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Vintage Telephony and Telecomms Vintage Telephones, Telephony and Telecomms Equipment |
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#1 |
New Member
Join Date: Sep 2023
Location: Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, UK.
Posts: 1
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Hi,
First post, please forgive any lack of awareness. I have a GPO746 telephone which I have used on a regular BT telephone line before. It rang and would dial out fine, and you could talk on it; the only thing it wouldn't do was allow you to navigate called menus ('Dial 1 for Customer service, dial 2 for sales' etc). I appreciate that this is because it is a pulse dialling device and such menus are tone-activated. We've now moved house and telephones are run through a Virgin HomeHub. I'd like to make my old GPO746 work on this. I've plugged it in using the provided RJ11-BTJack connector and some of it works; it won't ring and it won't dial out but you can answer calls on it and both speak and listen. The problem with it not dialling out is again presumably due to it being pulse and not tone. I can live with this. However I would like it to ring. A bit of research on this forum suggests that the problem is a lack of a ringing capacitor, and I've discovered that it does ring if you plug a broadband filter in line with the 'phone. Presumably such a filter provides a capacitor on a third terminal in the phone. Would it therefore be possible to take the relevant capacitor out of the broadband filter and connect it within the 'phone? I've taken the top off the 'phone and this is what it looks like (attached file). Those connections seem to be as follows; White - T18 Green - T15 Blue - T5 Red - T8 The following terminals are bridged: T4 - T5 - T6 (T4 - T5 is a small wire but it is there). T8 - T9 T16 - T17 - T18 - T19 C2 also seems to be missing (probably never present). This seems all to be in line with what other people have described on here with the exception of the Green wire on T15, which many people don't have connected. So my question is whether there is any internal re-wiring I can do to make the 'phone ring or whether I can simply bridge a capacitor across a couple of terminals to make it ring? And, if so, can I pinch a capacitor from the broadband filter to achieve this? Thanks in advance for your help. |
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#2 |
Dekatron
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Greater Manchester, UK.
Posts: 18,591
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The problem is with "The provided RJ11-BTJack connector", modern phones don't require the ringing signal on pin 3 of the BT connector, so they don't bother with the capacitor.
If you replace it with one like this https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/262671846092 it will work. Personally I would just stick with the ADSL microfilter. You can rewire the phone so it uses its existing internal capacitor, but as you need an adapter anyway to RJ11, it can kill two birds.
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-- Graham. G3ZVT Last edited by Graham G3ZVT; 27th Sep 2023 at 12:19 am. |
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#3 |
Heptode
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Hakadal, Norway
Posts: 633
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A pulse-tone adapter like Dialgizmo may solve the dialing problem. A capacitor in the phone may solve the ringing problem, if you are lucky, the capacitor is in there so you do just have to move some straps.
Try to put in the straps as in this diagram: https://www.vintage-radio.net/forum/...2&d=1405435789 From this tread: https://www.vintage-radio.net/forum/...d.php?t=107719 |
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#4 |
Octode
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Stevenage, Herts. UK.
Posts: 1,485
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Don't know which Virgin hub you have, but my 746 works fine with the Superhub 3. A capacitor made it ring and pulse dialing just works - I suspect the latter is hub dependent.
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#5 | |
Nonode
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: West Midlands, UK.
Posts: 2,179
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First, theres a site giving ful circuit diagrams of the 746 etc. Sam Hallas N diagrams( the GPO techs BIBLE TO phones. http://www.samhallas.co.uk/repositor...ms/popular.htm. N diagrams were the diagrams associated with GPO phones. For some reason, each phone diagram ( for the phone had 100 added to the phone number. e.g. a 706, was N diagram N806 AND 746 WAS n846. If you look at site http://www.samhallas.co.uk/repositor.../0000/N846.pdf, you will see the information for a 746 PHONE . iVE ADDED ( FROM MEMORY OF OVER 50 YEARS AGO) what I remember rrom the days at GPO TRAINING. Hopelfully it might show you how phones were connected then and now. Difference is that in old days, speech was in parallel, with bells in series. Today, in an alalogue system, speech is in parallel, as are bells. To achieve this bell circuits need the resistance increased in todays world. |
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#6 | ||
Heptode
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Flintshire, UK.
Posts: 706
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The website britishtelephones.com has far more information on GPO and other UK manufactured telephones and has details on converting them to plug & socket working including converting a Tele 746 to become a Tele 8746 I was a GPO Technical Officer 60 years ago ! How time flies - doesn't seem that long ago since we wound the handle to call the excange then again to 'ring off' at the end of the call. My oldest exhanges are some National Telephone Co magneto cord switchboards. My automatic GPO exchange is now coming up to 100 years old! Still got my old phones connect to CNet, our relica of the GPO public network as it was in the 1960/70's. London is still 01 xxx xxxx on our network! Free to connect to and all the calls are free - worldwide. Even BT have lines off our network! PM me for details. Ian J CNet 0352 2979# MR ETD 053-6278 |
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#7 |
Nonode
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: West Midlands, UK.
Posts: 2,179
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Pellseinydd- like you- TO on Transmission Mtce. I remember the old lady on an island in my younger days ( possibly Eigg) telling me &mentor( Maintenance TO) that a sub could not be contacted and that a ring on the handle( magneto exchange) got no response. Simple answer= wire down. My first Transmission place was OB/b- hidden in the bowels of a Scottish hillside in the days of the cold war. Time flies from my days surfacing between the islands of the inner Scottish highlands, where I met blokes like Tex Geddes ( who told me He could have been my dad) and other worties .
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#8 |
Tetrode
Join Date: Nov 2017
Location: Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, UK.
Posts: 62
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I'm embarrassed to say that as an ex GPO engineer and Virgin Media (business, not cable TV) I don't understand this.
Isn't a VM hub a cable modem and therefore any phone that connected to it should be ip? I've been retired for 7 years but at the time I left, business POTS lines (and residential) were delivered on copper from muxes in street cabinets. I might understand better if I ever used the product but I didn't live on the franchise. My sister does and her set-up is a CM and copper telephone line. Please enlighten me! |
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#9 | |
Dekatron
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Greater Manchester, UK.
Posts: 18,591
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As you imply, a true IP phone would just plug into a LAN socket on the router (or connect by WiFi), like anything else. The router in this case has a built in ATA (Analogue Telephone Adapter) so the customer can keep their existing POTS phones, and, if implemented correctly, they won't even notice the difference after the loss of their copper pair. (Until the power goes off anyway ![]()
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-- Graham. G3ZVT |
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