Thanks, a real blast from the past. I spent 30 years looking after this equipment in the Uk mainly in and around Derby. I have fond memories of those days. Many hours spent cleaning banks and changing wipers and magnets. My Farther also worked as an installation engineer installing and upgrading these exchanges.
Love ur channel when I was a child I bully a simple telephones with two single stage stepper switches from an old jukebox the logic relays wires by hand bully a line-finder out of like 10 relay witch were coned with two or three supervisory relays could only do one call at a time had the line-finer cross connected to control ringing to cutoff ringing when answered used ringing supply from 1A 2 system used 24 volts for talk 24 Volts for main logic 12 and 18 volts for the test it was a little bit of a mess but it worked. Had used interrupter also from 1A2 System. System had no dial tone or any tones at all guess I could add that in lol 😊🤓🙂🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗😬🙄😎🧔🏻🤓 The system still works today! Love what you did here so much!! 💕❣️💜🌈
I began my 30yr telephone career in a SxS office in Los Angeles in 1968. The sounds of a busy step office is just wonderful. Thanks for the time travel back.
Thanks. Interesting to learn that the step-by-step system is known as SxS in the US where in the UK it is always referred to as Strowger. It is fabulous technology that was the global standard for more than half a century. So nice that is relatively easy to keep it operational. A friend of mine is the curator of the JKL museum of telephony near Santa Cruz. Have you been there?
What does SxS mean? Did you actually clean Strowger switches? If so, what was the maintenance schedule? I have seen the Strowger cleaning and testing bay in an exchange where the maintenance work was done. I have also seen a tech repair a wire connection using a huge electric soldering iron. Did you also have to clean the bay contact bank connections when the Strowger is removed?
@@windward2818 Thanks for asking after all this time. SxS just means “step-by-step” as the switch train was set up one dialed digit at a time. As a CO technician I maintained, adjusted, trouble-shot, and did call traces in the SxS office. Wiper bank cleaning was done on an annual basis by a team of women at night, who travelled from office to office. As I recall it took about a week or more to clean banks in one office.
I worked in Northern Electric steppers. They were the same design as those from Western Electric. The switches you’re demonstrating were used in customer premises PBX and PABXs here in Alberta.
Great explanation of an old style telephone exchange. I have two old wall dial phones I would like to connect together and have them work as they did when these exchanges were in operation, this is the reason I saw your video. Obtaining this equipment seems to be a challenge now. Great video well done.
I understand that you are in Australia? Most of my Strowger stuff I got on eBay in the UK. To connect two telephones you only need a final selector, a couple of uniselectors and two sets of line relays. The rest is today’s electronics. You could contact a few eBay sellers in the UK that may have spare items: marglen, autofloor, newsandels. They can send copies of diagrams as well. Alternatively, you could get an electronic housetelephone exchange from the 1990s. You buy them second hand for a tenner or so. They will work with pulse dialling and also have the ring signal and all the tones. Good luck!
stages of step-by-step or Strowger telephone exchange - a- preslecter ( for sub number ) b- 1st selector for first digit c- 2nd selector for second digit d- 3rd selector for 3rd digit e- final selector for 4th and 5th digit for five digit telephone number like 41356 - this was in 1958 when I was working in Pak Capital Telephone Exchange - Karachi for rotary telephone sets
Hello Wim, Excellent video! I would like to build something similar (particularly the canned version of the subs line circuit) Would you have any diagrams of how it was built particularly with just two boxes! Kind regards, D.
Kevin, You should find the diagrams here: github.com/Godefridus/Arduino/blob/master/StrowgerSelectorDiagrams.pdf More information on telecommunication equipment here: wimsmuseum.jouwweb.nl If you want to dig further into Strowger technology try to get hold of the book Telephony Volume 2 by Atkinson. There is also a lot of information here: thg.org.uk but you need to become a member to get access to the archive of diagrams.
Thanks, a real blast from the past. I spent 30 years looking after this equipment in the Uk mainly in and around Derby. I have fond memories of those days. Many hours spent cleaning banks and changing wipers and magnets. My Farther also worked as an installation engineer installing and upgrading these exchanges.
Love ur channel when I was a child I bully a simple telephones with two single stage stepper switches from an old jukebox the logic relays wires by hand bully a line-finder out of like 10 relay witch were coned with two or three supervisory relays could only do one call at a time had the line-finer cross connected to control ringing to cutoff ringing when answered used ringing supply from 1A 2 system used 24 volts for talk 24 Volts for main logic 12 and 18 volts for the test it was a little bit of a mess but it worked. Had used interrupter also from 1A2 System. System had no dial tone or any tones at all guess I could add that in lol 😊🤓🙂🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗😬🙄😎🧔🏻🤓 The system still works today! Love what you did here so much!! 💕❣️💜🌈
I began my 30yr telephone career in a SxS office in Los Angeles in 1968. The sounds of a busy step office is just wonderful. Thanks for the time travel back.
Thanks. Interesting to learn that the step-by-step system is known as SxS in the US where in the UK it is always referred to as Strowger. It is fabulous technology that was the global standard for more than half a century. So nice that is relatively easy to keep it operational. A friend of mine is the curator of the JKL museum of telephony near Santa Cruz. Have you been there?
What does SxS mean? Did you actually clean Strowger switches? If so, what was the maintenance schedule? I have seen the Strowger cleaning and testing bay in an exchange where the maintenance work was done. I have also seen a tech repair a wire connection using a huge electric soldering iron.
Did you also have to clean the bay contact bank connections when the Strowger is removed?
@@windward2818 Thanks for asking after all this time. SxS just means “step-by-step” as the switch train was set up one dialed digit at a time. As a CO technician I maintained, adjusted, trouble-shot, and did call traces in the SxS office. Wiper bank cleaning was done on an annual basis by a team of women at night, who travelled from office to office. As I recall it took about a week or more to clean banks in one office.
Love it! Very clear, and it’s nice that you described the difference between a line finder and a subs uniselector… a lot of people miss that out!
This was a fantastic explanation of how everything works.
I worked in Northern Electric steppers. They were the same design as those from Western Electric. The switches you’re demonstrating were used in customer premises PBX and PABXs here in Alberta.
Great explanation of an old style telephone exchange. I have two old wall dial phones I would like to connect together and have them work as they did when these exchanges were in operation, this is the reason I saw your video. Obtaining this equipment seems to be a challenge now. Great video well done.
I understand that you are in Australia? Most of my Strowger stuff I got on eBay in the UK. To connect two telephones you only need a final selector, a couple of uniselectors and two sets of line relays. The rest is today’s electronics. You could contact a few eBay sellers in the UK that may have spare items: marglen, autofloor, newsandels. They can send copies of diagrams as well.
Alternatively, you could get an electronic housetelephone exchange from the 1990s. You buy them second hand for a tenner or so. They will work with pulse dialling and also have the ring signal and all the tones.
Good luck!
stages of step-by-step or Strowger telephone exchange - a- preslecter ( for sub number ) b- 1st selector for first digit c- 2nd selector for second digit d- 3rd selector for 3rd digit e- final selector for 4th and 5th digit for five digit telephone number like 41356 - this was in 1958 when I was working in Pak Capital Telephone Exchange - Karachi for rotary telephone sets
I worked on F1 automatic telephone exchange in mid 80s made in czhecosalva
Fantastic video
Hello Wim, Excellent video! I would like to build something similar (particularly the canned version of the subs line circuit) Would you have any diagrams of how it was built particularly with just two boxes! Kind regards, D.
Knap filmpje, Wim. Interessant!
Hi the 75 Volts ring is rms o peak to peak? thanks
The voltage is not really that critical for short connections. In my Strowger setup it is about 75V peak to peak.
@@wimderkinderen1952 thanks for the information, great collection
Just tried your site but not found.
Shame as I like and would like some more information on setting up and wiring etc
Kevin, You should find the diagrams here: github.com/Godefridus/Arduino/blob/master/StrowgerSelectorDiagrams.pdf
More information on telecommunication equipment here: wimsmuseum.jouwweb.nl
If you want to dig further into Strowger technology try to get hold of the book Telephony Volume 2 by Atkinson. There is also a lot of information here: thg.org.uk but you need to become a member to get access to the archive of diagrams.
Loos like. SxS British Post Office to me .
Very nice demonstrator system, great expiation.