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Telephone cable voltage

 
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davyzhu



Joined: 23 May 2004
Posts: 521
Helped: 3
Location: oriental


Post20 Aug 2004 15:50   Telephone cable voltage

Hello all,

How about the telephone cable voltage?

Regards,

Davy Zhu
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DarkJedi



Joined: 25 May 2004
Posts: 145
Helped: 9
Location: Lima, Perú


Post20 Aug 2004 15:53   Re: Telephone cable voltage

What about it?
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papyaki



Joined: 13 Apr 2002
Posts: 564
Helped: 19
Location: A small village somewhere in Gaul


Post20 Aug 2004 17:00   Re: Telephone cable voltage

Hi davyzhu,

Check this post :

h**p://www.edaboard.com/viewtopic.php?t=48619&highlight=etsi

Look at TBR21. It give all phone line parameters for Europe.

Replace * by t

Regards
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djalli



Joined: 10 Nov 2001
Posts: 887
Helped: 15
Location: 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington DC 20500


Post20 Aug 2004 20:41   Re: Telephone cable voltage

davyzhu wrote:
Hello all,

How about the telephone cable voltage?

Regards,

Davy Zhu


Ok remember telephone is no more than 64kbps as it operates. This is usually. In USA it is 64kbps that I know.

Practically the operating voltages of telephone systems can vary from 24V to 60V depending on the application, although 48V nominal voltage is the most commonly used. When telephone is on-hook down the line voltage is usually 1-3 volts. It is 8-10 volts when off-the-hook.

Remember are several systems of telephony in the world.
Now in the line voltage theoretically should be the same for each state separately for a matching load.
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Big Boy



Joined: 20 Jan 2004
Posts: 253
Helped: 10


Post20 Aug 2004 23:04   Re: Telephone cable voltage

European country main telephony standard use E1 signal, which run at 2.048Mbps, and contain 32 channels of 64Kbps. One phone line is routed to one channel.

In North America, the standard is T1, which is 1.544Mbps, with 24 channels of 64Kbps. One phone line is routed to one channel.

However, there is a catch. Those 2 standards come in different 'flavors'. For example, for T1, you can have what's called 'unframed', 'super-frame' and 'extended super-frame' (the most populars). the unframed T1 signal give 64Kbps, however, other signals give only 56Kbps of payload. The framed signals use some of the bits of the T1 payload as extra framing signals (to pass along extra infos).

This is why the modems standards can only go up to 56Kbps (which are by the way a pretty remarkable piece of technology, to be able to encode analog signals so that they get transformed to digital signals in the CO with using all of the avail bits).
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delay



Joined: 11 Jun 2004
Posts: 219
Helped: 3
Location: Van Allen Belt


Post27 Aug 2004 5:10   Re: Telephone cable voltage

The twisted pair cable that comes to your home in form of Tip and Ring in the RJ-11 connector is normally at -48V. You measure it sometime with a DMM. The battery voltage is the central office is specified nomially at -48V, hence the loop voltage is rated -46V to -55V. This is just the DC voltage for detecting the loop current. Of course when a phone call is considered, a ringing cadence AC signal around 20Hz is superimposed to this DC level (-48V) to bring it up to 90 to 110 Vrms.
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