Changes

Telephone System

1,283 bytes added, 01:52, 7 April 2016
The following lines were added (+) and removed (-):
[[File:dslamillustration1.jpg]][[File:dslamillustration1.jpg]]<BR><small>''The DSLAM can be in the phone company office or in an outdoor setup like the one illustrated here.  There is a limit to the distance a subscriber must be to the DSLAM in order to have DSL Internet service.''  </small>Early residents had to share a phone line with multiple families or homes in a neighborhood.  The '''Party Line''' implemented selective ringing to distinguish one subscriber from another on the same line.  This was later replaced with a more advanced selective ringing system so that only the individual phone in the family home the call is directed to rings.  If there were four families on a single party line, and a call was directed to family #2, only that phone would ring.  However, any of the families on the party line could pick up the receiver and eavesdrop on the other family's phone conversation.Early residents had to share a phone line with multiple families or homes in a neighborhood.  The '''Party Line''' implemented selective ringing to distinguish one subscriber from another on the same line.  This was later replaced with a more advanced selective ringing system so that only the individual phone in the family home the call is directed to rings.  If there were four families on a single party line, and a call was directed to family #2, only that phone would ring.  However, any of the families on the party line could pick up the receiver and eavesdrop on the other family's phone conversation. Small towns in the Midwest United States were still using the Party Line system well into the 1980s.  For an additional fee a subscriber could have their own private line.  Because of the party line legacy there are still a number of Bridge taps in older urban telephone lines.  The '''Bridge Tap'' was a way that the telephone company added a new POTS subscriber in the neighborhood onto the party line.  In a bridge tap one pair of wires appears in several  terminal locations allowing the telephone company to assign a pair to any subscriber near those terminal locations.  The bridge tap is a direct splice into the line and is known to cause an impedance mismatch.  The bridge tap is also the enemy of DSL Internet.  A telephone company used to charge a hefty fee to remove old bridge taps for customers wanting to subscribe to early CAP DSL service.  Today most telephone companies do not charge a fee to clean up the line.&nbsp;==Related== *[[Ethernet RJ45 Wiring Reference]]&nbsp;*[[Telephone RJ11 Wiring Reference]]*[[Telephone System]]*[[Telecommunication Jack]]
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