Telephone ringing circuits - Voltage, current etc

Telephone ringing circuits

What is ring signal ?

The telephone company sends a ringing signal which is an AC waveform. Although the common frequency used in the United States is 20 HZ and in Europe is typically 25 Hz, it can be any frequency between 15 and 68 Hz. Most of the world uses frequencies between 20 and 40 Hz. The voltage at the subscribers end depends upon loop length and number of ringers attached to the line; it could be between 40 and 150 Volts. The ringing cadence - the timing of ringing to pause - varies from telephone company to company.

The usual arrangement is to feed the 75 V a.c. ringing current (backed by earth) down one wire of the phone line. On the other wire is placed a slugged relay (or equivalent) which is backed by -48V d.c. When you pick up the phone

, the relay operates to the loop d.c. current and trips the ringing current. It also triggers a further device to put the transmission bridge in circuit to enable speech to take place, together with supervision of the calling and called loops. The ralay needs to be a slugged relay to prevent premature ring trip by the a.c. ringing current.

In USA minimum ring voltage supplied is 40Vrms (delivered into a 5 REN load). This is the must detect limit. There is also a minimum must ignore value of 10Vrms. Milage on individual PBX's will vary greatly. But most guarantee to deliver 40Vrms into a 3 to 5 REN load.

When the telephone ring signal is sen to the telephone, the ring voltage is not applied constanly to the line. Typically ring timing is 2 seconds on and 4 seconds off in the US. In the UK ring timing goes .4 sec on, .2 sec off, .4 sec on, 2 sec off then repeats. In toher countries the ring timign cna vary from country to country (even from operator to operator) and you should check the local regulations if you want to get to know the actual ring signal timing in use.

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