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Tony wrote:
(snip)code tho). That was a rotary phone that was in the house when I bought it 27 years ago. It is hooked up in the garage. In true "illegal phone" tradition, only one of them rings ;-) I don't understand the last sentence? In the old days, with the relatively high-draw mechanical ringers, they could put a meter across your line and see how much juice it drew when the ring tone was sent. Look on the bottom of a modern throw-away phone for the Ringer Equivalence Number (REN)- it is usually about 0.65 or so, as compared to 1.0 for a real phone. And if Ma Bell was suspicious, she could figure out how many you had. Standard home POTS line, if you put too many phones on, none would ring. So people with bootleg phones would disconnect the ringers on the 'extra' ones. There was a day when repeatedly getting caught with bootleg phones would get your service terminated. And since you could only get phones from the phone company, you were presumed to be holding stolen property. (For Ma Bell, at least, it said it was theirs right on it.) For a few years after the judge said the phone company had to allow customer-owned equipment, they were still allowed to require one phone-company owned phone per line. So a lot of small businesses who were early adopters for having their own phone system, would have a board on the basement wall with a 'real' wall phone for each line, never used. -- aem sends... |
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aemeijers wrote:
Tony wrote: (snip)code tho). That was a rotary phone that was in the house when I bought it 27 years ago. It is hooked up in the garage. In true "illegal phone" tradition, only one of them rings ;-) I don't understand the last sentence? In the old days, with the relatively high-draw mechanical ringers, they could put a meter across your line and see how much juice it drew when the ring tone was sent. Look on the bottom of a modern throw-away phone for the Ringer Equivalence Number (REN)- it is usually about 0.65 or so, as compared to 1.0 for a real phone. And if Ma Bell was suspicious, she could figure out how many you had. Standard home POTS line, if you put too many phones on, none would ring. So people with bootleg phones would disconnect the ringers on the 'extra' ones. OK, yes I remember those days. As late as 1985 I remember hooking up another "real" phone and it rang but the other phone just barely had the power to "tick" the bells. Buying a cheap new phone took care of that since their REN was so low. I also remember that I was supposed to pay an extra $1/month for all additional phones. Screw that. I'm not sure, but I think around that time they may have stopped charging for extra phones because I vaugley remember asking the phone company to up the power for the ringers and it was done free. I also had what I think was a "Princess" touch tone phone, not sure where I got it. For some reason I opened it up and saw a light bulb for the buttons. I called the phone company and asked why my bulb won't light and they told me they stopped supplying power for that. For free they did send me a little wall wort type thing to plug in and hook up to the phone so my light worked! I just saw it the other day, I think it is "Western Electric" brand, damn, now I can't find it! As a kid we had an outdoor phone ringer mounted to the chimmney which was about the center of the house. I'm almost certain it was real Bell of PA equipment. Our lot was a little over an acre and it could be heard easily 1 or 2 houses away, and I don't think we paid monthly for it. Just once for the bell and the hookup. That would drive me nuts if my neighbor got one of them now, we had a large family so the phone rang a lot! Gawd knows how many times we ran inside only to just miss the phone, not to mention how many times the run included a trip and fall! There was a day when repeatedly getting caught with bootleg phones would get your service terminated. And since you could only get phones from the phone company, you were presumed to be holding stolen property. (For Ma Bell, at least, it said it was theirs right on it.) For a few years after the judge said the phone company had to allow customer-owned equipment, they were still allowed to require one phone-company owned phone per line. So a lot of small businesses who were early adopters for having their own phone system, would have a board on the basement wall with a 'real' wall phone for each line, never used. I know some business' still have some real phones for in case their system dies or the electric goes out. The bank of real phones still works with no electric. |
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