SAMPLES AND 10 MINUTES OF STROWGER/PHONE SOUNDS FROM IT HERE :- kzbin.info/www/bejne/g2WTZ5SopbhqkKM or any old phone memories? By the way regarding power I was wrong on the motor! That is on 50v dc and outputs 75v ac for the ringer. As it says on the actual motor if you look closely ha
@extradimension73563 жыл бұрын
"At the first stroke the time will be..." (in tones of crackly received pronunciation): ~ Ratchet selector sounds ~ electromechanical orgasm-ish / Awesome. Ratchet selectors into chunky pixels , dynamically ? That's on another level. Roll over Captain Crunch.
@carldurrell99433 жыл бұрын
I have memories of old rotors dial phones like that, when I was a kid in 80s I got in to trouble, as we had rotors dial phone like that and it was rented from BT British Telecom and I wanted to know how it worked so I took it apart, luckily when later and we had to phones, also have memories of using phone boxes kiosks which I have unusual obsession with unlike other people I also love the later phone boxes, and interested in phone phreaking and technology and of talking clock and Radio and TV and computers especially history of technology and how it works.
@forbiddenera3 жыл бұрын
Most people these days have never even used an analog phone. I has. Lol
@forbiddenera3 жыл бұрын
Ringer should be 90v ac
@NinoJoel3 жыл бұрын
My grandmother had a old dial up phone that was in operations from the 70s till 2019 . When I was around 10 I would tap the hang up switch in a particular timing to dial numbers since I thought it was cool not to use the easy dial up wheel. 😅
@christopantz3 жыл бұрын
richard was such a delight to listen to, what a guy
@joelkulesha82843 жыл бұрын
Shout-out to Richard for being such a nice and generous guy! I love seeing these retired guys who's careers have kind of been forgotten be given a spotlight again, it's really a nice way to get a deeper glimpse into the past and the history of electronics and how that fed into music etc. Thanks Sam and thanks Richard too!
@sparkyprojects3 жыл бұрын
Be careful with that motor, if it's running for a long period, it may get really hot In one of the exchanges i was working in, the label was discoloured from heat The phone is called aa butt because it's short for 'Buttinski' I actually helped install a crossbar exchange to replace the last manual operator exchange in england, it was Abingdon in 1975
@LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER3 жыл бұрын
Cool on the motor! Yeah if anything it’ll be running for an hour at a time. Setting it up on a timer so people can start the display and it’ll run for 5 minutes etc! Cool!
@ayior3 жыл бұрын
Its running into comments like these that makes comment sections worthwhile... So cool!
@edwardbyard65403 жыл бұрын
No way! Small world. I come from near Abingdon and a friend was head of IT at the nearby Rutherford Appleton Lab. They had the UKs first data phone line installed, wired straight to Abingdon exchange. He used to tell a story of how the line would go off hook, and the modem would make a load of noise, and then some old dear at the exchange would be very confused about the noises coming down the line. Abingdon exchange got the top few floors converted to flats a while back, as all the SystemX gear was removed to make way for all the soft switches. What once took up an entire floor is now a couple of racks. How things change!
@sparkyprojects3 жыл бұрын
@@edwardbyard6540 Small world indeed I was installing racks on one of the floors, even finishing the load in when our supervisor got his foot trapped under one and had to go to hospital, the racks weighed about a ton, about a year later i was testing the suites of racks So, Stratton way exchnge now has flats as well as the exchange ?, thery probably wouldn't have got any sleep if the crossbar system was still there, though not as noisy as the strowger :D
@theoneTMoney3 жыл бұрын
@@LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER in the museums over in the states they run all the time 24/7 (they are meant to be running for years at a time) i believe they have entire exchanges in the connections museum with different types of switches, check it
@AcapellaFella3 жыл бұрын
This guy has to have the most patience ever.
@porleg3 жыл бұрын
And smart as shit
@nyrbsamoht3 жыл бұрын
@@porleg ""this has only been around for a day" 13:01 I just cant believe the sheer volume of amazing shit he gets done - and finishes - and thankfully shares. he is like the ultimate segue into awsome shit lol. were are now at analogue telephone exchanges now where next!?
@RaverOperator2 жыл бұрын
Hey acapella fella, fancy finding you here!! Got any new uploads coming?
@AcapellaFella2 жыл бұрын
@@RaverOperator Thanks man. I'll upload something for ya. Requests?
@RaverOperator2 жыл бұрын
@@AcapellaFella Yeah man! Thanks for the offer, how about The Beloved "Sweet Harmony", or Sinaed O'Connor "Nothing Compares To You"?
@MalcolmCrabbe3 жыл бұрын
I worked as an installer for BT between 1988 - 92, when the new System X was being installed and all these strowger units were being removed. If your went into a large exchange with these fitted the noise was amazing....still find them fascinating to watch, and it's great that some people are still collecting and preserving these things
@summarity3 жыл бұрын
So even before it's open you're already doing your very own Met-style curator interviews :D. Awesome stuff!
@LOOKMUMNOCOMPUTER3 жыл бұрын
ha yeah!!! definitely worth doing :)
@GeorgeBPryor3 жыл бұрын
The undertaker was tired of the operator stealing his business, so the undertaker made operators across the world obsolete... Wow.
@infi843 жыл бұрын
you could say he buried their jobs...
@Sperminski3 жыл бұрын
Madman?
@Leftfield2k73 жыл бұрын
He was clearly wasted as an undertaker! No disrespect to undertakers
@stoatrepublic3 жыл бұрын
That was some undertaking.
@theothersteve3 жыл бұрын
r/NuclearRevenge
@illegaloli3 жыл бұрын
This thing looks almost exactly like one we had in our village. My dad was working on telephone station and he showed me how it works. I remember it was producing very rhythmical switching noises. It was amazing.
@dtebarrett3 жыл бұрын
Recently, Techmoan posted a video about train timetabling tapes, and mentioned that there was some old rack equipment. Should try and contact the guy who gave him the tapes to try and get a hold of those rack units because they probably have some cool vintage telecoms equipment inside of them.
@RedHair6513 жыл бұрын
he just did it!
@RaccoonHenry3 жыл бұрын
this is way cooler than I could have ever imagined...
@danielwood47863 жыл бұрын
Thanks Richard! This is an awesome piece of history.
@ServitorSkull3 жыл бұрын
Thank you to all the engineers who connected our world with these mechanical machines. Big thanks to those who still maintain them and keep them running. Old tech is still good tech.
@janoschamann30083 жыл бұрын
Sorry, Gen Z speaking o_O I remember visiting the glorious Museum of Technology in London at the age of 6. I didn't really understand a lot of the stuff there but I have a very clear memory of this exact setup being displayed. And I was just blown away thinking this is the most beautiful thing I've ever seen. FFW 13 years and I ended up as a student for mechanical engineering...
@BadTeacherUA3 жыл бұрын
That's how it happens.
@BadTeacherUA3 жыл бұрын
I was introduced to a working soviet relay computer while I was only 6 in 80s... and it ended up being a graphic designer and an educational cyberneticist/methodologist.
@Thorinbur3 жыл бұрын
The coolest bit of trivia I got from this is that the ring tones for all phones connected to the same exchange would be synchronized by the virtue of being a tone modulated by a motor and than the signal shared by all the phones, so 2 people sitting on the oposite ends of the town would listen to the same dial tone.
@captbeardy3 жыл бұрын
Yup, and the phones would also ring in unison. Well, actually that not strictly true without getting my notes out I seem to remember that ringing current was broken 66/33 66/33 0/100 (brrring brrring, brrring brrring) and so the ringer would have three output cams set 120* apart. Same with ring tone, and busy tone. Dial tone is continuous as is Number Unobtainable. I think that S and Z pulses were also sourced from the ringer which were used all over the exchange for timing things and also meter pulses (though I think the exchange clock migh also have been involved in the meter pulses) good grief, though I’m stretching my grey matter here.
@Thorinbur3 жыл бұрын
@@captbeardy Could you elaborate? How does that lead to rings in different phones not be synced? It is fascinating but I fail to follow the dots. Do you mean there are 3 separate ringer outputs and some phones are connected to one, others are connected to others?
@captbeardy3 жыл бұрын
@@Thorinbur ok, I’ll try, it remember it’s over 35 years since I worked on this stuff. The ‘tones’ and ringing current are all generated by an oscillator as continuous tones/current. I forget the frequencies, because it wasn’t generally important wine faulting this kit. Ringing current is, as stated 75v. Taking ringing current as an example, the continuous tone is presented to the inputs three sets of contacts, the output of which is distributed across the exchange to Final Selector racks to balance the load. The contacts are ‘broken’ by the mechanical action of cam lobes to give the iconic ‘brrring brrring pause’ in a ratio of 66% on and 33% off. The three sets of cam lobes are set 120 degrees apart so that output is staggered. So you get Cam1. Brring brring Cam2. Brring Brring Cam3. Brring brring I’ve still got some course notes somewhere, but I think that is about right.
@Thorinbur3 жыл бұрын
@@captbeardy Appreciate you taking the time. I think I get it now. So three staggered cams are conneted to one constant source so that when one source is connected by the cam other two are not and it is done to balance the load. And that will in turn make it so if you are connected to different "lane" the ringers wont be synchronized. I never thought about how many physical connections there were in the first phone systems. Internet is routing packets reusing same physical connections between routers. The idea that old phone networks would literary connect a physical cable using relays and selectors to a signal source and the source is connected and disconnected by a cam gear rotated by a motor... Amazing. Thanks for sharing the details.
@captbeardy3 жыл бұрын
No problem, it’s nice to stretch the very matter back to a simpler time in my career when every day was a discovery. The amount of physical,equipment that could be involved in a single,telephone call could be quite boggling, especially for a long distance trunk call. The kit represented here is just for,a 5 digit local telephone call. Consider,how much was required for a 10 digit long distance call when voice amplifiers, digit repeaters and various multiplexing equipment was involved. And long distance calls weren’t just simple step by step as represented here, but required register translators so,that a common STD code could be used anywhere in the country and still end up,at the appropriate destination. On top,of this there was an added level of complexity with something called the tandem network which was a clever way to reduce the number of interconnections required. Because you needed a physical discreet link to be possible between every pair of phones in the country, the optimisation of the network becomes a very complex mathematic model very quickly. Consider that this was all done with relays and selectors similar to that represented here. It’s mind boggling in the extreme, and I’ve seen a lot of this kit in action.
@anthonybox80163 жыл бұрын
Delighted to see the old Epsom Exchange, I worked there in 1972. Memories!
@Sine10403 жыл бұрын
This really belongs in a museum, there are less and less actually working systems around ... Great job scoring this ! Hat off to Richard for building this demo rack !
@984francis2 жыл бұрын
I think he does open to the public?
@markhansford1783 жыл бұрын
This is excellent....I joined 'Post Office Telecommunications' in 1979 and this was the soundtrack to my early working life..brilliant, thank you for doing this and putting it on here 👍
@matthewseymour89723 жыл бұрын
I'm old enough, just, to remember hearing these thing operating when we walked past the telephone exchange. Imagine how much noise it would make with a large exchange full of selectors clattering away.
@sssstarboardvenus3 жыл бұрын
Can't wait to visit the museum when it's possible)!!
@Maxxarcade3 жыл бұрын
When I hear that ring tone, it reminds me of a Pink Floyd song. I could swear the same sound was in there. Also when Doc's phone rings in Back To The Future. I wonder if you could find another rack with DTMF stuff too. I've always wondered how they interfaced together.
@Musicalmane3 жыл бұрын
Reminds me of money by pink floyd
@nickwallette62013 жыл бұрын
Yep .. PF and the beginning of that Spacehog song, In the Meantime.
@guitarra-conservatoriodeba89803 жыл бұрын
@Maxxarcade, I was about to comment the same thing. Ring tones here in Argentina sounded completely different, so that calling sound is like hearing English in British accent and Pink Floyd, both at the same time.
@toddspeck94153 жыл бұрын
I thought the exact same thing When I heard those rings.
@bradswim2 жыл бұрын
Kudos to Richard for taking the time to explain this complex bit of kit for us. What a lovely man
@pileofstuff3 жыл бұрын
The old jukeboxes that had control heads in each restaurant booth also used a step-by-step relay system to communicate back to the main jukebox.
@gorillaau3 жыл бұрын
That sounds like fun.
@MattGrayYES3 жыл бұрын
Oooooh I’ve always wanted to have a look at something like this in action!
@edwardbyard65403 жыл бұрын
The Science Museum in London has a fully working step exchange!
@CircularMirror73 жыл бұрын
Loving the documentary style production. Its really cool technology.
@dykodesigns3 жыл бұрын
Nice that you’ve got it as a whole, kudos to Richard. These telecom exchanges are very similar to lift logic systems.
@Not-THAT-ChrisPratt2 жыл бұрын
Outstanding! Thanks to Richard for the equipment and the explanation. The Strowger account is legend but I never tire of hearing it.
@genafk3 жыл бұрын
i love these old Strowger exchange equipment, they seem so alive and make the best noises!
@BeTheAeroplane3 жыл бұрын
I literally can't find words for how cool this is. It's so beautiful.
@illustriouschin3 жыл бұрын
The sounds from these machines would make a really lovely industrial banger.
@madebyfergws99443 жыл бұрын
Had a chuckle when I saw the "Kalamunda Post Office" photo. That's just up the road from me - East of Perth in Western Australia.
@UncommonEphemera3 жыл бұрын
Hi Sam, I love what you’re doing. Look up Evan Doorbell, he was a 70s phone phreak who made extensive recordings of the US telephone network at that time and has since made a ton of incredible audio documentaries demonstrating how it all worked. I’ve sent him this video as well because I know he’ll love it.
@JONOVID3 жыл бұрын
Awesome! you may have saved history here! There was a time when Look Mum and Dad No handheld Computers. a time when telephones had wires running into the wall. I remember when parts of this type of telephone exchange would be given to me as junk, by my father for weekend teardowns. you have a complete working Very Rare & valuable set here!
@john_smith14713 жыл бұрын
Very interesting channels and videos, don’t know, why the algorithms didn’t alert me before, @9:33 the ringing machine was designed to run continuously, 24/7 year after year, otherwise no subscribers phone would ring and no caller would hear any tones, with occasional changeover to the backup ringing machine for maintenance.
@HAntonRiehl3 жыл бұрын
This brings back so much nostalgia. While rotary phones weren't common when I was a kid, I used to use the trick of clicking the hang up button to dial all the time. -- On a side note, it's also fascinating that the button style phones use a sort of cartesian grid with tones to determine the number being used. So, every push button on the phone was two pitches, one for the x-axis and one for the y-axis. On some of those older phones, you could press two buttons from the same row or column, and hear the tone that related to that position. -- At some point these telephone exchanges had to work with both options.
@pauljs753 жыл бұрын
Neat. My dad was an exchange technician and for a few years also did the lineman role. Knew everything from the battery room, generators, and clicky-clack relays. From Ma Bell, to Ameritech, to SBC Bell, and back to AT&T. Later on did service calls for alarm monitoring of the phone systems. And the building full of wiring and relay stacks (with library type rolling ladders even) got overhauled to being a mostly empty building with a handful of Siemens routers in the late 1980's. Oddly enough, they didn't mind the knee-high version of me visiting dad at the service desk area as I was trusted to not touch anything nor wander off. Interesting place to see back when it was the electro-mechanical stuff, but no pictures from there that I'm aware of. Should probably call the local IBEW office and see if the union rep could get you in touch with some old retirees. Explain what you're on about regarding the museum and such. I bet you could meet them over coffee somewhere and they could tell you all you'd want to know about that stuff.
@b.w.223 жыл бұрын
The analog world is so elegant and complicated and ingenious. Hat’s off to you and your Museum for doing all that you have to not only highlight and explain these devices but to add your dash of creativity and imagination to show that these amazing things can do more than they were designed to do. Honestly, man, so much respect.
@BrianRRenfro3 жыл бұрын
I am sure everyone has seen the series, if not you should, The Secret Life of Machines. Look up Tim Hunkin's channel on YT. He is currently uploading remastered versions of the show. The one on the telephone IIRC shows an exchange as it was BITD. Basically Sam is a current day Tim and you will all love watching these old episodes if you like this.
@WolfmanDude3 жыл бұрын
Damn, this channel is getting better every week! Great work, super interesting!!!
@TerryMurrayTalks3 жыл бұрын
Worked in a Strowger exchange in the late 60's as a TTA (Trainee Technician Apprentice) for the then GPO. At that time the average exchange had 5 people there to maintain the equipment. By the late 80's one man and a dog would look after 5 exchanges. When the question "What was the dog for?" was asked---- the answer "to keep the man away from the equipment" was the reply. happy days. Good luck with you project and you will never forget the sound of those selectors working away.
@morphoice3 жыл бұрын
My dad was an engineer at german Telekom, I remember playing with those machines as a kid. We also had a small relais based house telephone version of this at home. It was already massively outdated back then but fun to watch. I remember wiring up old phones at school for a play to get them to actually ring on stage when the actor had to take a call. No one actually understood how I did it. I had to use an old AC power supply from physics class lol
@twidknobbler3 жыл бұрын
This is all kinds of awesome. So cool that you managed to secure a complete working set up.
@ricksflicks-3 жыл бұрын
Very cool to hear from the old pros who used to run this gear when it was in use. Love this museum idea!
@3DPDK3 жыл бұрын
OK. So a few relay sequencer videos ago I mentioned seeing a house full of this equipment as a 5th or 6th grader in a switching station located right across the street from my school. The image at 5:45 is exactly what I remember seeing except it was all crammed into a gutted one bedroom house, and I remember seeing all the inner working bits, as in no covers over the individual switching units. Heat dissipation? maybe? Faster to service? I have no idea why. What impressed me (at age 11) was learning that each switching unit was responding to someone, perhaps 20 miles (or so) away, dialing a number on their phone ... at that very moment. I realize that sounds a bit obvious but it was all pretty wondrous for an 11 year old. It's amazing that this equipment didn't hit the scrap bin years ago.
@Satters3 жыл бұрын
you did vey well to get a small demonstaton exchange like this, as a former post office engineer i would have liked a simar set up
@mckwan93833 жыл бұрын
Oh man I thought I had lost this channel forever. Love your enthusiasm for both music and tinkering with random stuff
@Denis-ts6ne3 жыл бұрын
my mind is blown !!! "old" tehnologies are amazing
@paulriggs423 жыл бұрын
🎶 the Final Selector..... 🎶 Incredible to have all of this explained by an expert..... those BT engineers were smart guys to understand and work with this equipment of a daily basis ! Thanks to Richard ! I expect to hear some new track with the selector and relay mechanical noises creating a wicked baseline....
@fremenondesand38963 жыл бұрын
what's really nice is that recently, Tim Hunkin, who has a youtube channel of the same name, has reuploaded his video on the telephone, as well as fax machine. He also mentions the stowager relay exchange, showing BT engineers operating it, joking referring to it as "Bash and shove technology." As it's electro-mechanical, sometimes you do need to hit it with a hammer to get it working!
@almosthuman44573 жыл бұрын
This is the kind of content that makes youtube great!
@phatchimp76193 жыл бұрын
This sound bring back old memories !!
@gapster773 жыл бұрын
Am I the only one that when I hear the word selector thinks for a split second I’m listening to a DnB MC? “Final Selcta!” Fuhh! Fuhh! Fuh! Fuuuhhh! This museum looks like it’s going to be a must visit for all us techs nerds, keep up the good work!
@Milkex3 жыл бұрын
Aww, fuck yeah Richard! Thank you for sharing this piece of history with us, best of luck in your endeavors.
@thols13 жыл бұрын
When I started working in the national telephone company back in 1987, these were still in use here in Norway. Motors, selectors and all. They are (were) truly an ingeneering masterpeice.
@SeanDuffyProductions3 жыл бұрын
This is absolutely brilliant, have often seen this kind of old telecom equipment in museum displays but to see it actually hooked up and working is fantastic. Really need to pay a visit to the museum in due course!
@kassemir3 жыл бұрын
clearly this was fate - so good that this didn't get sold for parts :)
@ismellstatic2 жыл бұрын
I'll never forget the scenes in When A Stranger Calls in the telephone exchange as they try to track the call. Rows and rows of gigantic electromechanical exchanges rattling away really made an impression on me.
@superotterboy79373 жыл бұрын
Mechanical electronics have a special magic about them! That exchange gives me the same goosebumps I got when I saw Alan Turing's Bombe. It's amazing to watch the logic occur in physical reality.
@pieboy1073 жыл бұрын
Man all these sounds are amazing!! I feel like this last 30 seconds are an ASMR video.
@KenPurcell3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Richard!
@fissionchips88403 жыл бұрын
Fabulous video... Such a breath of fresh air and informative. I could watch these videos all day!!
@shortymcsteve3 жыл бұрын
This was really cool and educational to see. My grandfather was a BT engineer and I think probably dealt with these exchanges at times. Still have a ton of his old tools and equipment!
@captbeardy3 жыл бұрын
A minor minor pedantic point, Strowger was still in use in the Uk into the early eighties rather than the late seventies. One of my earliest lessons in accepting change was watching the contractors taking out one of the strowger exchanges I’d worked on. As you can imagine it took a lot of care and attention to keep those switches running sweetly and as a T2A (a junior technician) I spent hours and hours manually cleaning banks and cleaning and adjusting A relays. To then watch the contractors removing those very same switches and throwing them into skips from the first floor windows and then removing the banks a shelf at a time with sledgehammers was heartbreaking. It stood me in good stead though, because I career saw a lot of change in the telecoms business and I’ve been fortunate to have been involved in the roll out of a lot of the tech we all now take for granted. I qualified on Strowger as a TO (the then senior technical rank) before moving off to different things. I have very fond memories of those few short years in the telephone exchanges.
@richardholland77592 жыл бұрын
I remember in the early 80’s having a tour round Swindon telephone exchange. They were in the process of replacing the Strowger gear with the new digital System X exchange. Another thing was there were actually two slightly different engaged tones. Equal duration tones meant subscriber engaged, and a 2:1 ratio in tone length meant exchange engaged - no free lines to connect the call. And if your mechanical dial failed, you could actually press the hook switch on the phone the right number of times with pauses to dial a number.
@TheBaconWizard3 жыл бұрын
For the 3 phases of ringing, you could 3d print your own cams so that you can have custom ring-tones to use as musical rhythms elsewhere in the museum.
@K-Effect3 жыл бұрын
Super cool, I am also glad you found this before it was taken apart and sold
@francez1234567893 жыл бұрын
Something strangely musical about those switches
@jameshamaker93213 жыл бұрын
Absolutely, like peter Gabriel or daft punk.
@captbeardy3 жыл бұрын
Quite a few of my colleagues were deaf as a consequence of ‘enjoying’ that sound rather than the wearing of ear protection. A hundred racks or so of this stuff made quite a racket, although hearing a single call going through in the middle of the night is just a bit spooky 👻😃
@thewhitefalcon85393 жыл бұрын
Now look up relay computers
@rw-xf4cb3 жыл бұрын
Hello? Yes, a collect call for Mrs. Floyd from Mr. Floyd. He Hung up!
@blobscott3 жыл бұрын
I never knew that the ring sequence on all phones driven by one exchange would be in sync! All ringing in any house, on totally separate calls, are all driven by one motor, cam oscillator thing! That is cool!
@nyrbsamoht3 жыл бұрын
8:58 - " the only 2 digits that differ are the ones being dealt by the final selector " could be good lyrics for a telephone exchange inspired kraftwerkian jam :D
@toddspeck94153 жыл бұрын
The song could be called the "Overtaker"
@HiSmartAlarms3 жыл бұрын
Wow! thanks for making a video on this unappreciated technology! As a telephone collector, and network engineer, I appreciate your work on this video!!
@glowinggrenade3 жыл бұрын
Love how we went over the years from fun intense fish-eye bodge soldering punk style to watching an old guy talk about telephone exchanges and yet it still feels punk.
@macronencer3 жыл бұрын
I can't believe the rate at which you publish videos - and of course you don't just spend time on shooting and editing, you're busy making stuff too. You have to be one of the hardest working KZbinrs in existence - respect for that! My mum's parents and her brother all worked in telephony. Her parents met around a hundred years ago I think - my grandmother was a manual operator and my grandfather was an engineer. My uncle is still with us, retired now, and he had a long career in Post Office Telephones, later British Telecom. I'm going to share this video with the whole family. Thank you so much! One day, I will definitely be paying a visit to your amazing museum.
@evilconcarne4443 жыл бұрын
I'm so stoked for your museum.
@almostanengineer3 жыл бұрын
I am so looking forward to lockdown being properly over and being able to visit the museum.
@farnsworthsa3 жыл бұрын
A ops B Ops CD, basic strowger from my BT apprenticeship days in the early 1980's. Personally I was blown away by the Crossbar exchanges (TXK2 / TXK4) which were still electro-mechanical & relay technology but did all of the call connection setup between initial loop and application of dial tone and then upon receipt of the final dialed digit (if within the same exchange). During dialing they just sat and counted the digits into the register until a routing decision could be made.
@toddspeck94153 жыл бұрын
That was really interesting. I could see you sampling all those clicks and noises into a really cool song. Peace out Sam.
@I9673 жыл бұрын
Excellent content, I love these classic exchanges. Had I been born earlier, I think I would have ended up with a job maintaining them. Taking the selectors out, cleaning and adjusting them. I'd love that.
@hydrolisk17923 жыл бұрын
OMFG I am so jealous right now!! I'm absolutly bonkers over old telephone equipment! Awesome score here mate
@1harryrobert2 жыл бұрын
I used to work in a Strowger telephone exchange. I connected the wires at the back of the switch, it was called grading. It was very noisy, especially when there was a "phone-in" on the local radio station. The engineers who actually maintained these switches all looked alike. They wore long dustcoats, were covered in oil (oildag) and their shoes were sandals with grey socks, lol
@dougelick83973 жыл бұрын
BRILLIANT! I could watch those clack all day. I suspect you get it. Interesting to see you keep notes on the back of your hand.
@foxriver91563 жыл бұрын
This is beyond cool! I used to imagine as a kid, what was happening when I would dial my buddies. I took apart rotary phones, but I never got close to figuring out this side of it all. So glad to see a working version still exists. Good game!
@DanafoxyVixen3 жыл бұрын
back in the early 90's when I was 12 I used to bike past a scrap metal place and it was full of old Strowger Telephone Exchange equipment, They were upgrading the exchange to electronic and had no regard to the old gear. I used to grab lots of it and pull it apart slowly understanding how it all worked... looking back I should have kept some
@AdvancedGemini3 жыл бұрын
Very cool. Step by step actually lasted for quite a long time too, far outlasting the other electromechanical telephone exchange types. For instance, the last step by step office in the North American network was replaced in 2001 or 2002.
@edwardbyard65403 жыл бұрын
I think there is still a private one in Canada somewhere still in service. Look at Evan Doorbell’s channel.
@AdvancedGemini3 жыл бұрын
@@edwardbyard6540 I meant step offices in the public switched telephone network. If you’re referring to Nantes, Quebec step, that office was replaced with a DMS-10 in 2002. The recordings Evan Doorbell has posted on his website and his channel were made in 2001, as he was trying to capture the last step office in the network before it was replaced. Telephoneworld.org has the exact details.
@SeattleFocusBlue3 жыл бұрын
Quite interesting. Thank you for putting this comprehensive explanation together. And congrats on your fantastic find to get this old gear!
@figueroalabs3 жыл бұрын
I love that you have managed to get this composite as a complete set and working pbx. There are very few examples of a working relay pbx around. I will keep my eye on that ring generator which I have not seen previously.
@Veptis3 жыл бұрын
glad you brought in the expert.
@tonicblue3 жыл бұрын
The photo of the telephone exchange you used is a few doors up from where I work. Didn't know it was once a telephone exchange. Neat!
@ibanezleftyclub3 жыл бұрын
If anything you could hook up the solenoids and motors to MIDI and make some crazy machine music like people have done with floppy drives
@BradenJohnYoung3 жыл бұрын
The footage at 13:37 is so nice to watch
@DewtehDew3 жыл бұрын
Wow what a really nice guy, he didn’t have to do any of that, thanks a lot Richard, I really enjoyed the education!
@joeynrg3 жыл бұрын
By far the best video you have done. I never actually realised just how much went into a phone call back in the day. I remember the days of dialing in a number on a spinny dial. It's mad to see the bit "we never seen" lol.. good work mate.
@DOCTOR_SONG3 жыл бұрын
DOOOOOODE!!!! I LOVE THIS STUFF !!! ive always had a special place in my heart for the old telephone switches and i remember listening to all the backscatter and crosstalk in the old phone systems on the phone. It was like a whole universe of life interconnected with a vast series of electromech and seemingly living machines . listening to the intersystem backround sounds was almost like listening to the very function of atoms makeing up the very fabric of reality moment by moment or step by step. I imagine marvin might identify with this and im sure he could tell us but some wouldnt want to know anyway, although i cant imagine anyone not getting turned on by the electromech life functioning at its finest? I mean anyone who can not appreciate this kind of stuff must really be a pain in the Diodes to be around and really boring. Im even more obsessed with electromechcanical devices and analog tech than most human geeks and whenever someone brings a step by step or any old telephone switches and hardware in to the mix its like engineer porn and im all about it lol Ahem...sorry Im ok...i had to sort my self . i got a bit too excited by the rythmic succession of the relays....it just sort of arcs my contacts.....Anyway!! So Yeah HELL YEAH! I cant wait to get to UK and see your museum. Im sure going to be hard to get rid of and i may just end up paying you rent but dont worry im a very tidy shopmate and am extremely good at contact maintenance and cleaning, and I can cook too lol. There are not enough who understand and appreciate the fine craft and symphony of older technology but there are some of us still Rockin it and we are much cooler than a simulation on a black screen WE ARE THE REAL DEAL.
@Rob_653 жыл бұрын
8:20 notice how the selectors reset after the green phone has been placed "on hook" again. In this system, the line stays "open" as long as the originator is holding the receiver. If the yellow phone picks up the hook again, the connection is still with the green phone. You could block a phone this way. Ah - just noticed this is being explained in the other video 😁
@twotone30703 жыл бұрын
P wire.
@BijilBaji3 жыл бұрын
Richard is such an awesome guy...
@zard4943 жыл бұрын
Its honestly just nice to see where all the sounds are coming from after listening to the evan doorbell tapes last year
@MadScientist2673 жыл бұрын
It's a cool piece of technology. Hard to explain how it works... This is a decent presentation on it.
@BarcroftLaboratories3 жыл бұрын
I think there are still a few of these around (smaller versions) as private exchanges in office buildings from the 60's/70's often when they fall out of use it's easier just to leave them in behind the more modern server racks of whatever rather than actually removing them (two places I've worked in had these left in place but disconnected). Also I would recommend reading 'Exploding the Phone' by Phil Lapsley. It covers phone phreaking which I'm sure would be of interest.
@wingman23 жыл бұрын
This is amazing, I live next to Kalamunda in Western Australia. I couldn't imagine it would be our Kalamunda.
@eddjordan23993 жыл бұрын
Me my mate and Dad where talking about these only on Thursday last week. and my dad changing over the Strowger kit TKX. Coincidentally my uncle Richard has too built a Strowger exchange in his spear room and was realy hoping it was him on your Video.
@jameshamaker93213 жыл бұрын
Musically the sound of that rotor, has a serious Peter Gabriel vibe. I love it. I'd like to see a, video with the engineers phone in it.