mirror of
https://github.com/fdiskyou/Zines.git
synced 2025-03-09 00:00:00 +01:00
391 lines
24 KiB
Text
391 lines
24 KiB
Text
![]() |
==Phrack Inc.==
|
||
|
|
||
|
Volume Two, Issue 24, File 9 of 13
|
||
|
|
||
|
/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| Lifting Ma Bell's Cloak Of Secrecy |
|
||
|
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
|
||
|
| A New Look At Basic Telephone Systems |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
| by VaxCat |
|
||
|
| |
|
||
|
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though telephones predate radio communications by many years, they aren't
|
||
|
nearly as simple as they appear at first glance. In fact, some aspects of
|
||
|
telephone systems are most interesting and quite ingenious. In this file, I
|
||
|
will describe some of these more interesting and perhaps less well-known areas
|
||
|
of telephone systems. Before going any further, let me explain and apologize
|
||
|
for the fact that some of the information in this file may not be altogether
|
||
|
complete, up to date, or even totally correct.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I do not work for any phone company, and therefore, I do not have unlimited
|
||
|
access to internal telephone company literature. Moreover, there is very
|
||
|
little material available in books or magazines which describes how United
|
||
|
States telephone systems work. Much of the information in this file has been
|
||
|
obtained piece-meal from many different sources such as books, popular
|
||
|
magazines, computer data communications journals, handbooks, and sometimes just
|
||
|
plain hearsay.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I have tried to correlate as much as possible all the little bits and pieces
|
||
|
into a coherent picture which makes sense, but there is no easy way to be sure
|
||
|
of all the little details. So think of this article as if it is a historical
|
||
|
novel - generally accurate and, regardless of whether it is completely true or
|
||
|
not, fascinating. With this out of the way, let's go on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You, as a customer, are generally referred to as the "subscriber." Your
|
||
|
telephone connects to the Central Office through a two-wire cable which may be
|
||
|
miles long, and which may have a resistance on the order of hundreds or even
|
||
|
thousands of Ohms. This cable is essentially a balanced line with a
|
||
|
characteristic impedance of around 900 Ohms, but this varies greatly with
|
||
|
different cables, different weather conditions, and different calls. This is
|
||
|
why it is so hard to keep a hybrid phone-patch balanced.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The main power in the central office comes from 48 volt storage batteries which
|
||
|
are constantly kept trickle-charged. This battery is connected to your line
|
||
|
through a subscriber relay and a balanced audio transformer. The relay is
|
||
|
sensitive enough to detect even quite small currents through your line.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The buttons which stick up out of your telephone case when you lift the handset
|
||
|
activate the hook switch. The name probably dates back to the days when the
|
||
|
handset (or even earlier, the earpiece) hung on the side of the phone from a
|
||
|
hook. In any case, when your phone is hung up it is said to be on the hook,
|
||
|
and when you lift the handset to make a call it is said to go off the hook.
|
||
|
With the phone on hook, the line is connected only to the bell (called the
|
||
|
ringer). Because the bell circuit has a capacitor in it, no DC current can
|
||
|
flow through the phone. As a result, the subscriber relay back in the central
|
||
|
office will be de-energized, indicating to the central office (let's abbreviate
|
||
|
that as CO from now on) that your phone is hung up.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Since there is no current through your line or phone, there is no voltage drop
|
||
|
anywhere, and so if you measure the voltage across the phone line at your phone
|
||
|
you will see the entire 48 volts (or even more if the CO batteries are well
|
||
|
charged).
|
||
|
|
||
|
The positive (grounded) lead is called the tip and the negative lead is called
|
||
|
the ring; these names correspond to the tip and ring of a three-circuit phone
|
||
|
plug. Now suppose you want to place a call; You pick up the handset and the
|
||
|
phone goes off the hook. This completes the DC circuit through the dial,
|
||
|
microphone, and the hybrid network which is basically a complicated transformer
|
||
|
circuit.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At this point current starts to flow from the battery through your line and
|
||
|
phone, and the subscriber relay back at the CO pulls in. The line voltage
|
||
|
across your phone now drops to just a few volts because the line is loaded down
|
||
|
by the low resistance of the phone. The CO now searches for some idle dialing
|
||
|
circuits, and when it finds them, connects a dial tone back to your phone.
|
||
|
When you hear this, you start dialing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So lets talk about rotary dial, the type of phone which you turn with your
|
||
|
finger (we will talk about Touchtone dials later). When you dial a number, the
|
||
|
dial acts as a short circuit until you release the dial and let the built-in
|
||
|
spring return it back to the resting position. As it is returning, it starts
|
||
|
to open and close the circuit in sequence to indicate the number you dialed.
|
||
|
If you dial a 1, it opens the circuit once; if you dial a 9 it opens the
|
||
|
circuit nine times. As the dial is returning it cause the subscriber relay to
|
||
|
open and close in step. This enables the CO to recognize the number you want.
|
||
|
When you finish dialing, the dial becomes just a plain short circuit which
|
||
|
passes current through the microphone and the hybrid network. Since the mike
|
||
|
is a carbon unit, it needs this current to work. When the CO receives he
|
||
|
complete number, it starts to process your call. If you dialed another
|
||
|
subscriber in the same area, it may connect you directly to that subscriber's
|
||
|
line. Calls to phones a little further away may have to be routed through
|
||
|
another CO, while long distance calls may go through one or more long distance
|
||
|
switching centers (called tandems) and possibly many other CO's before arriving
|
||
|
at the destination. At the completion of this process, you may get either a
|
||
|
ringing signal, indicating that the phone at the other end is ringing, one of
|
||
|
several types of busy signals, or possibly just silence, if something goes
|
||
|
wrong somewhere.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When you talk to the person at the other end, the cable carries audio in both
|
||
|
directions at the same time. Your carbon microphone varies the current in your
|
||
|
circuit, and this current variation is detected by a balanced transformer in
|
||
|
the CO. At the same time, audio coming back to your phone goes through the
|
||
|
hybrid network to your earphone. In phone company lingo they like to call the
|
||
|
mike a transmitter, and the earphone is called the receiver.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You may be interested in the makeup of the various tones you may hear on your
|
||
|
telephone; these tones are important to people such as computer communications
|
||
|
designers who have to build equipment which will recognize dial or other
|
||
|
signaling tones:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dial tone in older exchanges may still be a combination of 120 and 600 Hz,
|
||
|
but the newer exchanges use a combination of 350 and 440 Hz. There is
|
||
|
often a slight change in the DC line voltage at the beginning of dial
|
||
|
tone, and this may also be detected.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Busy signal is a combination of 480 and 620 Hz which alternates for 1/2
|
||
|
second on and 1/2 second off (i.e., 60 interruptions per minute) when the
|
||
|
party you are calling is busy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The same busy signal may be used for other conditions such as busy
|
||
|
interoffice or long distance circuits, but would then be interrupted
|
||
|
either 30 times a minute or 120 times per minute. This is a standard
|
||
|
agreed on by an international telecommunications organization called CCITT
|
||
|
(and I don't offhand remember the French words it stands for), but
|
||
|
occasionally other frequencies up to 2 kHz are used. A siren-like sound
|
||
|
varying between 200 and 400 Hz is often used for other error conditions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ringing tone, which you hear coming back to you when the phone rings
|
||
|
on the other end of the connection, is nowadays mostly a combination of
|
||
|
440 and 480 Hz, but there is great variation between CO's. Very often a
|
||
|
higher frequency such as 500 Hz is interrupted at 20 Hz, and other tones
|
||
|
are used as well. The tone is usually on for 2 seconds and off for 4
|
||
|
seconds.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The ringing current, actually used to ring the bell in a telephone, is an
|
||
|
AC voltage since it has to activate a ringer which has a capacitor in
|
||
|
series with it. Different companies use different ringing currents, but
|
||
|
the most common is 90 volts at 20 Hz. Since a typical phone may be
|
||
|
thousands of feet away from the CO, the thin wires used may have a fairly
|
||
|
high line resistance. Hence only a relatively small current can be
|
||
|
applied to the bell, certainly not enough to ring something like a
|
||
|
doorbell. This problem is solved by making the bell resonant mechanically
|
||
|
at the ringing frequency so that even a fairly small amount of power is
|
||
|
enough to start the striker moving hard enough to produce a loud sound.
|
||
|
This is the reason why a low-frequency AC is used. Although this raises
|
||
|
some problems in generating a 20 Hz signal at a high enough voltage, it
|
||
|
has the advantage that a bell will respond to a ringing current only if
|
||
|
the frequency is quite close to the bell's naturally resonant frequency.
|
||
|
If you build two bells, one resonant at 20 Hz and the other resonant at 30
|
||
|
Hz, and connect them together to the same line, you can ring just one bell
|
||
|
at a time by connecting a ringing current of the right frequency to the
|
||
|
line; this has some useful applications in ringing just one phone on a
|
||
|
party line.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now let's look at some of the components of the phone itself. We will consider
|
||
|
the most common new phone, a model 500 C/D manufactured by Western Electric and
|
||
|
used by Bell System affiliated phone companies. This is the standard desk
|
||
|
phone, having modern rounded lines and usually having a G1 or G3 handset. It
|
||
|
was developed about 1950 and replaced the older 300-series phones which had the
|
||
|
older F1 handset and had sharper corners and edges. There was an in between
|
||
|
phone, where they took an old 300-series phone and put a new case on it which
|
||
|
resembled the 500-style case, but had a straight up and down back - the back of
|
||
|
the case came straight down right behind the handset cradle, whereas the true
|
||
|
500-style telephone has what looks like a set sticking out behind the cradle).
|
||
|
|
||
|
If you are still in doubt as to which phone you have, the bell loudness control
|
||
|
is a wheel on the 500-type phone and a lever on the 300-type. If you live in
|
||
|
the boondocks, you may still have the 200-type phone (sometimes called the
|
||
|
ovalbase) or maybe even the desk-stand type that looked like a candlestick,
|
||
|
with the microphone mounted on the top and the earpiece hanging on the side
|
||
|
from a hook.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Neither of these phones had a built in bell, and so you probably have a bell
|
||
|
box attached to your wall. If you have a phone with a handle on the side which
|
||
|
you crack to call the operator, the following does not apply to your phone!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now lets discuss the bell circuit, which consists of a two-coil ringer and a
|
||
|
0.5 uF capacitor. On Western Electric phones the capacitor is mounted inside
|
||
|
the network assembly, which also has a large number of screws on top which act
|
||
|
as connection points for almost everything inside the phone. I have never
|
||
|
been able to find out why the ringer has two coils of unequal resistance, but
|
||
|
it apparently has something to do with determining which subscriber on a party
|
||
|
line makes which call. In most phones, the yellow and the green wires are
|
||
|
connected together at the wall terminal block so that the bell is connected
|
||
|
directly across the telephone line; disconnecting the yellow lead would turn
|
||
|
off the bell (although sometimes the connection is made internally by
|
||
|
connecting the black lead from the ringer directly to the L1 terminal, in which
|
||
|
case the yellow lead is disconnected.
|
||
|
|
||
|
You may wonder why a yellow lead is needed at all when only two wires are
|
||
|
normally used anyway. It is true that only two wires enter the house from the
|
||
|
outside; one of these is the tip and the other is the ring. In a non-party
|
||
|
line the ringing current as well as all talk voltages are applied between the
|
||
|
tip and the ring, and it doesn't actually matter which of the phone leads goes
|
||
|
to the tip and which to the ring if you have a rotary dial phone. If you have
|
||
|
a Touchtone dial, then you have to observe polarity so that the transistor
|
||
|
circuit in the dial works, in which case you have to make sure that the green
|
||
|
lead goes to the tip and the red lead goes to the ring.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The yellow lead is commonly used for party lines. On a two-party line ringing
|
||
|
current from the CO is applied not between the two lines, but between one line
|
||
|
and ground. In that case the yellow lead goes to ground while the other side
|
||
|
of the ringer (the red lead) is connected to either the tip or the ring,
|
||
|
depending on the party. In this way, it is possible to ring only one party's
|
||
|
bell at a time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The remaining connections inside the telephone are varistors; the phone
|
||
|
companies must be the world's biggest users of these devices, which are
|
||
|
variable resistors whose resistance drops as the voltage across them rises.
|
||
|
Their function in the phone set is to short out parts of the set if the applied
|
||
|
voltage gets too high.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hook switch actually has three sets of contacts, two normally open (open,
|
||
|
that is, when the hand set is on hook) which completes the DC circuit when you
|
||
|
pick up the handset, and a normally closed contact which is wired directly
|
||
|
across the earphone. This contact's function is to short the earphone during
|
||
|
the time that the DC circuit is being opened or closed through the phone - this
|
||
|
prevents you from being blasted by a loud click in the earphone.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The dial has two contacts. One of these is the pulsing contact, which is
|
||
|
normally closed and only opens during dialing on the return path of the dial
|
||
|
after you let go of it. The second contact (the off-normal contact), shorts
|
||
|
the earphone as soon as you start turning the dial, and releases the short only
|
||
|
after the dial returns back to the normal position. In this way you do not
|
||
|
hear the clicking of the dial in the phone as you dial. Finally, the phone has
|
||
|
the hybrid network which consists of a four-winding transformer and whole
|
||
|
collection of resistors, capacitors, and varistors. The main function of the
|
||
|
network is to attenuate your own voice to lower its volume in your earphone.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The simplest phone you could build would be just a series circuit consisting of
|
||
|
a dial, a mike, and an earphone. But the signals coming back from the other
|
||
|
party so much weaker than your own signals, that than earphone sensitive enough
|
||
|
to reproduce clearly and loudly the voice of the other person would then blast
|
||
|
your eardrums with the sound of your own voice. The function of the network is
|
||
|
to partially cancel out the signal produced by the local mike, while permitting
|
||
|
all of the received signal to go to the earphone. This technique is similar to
|
||
|
the use of the hybrid phone patch with a VOX circuit, where you want the voice
|
||
|
of the party on the telephone to go to your transmitter, but want to keep the
|
||
|
receiver signal out the transmitter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In addition to the parts needed for the hybrid, the network also contains a few
|
||
|
other components (such as the RC network across the dial pulsing contacts) and
|
||
|
screwtype connection points for the entire phone.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Touchtone phone is similar to the dial phone described above, except that the
|
||
|
rotary dial is replaced by a Touchtone dial. In addition to its transistorized
|
||
|
tone generator, the standard Touchtone pad has the same switch contacts to mute
|
||
|
the earphone, except that instead of completely shorting the earphone, as the
|
||
|
rotary dial does, the Touchtone dial switches in a resistor which only
|
||
|
partially mutes the phone.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is fairly common knowledge as to what frequencies are used for Touchtone
|
||
|
signalling, but a it never hurts to reiterate information. Each digit is
|
||
|
composed of one frequency from the low group and one frequency from the high
|
||
|
group; for instance, the digit 6 is generated by producing a low tone of 770 Hz
|
||
|
(Hertz) and a high tone of 1477 Hz at the same time. The American Touchtone
|
||
|
pads generate both of these tones with the same transistor, while European pads
|
||
|
(yes, there are some) use two transistors, one for reach tone. In addition to
|
||
|
the first three high tones, a fourth tone of 1633 Hz has been decided on for
|
||
|
generating four more combinations. These are not presently in use, although
|
||
|
the standard phone Touchtone pad can easily be modified to produce this tone,
|
||
|
since the required tap on the inductor used to generate the the tone is already
|
||
|
present and only an additional switch contact is needed to use it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What is not generally known is that the United States Air Force uses a
|
||
|
different set of Touchtone frequencies, in the range of 1020 to 1980 Hz. Since
|
||
|
many of the phones available for purchase in stores come from Department of
|
||
|
Defense surplus sales, it will be interesting when these phones become
|
||
|
available.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another Touchtone dial presently used by amateurs is made up from a thin
|
||
|
elastomeric switch pad made by the Chomerics Corporation (77 Dragon Court,
|
||
|
Woburn, Mass. 01801) and a thick-film hybrid IC made by Microsystems
|
||
|
International (800 Dorchester Boulevard, Montreal, Quebec). The pad is the
|
||
|
Chomerics ER-20071, which measures about 2 1/4 inch wide by 3 inches high, and
|
||
|
only about 3/16 inch thick (Chomerics also makes a smaller model ER21289, but
|
||
|
it is very difficult to use and also apparently unreliable). Microsystems
|
||
|
International makes several very similar ICs in the ME8900 series, which use
|
||
|
different amounts of power and generate different amounts of audio. Some of
|
||
|
these also contain protection diodes to avoid problems if you use the wrong
|
||
|
polarity on the IC, and there are so many models to choose from that you should
|
||
|
get the technical data from the manufacturer before ordering one. There are a
|
||
|
number of United States distributors, including Newark Electronics, Milgray and
|
||
|
Arrow Electronics in New York.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the problems with any current IC oscillator is that the frequency
|
||
|
changes if rf gets near it. Many hams are having a hard time mounting such IC
|
||
|
pads on their 2 meter handie-Talkies. A solution seems in sight as Mostek, a
|
||
|
large IC company, is coming out with an IC Touchtone generator which has a
|
||
|
cheap 3.58 MHz external crystal as reference, and then produces the tone
|
||
|
frequencies by dividing the 3.58 MHz down with flip flops to get the required
|
||
|
tone frequencies. This approach not only promises to be more reliable in the
|
||
|
presence of rf, but should also be cheaper since it would not need the custom
|
||
|
(and expensive) laser trimming of components that the Microsystems
|
||
|
International IC needs to adjust the frequencies within tolerance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the other end of the telephone circuit, in the CO, various circuits are used
|
||
|
to decode the digit you dial into the appropriate signals needed to perform the
|
||
|
actual connection. In dial systems, this decoding is done by relay circuits,
|
||
|
such as steppers. This circuitry is designed for dialing at the rate of 10
|
||
|
pulses per second, with a duty cycle of about 60% open, 40% closed. The
|
||
|
minimum time between digits is about 600 milliseconds, although a slightly
|
||
|
greater time between digits is safer since it avoids errors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In practice, many COs will accept dialing at substantially slower or faster
|
||
|
rates, and often you will see a dial that has been speeded up by changing the
|
||
|
mechanical governor to operate almost twice as fast; it depends on the type of
|
||
|
CO equipment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Touchtone decoding is usually done by filter circuits which separate out the
|
||
|
Touchtone tones by filters and then use a transistor circuit to operate a
|
||
|
relay. A common decoder is the 247B, which is designed for use in small dial
|
||
|
switchboard systems of the type that would be installed on the premises of a
|
||
|
business for local communication between extensions. It consists of a limiter
|
||
|
amplifier, seven filters and relay drivers (one for each of the seven tones
|
||
|
commonly used) and some timing and checking circuitry. Each of the seven
|
||
|
relays has multiple contacts, which are then connected in various
|
||
|
series/parallel combinations to provide a grounding of one of ten output
|
||
|
contacts, when a digit is received. The standard 247B does not recognize the *
|
||
|
and digits, but can be modified easily enough if you have the unit diagram.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The 247B decoder is not very selective, and can easily be triggered by voice
|
||
|
unless some additional timing circuits are connected at the output to require
|
||
|
that the relay closure exceed some minimum time interval before it is accepted.
|
||
|
Slightly more complicated decoders which have the time delays built in are the
|
||
|
A3-type and the C-type Touchtone Receivers. both of these are used in
|
||
|
customer-owned automatic switchboards when a caller from the outside (via the
|
||
|
telephone company) wants to be able to dial directly into the private
|
||
|
switchboard to call a specific extension.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The C-type unit is similar to the 247B in that it has ten outputs one for each
|
||
|
digit. The A3-type does not have output relays, but instead has seven voltage
|
||
|
outputs, one for each of the seven basic tones, for activating external 48-volt
|
||
|
relays. The A-3 unit is ideal for activating a Touchtone encoder, which can
|
||
|
then be used to regenerate the Touchtone digits if the original input is noisy.
|
||
|
This might be very useful in a repeater autopatch, for cleaning up Touchtone
|
||
|
digits before they are sent into the telephone system.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In addition to the above, there are probably other types of units specially
|
||
|
designed for use in the CO, but information on these is not readily available.
|
||
|
It is also fairly easy to build a Touchtone decoder from scratch. Though the
|
||
|
standard telephone company decoders all use filter circuits, it is much easier
|
||
|
(though perhaps not as reliable) to use NE567 phase-locked-loop integrated
|
||
|
circuits.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An interesting sidelight to Touchtone operation is that it greatly speeds up
|
||
|
the process of placing a call. With a Touchtone dial it is possible to dial a
|
||
|
call perhaps 3 or 5 times faster than with a rotary dial. Since the CO
|
||
|
equipment which receives and decodes the number is only needed on your line
|
||
|
during the dialing time, this means that this equipment can be switched off
|
||
|
your line sooner and can therefore handle more calls. In fact, the entire
|
||
|
Touchtone system was invented so that CO operation would be streamlined and
|
||
|
less equipment would be needed for handling calls. It is ironic that the
|
||
|
customer should be charged extra for a service which not only costs the
|
||
|
telephone company nothing, but even saves it money.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another practice which may or may not cost the company money is the connection
|
||
|
of privately-owned extension phones. You have probably seen these sold by mail
|
||
|
order houses and local stores. The telephone companies claim that connecting
|
||
|
these phones to their lines robs them of revenue and also may cause damage to
|
||
|
their equipment. There are others, of course, who hold the opinion that the
|
||
|
easy availability of extensions only causes people to make more calls since
|
||
|
they are more convenient, and that the companies really benefit from such use.
|
||
|
The question of damage to equipment is also not easily answered, since most of
|
||
|
the extension phones are directly compatible, and in many cases the same type
|
||
|
as the telephone company itself uses. Be that as it may, this may be a good
|
||
|
time to discuss such use.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Prior to an FCC decision to telephone company interconnection in the Carterfone
|
||
|
case in 1968, all telephone companies claimed that the connection of any
|
||
|
equipment to their lines was illegal. This was a slight misstatement as no
|
||
|
specific laws against such use were on the books. Instead, each local
|
||
|
telephone company had to file a tariff with the public service commission in
|
||
|
that state, and one of the provisions of that tariff was that no connection of
|
||
|
any external equipment was allowed. By its approval of that tariff, the public
|
||
|
service commission gave a sort of implicit legal status to the prohibition.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the Carterfone case, however, the FCC ruled that the connection of outside
|
||
|
equipment had to be allowed. The phone companies then relaxed their tariff
|
||
|
wording such that connection of outside equipment was allowed if this
|
||
|
connection was through a connecting arrangement provided by the telephone
|
||
|
company for the purpose of protecting its equipment from damage. Although this
|
||
|
result has been challenged in several states, that seems to be the present
|
||
|
status. The strange thing is that some telephone companies allow
|
||
|
interconnection of customer equipment without any hassle whatsoever, while
|
||
|
others really make things difficult for the customer.
|
||
|
_______________________________________________________________________________
|