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Škoda DuoBell prototype unveiled on April 5, 2026. 750 Hz pulse and 2,000 Hz chime cut through ANC, alerting riders faster at 15 mph

Škoda DuoBell prototype unveiled on April 5, 2026

On April 5, 2026 Škoda introduced the DuoBell, a bike bell that emits a 750 Hz pulse plus a 2,000 Hz chime. Tests with Apple AirPods Max and Sony WH‑1000XM5 showed cyclists heard the alert up to five seconds sooner, a vital edge at 15 mph. The device has no production schedule or pricing; if sold for under $30, it boosts safety on urban lanes.

9 April 2026

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TLDR:

  • Škoda unveiled the DuoBell prototype on April 5, 2026—a dual‑tone bike bell (750 Hz pulse + 2 kHz chime) that exploits ANC headphones’ low‑frequency blind spot.
  • Tests with AirPods Max and Sony WH‑1000XM5 showed riders heard the DuoBell about five seconds sooner than a conventional single‑tone bell.
  • Škoda says DuoBell remains a prototype with no production date or price; if priced under $30, it could cut cyclist‑headphone accidents on busy US bike lanes.

Škoda unveiled the DuoBell prototype—a bicycle bell engineered to punch through active-noise-cancelling headphones using the ANC algorithm's own frequency blind spot.

What's new: The bell fires a 750 Hz low-frequency pulse—a range ANC chips typically ignore—paired with a 2,000 Hz chime that your brain reads as "bicycle bell." The combo bypasses digital noise filters while staying audible above traffic and wind roar.

Why it matters: Škoda's engineers tested the DuoBell against popular headphones, including Apple AirPods Max and Sony WH-1000XM series. Riders wearing ANC headphones detected the dual-tone alert an average of five seconds earlier than a standard single-frequency bell—a lifetime when you're closing at 15 mph on a bike lane.

How it works: Active noise cancellation works by sampling ambient sound and generating inverse waveforms to cancel it out. Most ANC algorithms leave a gap in the low-frequency range around 750 Hz because processing those frequencies drains battery and doesn't target typical noise like engine hum or HVAC. DuoBell exploits that gap: the low pulse slips through untouched, while the secondary 2,000 Hz tone registers as the classic "ding" without overwhelming the rider.

Where it actually works—and where it doesn't: Urban cyclists threading bike lanes on streets where wind noise, delivery trucks, and Bluetooth speakers mask traditional bells will get the most out of the dual-tone alert. Riders on quiet park trails or protected greenways may find the high-pitch chime overkill—especially if pedestrians aren't wearing headphones in the first place.

The bottom line: Škoda says the DuoBell remains a prototype with no production timeline, pricing, or street date. The company has released a technical paper detailing the frequency analysis. Still, it's a smart engineering answer to a real-world problem: on America's bike lanes, half the riders have AirPods Pro in, and a standard bell might as well be a whisper. If Škoda or another manufacturer can package this for under $30 and get it into bike shops, it could help prevent accidents—and that's worth more than a press release.

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