NiteDog
New member
Bubbacon and Friends
Hey TC,
The older ring standards are still in effect in many areas to support the old indutry standards. There still is a huge quantity of older equipment in many subscribers homes and small businesses.
I have seen the various ringing currents all over the east coast. In the early days when I was a new lineman, there was nothing like the wake up call you get from leaning out across iron wire to connect a drop. Yes you can get a nasty burn.
The muxes we use in customer sites to drop from fiber to copper have some nasty ring generators. Some of the first generation digital EAPBXes I worked on could peak 300vac off the back of the unit, but when loaded or tied down to the copper plant they would settle in around 105.
You probably work in an area that has had a better rebuild program and the standards aren't as critical, and I believe as time goes on the rest of the country will follow suit. Eventually we will all be on fiber and ring current won't be an issue. Let's just hope they send the ones and zeros in the right sequence. lol
that's my two cents,
mike
TwistedCopper said:Just for kicks I just tested mine. 46V AC ringing voltage (I didn't bother testing frequency). I was already aware that the DC voltage remains on the line while it rings, and it is one of the only examples of the two types of voltage being run on the same circuit of anything I have ever dealt with. I never would have thought that possible before working for the phone company.
I guess the telco equipment varies more than I thought. I figured yours would have been closer to 50V. I wonder why that system uses a higher voltage, as I don't start to troubleshoot a line unless it drops below 40VAC.
Good to know though, and it'll have me picking the brain of a couple of the old-timers at my work location
As for your Jeep being 160V, I'm going to quit while I'm behind but I'm glad we agree on the safety issue. I felt the need to state it when I got a mental image of some welder-to-be checking to see if he could really shock himself harmlessly :lol:
Hey TC,
The older ring standards are still in effect in many areas to support the old indutry standards. There still is a huge quantity of older equipment in many subscribers homes and small businesses.
I have seen the various ringing currents all over the east coast. In the early days when I was a new lineman, there was nothing like the wake up call you get from leaning out across iron wire to connect a drop. Yes you can get a nasty burn.
The muxes we use in customer sites to drop from fiber to copper have some nasty ring generators. Some of the first generation digital EAPBXes I worked on could peak 300vac off the back of the unit, but when loaded or tied down to the copper plant they would settle in around 105.
You probably work in an area that has had a better rebuild program and the standards aren't as critical, and I believe as time goes on the rest of the country will follow suit. Eventually we will all be on fiber and ring current won't be an issue. Let's just hope they send the ones and zeros in the right sequence. lol
that's my two cents,
mike