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stha Offline OP
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All the French phones I have are too recent to give a separate ringer easy to measure. The only thing I can do is to measure the voltage directly on the 2 wires of the wall. Does it help ?

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stha Offline OP
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I have tested the voltages direcly on the wall wires (before a phone) here is all I can see :
- when no ring or calls : +40v in DC mode or 90V in AC mode (but nothing if the wires are inversed in AC).
- when rings on the line : 0V to 40V in AC mode or 40V to 90V if I reverse the wires. 0V to +40V in DC mode.

Back with the Call director, if I measure the ringer wires when rings I have 0V to 40V in AC mode (i can reverse the wires and see the same) but nothing on the DC mode. If no ring, 0V everywhere.

The buzzer is the one I'd most like to ear...

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You should not see any AC voltage when the line is idle. By setting your meter to the AC setting, it's just reading the DC voltage and effectively doubling it, giving you a false reading.

It sounds like the 90 volts that you are detecting during the ring cycle is fine. There is an issue of AC frequency though. U.S. straight-line ringers are designed to respond to 17-33 Hz. Being in Europe, there's a good chance that the frequency of the 90 volts is outside of this range.

I do need to ask these questions:

You had mentioned that you were using 2565HKM sets before. Did the ringers work properly in these sets? If so, we may just have an internal wiring issue.

Is the Call Director set new or is it one that was used? If used, there's a good chance that a diode may have been used in the ringer wiring as a field modification.

Let us know and we can dig further.


Ed Vaughn, MBSWWYPBX
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stha Offline OP
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With my 2565 HKMS and also another but smaller Call Director (Northern Electric) the ringers were just giving a very low ring (every ringer positions tested), just one small movment instead many high I could have with a normal phone. The most important thing I can say is that I had to reverse the wires to have it. That means when I plug the phone on the wall, there's a first ring.

The Call Director is a used unit purshased from ebay.

Is there a way to modify easily the frequencies to meet the 30Hz of the US phones ?

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No, they aren't modifiable. Different frequencies require different ringer coils that are no longer manufactured.

You might want to go out on a ledge and try taking the black ringer lead loose from the network and connect it to a good known ground and test. If that doesn't work, try putting the black wire back and do the same thing with the red wire.

It's possible that they still use grounded ringing in France, but I doubt it. It's worth a try.


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Quote
Originally posted by EV607797:
It's possible that they still use grounded ringing in France, but I doubt it.
I'm not very familiar with the switching equipment used in France today, but I believe that at least some central offices are the Ericsson AXE10, which is also used widely here in Britain under the guise of BT's "System Y."

These do employ grounded ringing. On an incoming call, battery is transferred to the tip side (A-wire) of the line, and ringing voltage is applied from the ring side (B-wire) to ground. If you're on a similar arrangement you might find it easier to actually measure the ringing voltage to ground, since you can then do so without the d.c. component affecting the meter.

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I remember working on a German Intercom system back in the '60s (Telefunken und Normelzeit, I think). We had to use their phones because the ringing generator wouldn't work American ringers. As I recall it wwasn't voltage, it was the frequency. We needed 20-30hz and they were running on 60hz.

I'm assuming something similar is going on here.

Sam


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You could try wiring or finding the correct Buzzer in place of the ringer. Such as A to k or k to A on the set's network with or without the right diode. Ring frequency generator in france is the question here?

Like Ed said the ring generator leaves the office at 105 ac at 17 cycles or hertz in USA.

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You could also try to strap a pazio type ringer out out of a cheap single line set. Im sure something would work. But then again, it becomes a hobby like an old train set. You might have to remove the condenser crkt. The a to K or k to A on the phones network

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stha Offline OP
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I also suspect that my problem comes from the frequency (but I can't measure). I also tryed to install the buzzer instead of the ringer, but nothing happens. As far as it's not possible to change the frequency, I suppose that I couldn't fix this problem and the best solution is to have 2nd phone (like modern wireless) only for his ringer... Too, I must take care of the equipments because I'm behind a DSL box that gives internet, phone and TV, I remember having damaged a similar unit when playing with the wires of WE phones and ringers... But finally, I'm very happy to got at a reasonable price the black 29 lines Call Director that I was searching since a very a very long time.

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