Friday, April 20, 2012

How Ma Bell Works by the Jolly Roger


       
In  this  article,  I  will first describe  the  termination, 
wiring,  and  terminal  hardware most commonly used in  the  Bell 
system, and I will include section on methods of using them.
     -------------
     LOCAL NETWORK
     -------------
The   local   telephone   network   between   the    central 
office/exchange  and  the  telephone subscribers can  be  briefly 
described as follows:
From  the  central office (or local exchange) of  a  certain 
prefix(es), underground area trunks go to each area that has that 
prefix  (Usually  more than one prefix per area.)  At  every  few 
streets or tract areas, the underground cables surface. They then 
go to the telephone pole (or back underground,  depending on  the 
area)  and  then  to the subsribers house (or in the case  of  an 
apartment building or mutliline business,  to a splitter or  dis-
tribution box/panel). 
Now  that  we have the basics,  I'll try and go in-depth  on  the 
subject.
    ------------------
    UNDERGROUND CABLES
    ------------------
These  are sometimes inter-office trunks,  but usually in  a 
residential  area they are trunk lines that go to bridging  heads 
or  distribution  cases.  The cables are about 2-3  inches  thick 
(varies),  and  are  either  in  a metal  or  pvc-type  pipe  (or 
similiar).  Rarely (maybe not in some remote rural areas) are the 
cables  just 'alone' in the ground.   Instead they are usually in 
an  underground cement tunnel (resembles a small sewer or  storm-
drain.)   The manholes are >heavy< and will say 'Bell system'  on 
them.  they can be opened with a 1/2 inch wide crowbar (Hookside) 
inserted  in the top rectangular hole.  There are ladder rungs to
help you climb down.  You will see  the cable  pipes on the wall,
with the blue and white striped one being  the inter-office trunk
(at  least  in my  area).  The others  are local  lines,  and are
usually marked or color  coded.  There is almost  always a posted
color code  chart on the wall, not to mention  Telco manuals de-
scribing the cables and terminals, so I need not get into detail.
Also, there is usually  some kind  of  test equipment,  and often
Bell test sets are  left  in there.
       --------------
       BRIDGING HEADS
       --------------
The  innocent-looking  grayish-green boxes.   These  can  be 
either trunk bridges or bridging for residences.  The major trunk 
bridging  heads  are usually larger,  and they have the  'Western 
Electric' logo at the bottom,  whereas the normal bridging  heads 
(which  may  be different in some areas-depending on the  company 
you are served by.  GTE B.H.'s look slightly different.  Also, do 
not  be  fooled by sprinkler boxes!)  They can be found  in  just 
about every city.
To open a bridging head: if it is locked (and you're feeling 
destructive),  put a hammer or crowbar (the same one you used  on 
the  manhole) in the slot above the top hinge of the right  door.  
Pull hard, and the door will rip off. Very effective! If it isn't
locked (as usual),  take a 7/8 inch hex socket and with it,  turn
the bolt  about 1/8 of a turn  to the  right  (you  should hear a
spring release inside). Holding the bolt, turn the handle all the
way to the left and pull out.
To Check for a test-set (which are often left by Bell employees),
go inside - First check  for a test-set  (which  are  often  left 
by  Bell  employees).   There should be a panel of terminals  and 
wires.   Push the panel back about an inch or so,  and rotate the 
top  latch  (round with a flat section)  downward.   Release  the 
panel  and it will fall all the way forward.  There is usually  a 
large  amount  of wire and extra terminals.   The  test-sets  are 
often hidden here,  so don't overlook it (Manuals,  as  well,  are 
sometimes placed in the head).   On the right door is a metal box 
of alligator clips.   Take a few (Compliments of Bell.).  On each 
door is a useful little round metal device. (Says 'insert gently' 
or'  clamp  gently - do not overtighten' etc..)  On the front  of 
the disc, you should find two terminals.  These are for your test 
set.   (If you dont have one, dont despair -I'll show you ways to 
make basic test sets later in this article).
Hook the ring (-) wire to the 'r' terminal;  and the tip (+) 
wire  to the other.  (By the way,  an easy way to  determine  the 
correct polarity is with a 1.5v LED.   Tap it to the term.  pair, 
if  it  doesnt light,  switch the poles until it does.   When  it 
lights,find the longer of the two LED poles:  This one will be on 
the  tip wire (+).   Behind the disc is a coiled  up  cord.  This 
should have two alligator clips on it..  Its very useful, because 
you dont have to keep connecting and disconnecting the fone (test 
set) itself, and the clips work nicely.
On  the  terminal  board,  there should be  about  10  screw 
terminals  per  side.   Follow the wires,  and you can see  which 
cable pairs are active.  Hook the clips to the terminal pair, and 
you're set!   Dial out if you want,  or just listen (If someone's 
on theline).  Later,  I'll show you a way to set up a true  'tap' 
that  will let the person dial out on his line and receive  calls 
as normal, and you can listen in the whole time.  More about this 
later...
On  major  prefix-area bridging heads,  you can  see  'local 
loops' ,which are two cable pairs (cable pair = ring+tip,  a fone 
line)  that are directly connected to each other on the  terminal 
board.   These  'cheap  loops' as they are called,  do  not  work 
nearLy  as  well  as the existing ones set up  in  the  switching 
hardware  at the exchange office.   (Try scanning your  prefixes' 
00xx  to 99xx #'s.)  The tone sides will announce themselves with 
the 1008 hz loop tone,  and the hang side will give no  response.  
The  first  person  should dial the 'hang' side,  and  the  other 
person dial the tone side,  and the tone should stop if you  have 
got the right loop.)
If  you want to find the number of the line that you're  on, 
you  can either try to decipher the 'bridging log' (or whatever), 
which is on the left door.  If that doesnt work,  you can use the 
follwing:
     ---------------------------
     ANI # (Automatic Number ID)
     ---------------------------
This  is a Telco test number that reports to you the  number 
that youre calling from (It's the same, choppy 'Bell bitch' voice 
that you get when you reach a disconnected #) 
For the   213 NPA - Dial 1223
          408 NPA - Dial 760
          914 NPA - Dial 990
These  are  extremely useful when messing with any  kind  of line
terminals, house boxes, etc.
Now that we have bridging heads wired, we can go on... (don't 
forget to close and latch the box after all... Wouldnt want GE 
and Telco people mad, now, would we?) 
     -------------------------------------
     "CANS" - Telephone Distribution Boxes
     -------------------------------------

Basically, two types:
1> Large, rectangular silver box at the end of each street.
2> Black, round, or rectangular thing at every telephone pole.
Type 1 -   This is the case that takes the underground cable from 
the  bridge and runs it to the telephone pole cable (The  lowest, 
largest  one  on the telephone pole.)  The box is always  on  the 
pole nearest the briging head, where the line comes up.  Look for 
the 'Call before you Dig - Underground cable' stickers..
The  case box is hinged,  so if you want to climb the  pole, 
you  can open it with no problems.   These usually have 2 rows of 
terminal sets. 
You  could try to impersonate a Telco technician and  report 
the  number as 'new active' (giving a fake name and fake  report, 
etc.)   I  dont recommend this,  and it  probably  won't  (almost 
positively won't) work,  but this is basically what Telco linemen 
do).
Type  2 - This is the splitter box for the group of houses around 
the  pole  (Usually  4 or 5 houses).   Use it  like  I  mentioned 
before.   The terminals (8 or so) will be in 2 horizontal rows of 
sets.   The  extra  wires  that  are  just  'hanging  there'  are 
provisions for extra lines to residences (1 extra line per house, 
thats  why  the insane charge for line #3!)  If its the  box  for 
your  house  also,  have fun and swap lines with  your  neighbor!
'Piggyback'  them  and  wreak havoc  on  the  neighborhood  (It's 
eavesdropping  time...)  Again,  I don't recommend this,  and its 
difficult to do it correctly.  Moving right along...
     ------------------------------
     APARTMENT / BUSINESS MULTILINE
           DISTRIBUTION BOXES
     ------------------------------
Found  outside the buliding (most often on the  right  side, 
but not always...   Just follow the wire from the telephone pole) 
or  in the basement.   It has a terminal for all the lines in the 
building.   Use it just like any other termination box as before. 
Usually says 'Bell system' or similar.  Has up to 20 terminals on 
it (usually.) the middle ones are grounds (forget   these).   The 
wires come from the cable to one row (usually the left one), with
the other row of terminals for the other row of terminals for the 
building  fone wire pairs.   The ring (-) wire is usually the top 
terminal if the set in the row (1 of 10 or more),  and the tip is 
in the clamp/screw below it.  This can be reversed, but the cable 
pair is always terminated one-on-top-of-each- other,  not on  the 
one  next  to  it.  (I'm  not sure why the other  one  is  there, 
probably as aprovision for extra lines) Don't use it  though,  it 
is usually to close to the other terminals, and in my experiences 
you get a noisy connection.
Final note:  Almost every apartment, business, hotel, or anywhere 
there   is  more  than  2  lines  this  termination  lines   this 
termination method is used.  If you can master this type, you can 
be  in control of many things...   Look around in your area for a 
building  that  uses this type,  and practice hooking up  to  the 
line, etc.
As  an  added  help,here is the basic  'standard'  color-code  for 
multiline terminals/wiring/etc...
Single line:  Red = Ring
            Green = Tip
           Yellow = Ground *
*  (Connected  to  the ringer coil  in  individual  and  bridged 
    ringer   phones (Bell only)  Usually  connected to the  green 
    (Tip)
Ring (-) = Red
           White/Red Stripe
           Brown
           White/Orange Stripe
           Black/Yellow Stripe
Tip (+) =  Green (Sometimes
            yellow, see above.)
           White/Green Stripe
           White/Blue Stripe
           Blue
           Black/White Stripe
Ground =   Black
           Yellow
      ----------------------
      RESIDENCE TERMINAL BOX
      ----------------------
Small,  gray (can be either a rubber (Pacific Telephone) or  hard
plastic  (AT & T) housing deal that connects the cable pair  from 
the  splitter box (See type 2,  above) on the pole to your  house 
wiring.  Only 2 (or 4, the 2 top terminals are hooked in parallel 
with the same line) terminals, and is very easy to use.  This can 
be  used to add more lines to your house or add an external  line 
outside the house.
      ---------
      TEST SETS
      ---------
Well,  now  you  can  consider  yourself a minor  expert  on  the 
terminals and wiring of the local telephone network.  Now you can 
apply  it  to whatever you want to do..  Here's another  helpful 
item:
How  to  make  a Basic Test-Set and how to use it  to  dial  out, 
eavsdrop, or seriously tap and record line activity.
These are  the  (usually) orange hand set fones  used  by  Telco 
technicians to test lines.   To make a very simple one,  take any 
Bell (or other,  but I recommend a good Bell fone like a princess 
or a trimline. gte flip fones work excllently, though..) fone and 
follow the instructions below.
Note:    A 'black box' type fone mod will let you tap into  their 
line,  and with the box o,  it's as if you werent there. they can 
recieve  calls and dial out,  and you can be listening the  whole 
time! very useful.  With the box off, you have a normal fone test 
set.
Instructions:
A  basic black box works well with good results.   Take the cover 
off  the fone to expose the network box (Bell type  fones  only).  
The <RR> terminal should have a green wire going to it (orange or 
different  if  touch tone - doesnt matter,  its the same  thing). 
Disconnect the wire and connect it to one pole of an SPST switch.  
Connect  a  piece  of wire to the other pole of  the  switch  and 
connect it to the <RR> terminal.   Now take a 10k hm 1/2 watt 10% 
resistor  and  put  it  between the <RR>  terminal  ad  the  <F> 
terminal,  which  should have a blue and a white wire going to it 
(different for touch tone).  It should look like this:
-----Blue wire----------<F>
                   !
----White wire-----!
                   !
              10k Resistor
                   !
                   !
--Green wire--     !----<RR>
              !    !
               SPST
What  this  does in effect is keep the hookswitch  /  dial  pulse 
switch (F to RR loop) open while holding the line high with  the 
resistor.   This gives the same voltage effect as if the fone was 
'on-hook',  while  the 10k ohms holds the voltage right above the 
'off hook' threshold (around 22 volts or so, as compared to 15-17  
or normal off hook 48 volts for normal 'on-hook'), giving
Test Set Version 2.
Another  design is similar to the 'type 1' test set (above), 
but has some added features:
From >----------------Tip------<To Test
Alligator                        set
Clip >----------------Ring-----<phone
            !                !
            x                !
            !                !
            o                !
            !    x---RRRRR---!
            !   x            !
            !---x            !
                 x----0------!
x    = Spst Switch
o    = Red LOD        0   = Green LED
RRRRR= 1.8k 1/2 watt  xxxx= Dpst switch
        resistor
When the SPST switch in on, the LED will light, and the fone 
will become active.   The green light should be on.  If it isn't, 
switch  the dpst.   If it still isnt,  check the polarity of  the 
line and the LEDs.   With both lights on, hang up the fone.  They 
should all be off now.   Now flip the dpst and pick up the  fone.  
The  red  LED shold be on,  but the green shouldnt.   If  it  is, 
something is wrong with the circuit.  You wont get a dial tone if 
all is correct.
When  you  hook  up  to the line with  the  alligator  clips 
(Assuming you have put this circuit inside our fona and have  put 
alligator clips on the ring and tip wires (As we did before)) you 
should  have the spst #1 in the off posistion.  This will greatly 
reduce the static noise involved in hooking up to a line. The red 
LED can also be used to check if you have the correct polarity.
With  this  fone you will have the ability to listen  in  on 
>all< audible line activity,  and the people (the 'eavesdropees') 
can use their fone as normal.
Note that test sets #1 and #2 have true 'black boxes', and can be 
used for free calls (see an article about black boxes).

Test Set Version 3

To do test set 3:
Using a trimline (or similar) phone, remove the base and cut 
all  of  the wire leads off except for the red (ring -)  and  the 
green  (tip +).   Solder alligator clips to the  lug.   The  wire 
itself  is  'tinsel' wrapped in rayon,  and doesnt solder  well.  
Inside  the one handset,  remove the light socket (if it has one) 
and install a small slide or  toggle switch (Radio Shack's micro- 
miniature  spst works well).   Locate the connection of the  ring 
and the tip wires on the pc board near where the jack is  located 
at the bottom of the handset.  (The wires are sometimes black or 
brow instead of red and green,  respectively).   Cut the foil and 
run 2 pieces of wire to your switch.  In parallel with the switch 
add  a .25 uf 200 VDC capacitor (mylar,  silvered mica,  ceramic, 
not  an electrolytic).  When the switch is  closed,  the  handset 
functions normally.   With the switch in the other position,  you 
can listen without being heard.
Note:  To  reduce the noise involved in connecting the clips to a 
line,  add  a  switch selectable 1000 ohm 1/2  watt  resistor  in 
series with the tip wire. Flip it in circuit when connecting, and 
once on the line, flip it off again. (or just use the 'line disc- 
onect'  type  switch as in the type 2 test  set  (above)).   Also 
avoid   touching the alligator clips to any metal parts or  other 
terminals,  for  i causes static on the line and raises  poeple's 
suspicions. 
      ---------
      RECORDING
      ---------
If you would like to record any activity,  use test set 1 or 
2  above  (for unattended recording of >all< line  activity),  or 
just  any test set if you are going to be there to  monitor  when 
they are dialing, talking, etc. 
Place  a  telephone pickup coil (I recommend the Becoton  T-5  TP 
coil  or equivalent) onto the test set,  and put the TP plug into 
the mic.  jack of any standard tape recorder.  Hit play, rec, and 
pause.   Alternate  pause when you want to record (I  dont  think 
anyone should have any difficulty with this at all...)
Well,  if  you  still can't make a test set or you dont have  the 
parts, there's still hope.  Alternate methods:         
1>  Find  a  bell test set in a manhole or a  bridging  head  and 
'Borrow it indefinately...
2>  Test sets can  be  purchased from:
    Techni-Tool
    5 Apollo Road
    Box 368
    Plymouth Meeting PA., 19462
Ask for catalog #28
They  are usually $300 - $600, and are supposed to have  MF 
dialing  capability as well as TT dialing.  They are also of much 
higher quality than the standard bell test sets.
If you would like to learn more about the subjects covered here, 
I suggest:
1>  Follow Bell trucks and linemen or technicians and ask  subtle 
    questions. also try 611 (repair service) and ask questions..
2> Explore your area for any Bell hardware,  and experiment  with 
   it.  Don't try something if you are not sure what youre doing, 
   because you wouldnt want to cause problems, would you?

                               -----Exodus-----


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