home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!uwm.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!dtix!oasys!curt
- From: curt@oasys.dt.navy.mil (Curt Welch)
- Newsgroups: sci.electronics
- Subject: Re: Adding a Second Phone Line
- Message-ID: <27263@oasys.dt.navy.mil>
- Date: 6 Nov 92 16:54:49 GMT
- Article-I.D.: oasys.27263
- References: <Bx8C3s.C70@news.cso.uiuc.edu> <1992Nov5.213451.27140@mp.cs.niu.edu>
- Reply-To: curt@oasys.dt.navy.mil (Curt Welch)
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: Carderock Division, NSWC, Bethesda, MD
- Lines: 33
-
- wrb@cbnews.cb.att.com (wallace.r.blackburn) writes:
- >If you get them backwards, the phone will work, that is you will be able to
- >answer an incoming call. But it won't dial out. If this happens, just
- >switch the two wires around.
-
- In sci.electronics, rickert@mp.cs.niu.edu (Neil Rickert) writes:
- >Perhaps this depends on the type of telephone. Many 'phones seem to work
- >and dial out with either polarity.
-
- Yes, it does depend on the phone. Most new phones today do not care about
- the polarity.
-
- Here's the story I heard about phone polarity. All the old AT&T network
- was wired with correct and consistant polarity. And the old AT&T touchtone
- phones required correct polarity to drive the touchtone keypad. As the
- person above noted, if you got it backwards, the phone would work, but the
- touchtone keypad wouldn't.
-
- But some phone systems, like GTE, didn't have their network
- consistantly wired. So the GTE phones had a bridge rectifier built
- into them so that they would work no matter how the jacks were wired.
-
- And this wasn't just a problem of wiring the jacks correctly. With
- some GTE CO switches, the polarity of your phone would change depending
- on who you called. So if you had an AT&T phone connected to a GTE
- system, the keypad might stop working after you placed the call. There
- was a time when GTE would come out and install a rectifier in your
- phone to fix this problem if you asked them to.
-
- Today, especially with all the do-it-yourself home wiring, most, if not
- all, new phones will work either way.
-
- Curt
-