and most other video doorbells). It is the only chime on the market like it.
I JUST MOVE AND LEFT THE RING DOOR BELL SYSTEM WITH THE NEW OWNERS BUT I TOOK THE TWO WIRELESS DOOR CHIME THEN INSTALLED A NEW GOOGLE NEST DOOR BELL SYSYEM IN MY NEW HOME
QUESTION: IS IT POSSIBLE TO CONNECT THE TWO CHIME TO MY NEW GOOGLE NEST DOOR BELL SYSTEM THAT HAVE UP AND RUNNING
No, they won’t work together.