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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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On Sat, 17 Jul 2010 11:33:24 -0700, David Nebenzahl
wrote: On 7/17/2010 8:56 AM Jeffrey D Angus spake thus: David Nebenzahl wrote: I said that *some* of the phones (meaning the wiring inside the house) work and some of them don't, so obviously the problem is inside the house. Bite the bullet. Buy a box of Cat-3 (or 5) wire and start over. Every house I've ever worked on has a total cluster-f**k for the telephone wiring. Pick a location, (a closet or such) and call that "home". Run a new cable from the telephone company POE, to there. From there, run a new cable to each and every jack in the house. One Type-66 split block and a package of jumper clips will make a nice "distribution" point in the closet. Problem solved. And if you decide to get campy and put in a cheap PBX, all your work is already done for the most part. Well, good suggestions all. But thanks but no thanks; I'll answer several replies here by saying that even though I posted this query, I have no intention of actually trying to fix it. Here's why. WTF!!! Here's how life works. If a man (I'm referring to a real man, not some elitest bull**** "I don't want to get my hands dirty" type who happens to possess a Y chromosome) sees a problem, he tries to fix it. If he can't he asks for help. This doesn't reflect unfavorably on his masculinity. When the first proto cave-man decided it would be nice to live in a cave rather than get wet every time it rained, he asked his proto cave-man buddies for advice on getting the wild animals out of the cave of choice. And being real men, they probably offered to help. And sat around in the cave afterward eating the former four legged occupant. If you are going to ask for advice that you don't intend to use, the honorable thing to do is to tell us up front that this is purely for informational purposes. At a mimimum, afterwards say "Thanks, the problem has been solved." That at least give your helpers the satisfaction of having spent their time in a useful matter. This "I'm not going to do anything about it" is BULL****!!! PlainBill Mainly 'cuz I'm not a telephone repair person. As I get older I try more and more to recognize and respect my limitations. I'm not a master of all trades. I *might* be able to fix this problem; after all, telephone wiring is not exactly rocket science. But still, it has its on specialized problems, and I have no test equipment to perform this kind of diagnosis, apart from a VOM. Plus it's a fairly large house, with lots of wiring inside walls and in barely-accessible crawlspaces. Not my idea of fun at all, brushing aside piles of old rat **** to trace a wire. Plus, the existing wiring is a total ****ing mess. Unbelievable how those phone co. monkeys wire stuff. There's a literal rat's nest of wiring under the house, not in any box, splices every which way, no consistency in the use of color pairs, no labels, just a ****ing nightmare. So I'll leave it to someone else to sort out, thank you very much. Ackshooly, the homeowners are lucky, because the last time they called the telco (AT&T), they got a guy who scurried about under the house, found the problem (this was a DSL issue), fixed it, and DIDN'T CHARGE THEM ANYTHING FOR IT! They think they can get this person to perform another miracle for them. |
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