New Zealand's Roaring Chorus connects with a campaign led by the UK government, supported by the German government, inviting nations to participate in international bellringing.
Other countries including the USA are contributing, and even the remote location of Rothera Research Station in the Antarctic is expected to join in.
Churches across New Zealand will join in. In Christchurch, where the city's cathedral was badly damaged after the February 2011 earthquake and its bells are still inoperable, its ringers have formed a band with those at St Paul's in Papanui where they will ring a quarter peal of Plain Bob Major.
St Andrew's Anglican Church will also ring out during Armistice commemorations in Cambridge — the sister city of Le Quesnoy — as will First Church of Otago in Dunedin, and many smaller churches nationwide.
Reverend Jacynthia Murphy convinced her parish at St Martin's at St Chad's in Sandringham to restore its church bell so it could participate.
The bell had long been silent after its rope had frayed and finally severed, but last month Frank Bartley — the parish's 80-year-old treasurer — climbed a tall ladder and twisted himself into the tower to fix it.
Sarah Davies, director of the First World War Centenary Programme WW100, reports many churches have registered Armistice Centenary events at WW100.govt.nz/armistice-events.
"It is fantastic that so many bellringers are joining the Roaring Chorus.
New Zealand will be among the first countries in the world to commemorate the Armistice Centenary, and our bells will be echoed around the world as other nations contribute the sound of theirs. It will be poignantly beautiful."
The Rangimarie peace bell of the National War Memorial Carillon will toll 11 times to mark the start of the two-minute silence of remembrance at 11am at the official Armistice Centenary National Ceremony in Wellington.
At 11.02am, there will be a celebratory fanfare played by the full bells of the carillon, in unison with the Roaring Chorus across New Zealand.
A carillon is the largest musical instrument in the world, and Wellington's is the third largest carillon in the world.
Historic accounts show that there was spontaneous bellringing in celebration of peace at the time of the Armistice.
A 1918 letter written by a Kinloch girl to her local newspaper says: "The steamer Ben Lomond began to whistle coming up the lake when the news of peace came through.
Mum got the cowbell and I got the school bell, and we made a great noise with them." (Otago Witness, 27-11-1918).
In commemorations nationwide, thousands are expected to make jubilant noise with vintage car horns, cannons, waiata, cheers, whistles, hooters and even pots and pans.
Fire and Emergency New Zealand and New Zealand Police have invited available fire appliances and police cars to ring their sirens, and Maritime New Zealand has invited vessels in New Zealand waters to join the commemoration with their horns.
Bluebridge Cook Strait Ferries and Interislander ferries will be sounding their horns, as will KiwiRail's scenic and freight trains.
The Wellington Combined Society of Bell Ringers is set to ring a 45-minute quarter peal at Wellington Cathedral of St Paul.
Canon Simon Winn has devised 'A Service of Remembrance and Commitment to Peace' prior, incorporating period music and poetry, soldiers' reflection and statements from the Governor-General and Prime Minister which are available to the public.
Worshippers will crowd on to the cathedral steps with handbells, whistles, drums and voices to add to the Roaring Chorus while the bells peal overhead.