IBM Audible Random Timer lolwtfbbq thread, part 4 of however many.
How it works - overview.
The slide switch selects off, low volume, or high volume. "Low" volume is quite low. In a quiet room it's noticeable but not jarring. High volume is quite a bit louder, bordering (to me) on annoyingly loud in a quiet room but probably acceptable with any other ambient noise.
When powered on, it beeps 4-5 times to let you know it's working. Then, randomly, it will beep again 4-5 times and stop. You can stop the beeping by pressing the slide switch (it's also a pushbutton). If you leave it alone it'll beep those same 4-5 times then stop.
So far, with only a few (6-8) datapoints, the "random interval" has been between 7 minutes and just over an hour.
Beeper is a little piezoelectric buzzer stickytaped to the inside of the front panel.
Also, IBM-made tell #4 is the front panel. It's the same thickness and material as IBM machine nameplates and is the same screen printed technique.
IBM Audible Random Timer lolwtfbbq thread, part 5 of however many.
How it works - detail.
The right side of the PCB are two 4060 binary counter ships and a 74HC688 8 bit comparator. This is I think where the "randomness" is generated - assuming the two counters run at different rates, the comparator would trigger the alarm when the two counters hit the same number at the same time.