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UK Ring on U.S phone?
RING RING...................RING RING...................RING RING................
I have heard a UK ring eminating from closed office doors a number of times and I know it's not coming from a mobile phone. So how do you get this ring on a land line? Anyone done it? Would be an intresting novelty. |
Re: UK Ring on U.S phone?
Originally Posted by tony_2003
RING RING...................RING RING...................RING RING................
I have heard a UK ring eminating from closed office doors a number of times and I know it's not coming from a mobile phone. So how do you get this ring on a land line? Anyone done it? Would be an intresting novelty. Funny, I never thought about it being a UK ring tone until you said it here. I guess I will now forever hear it that way! :) |
Re: UK Ring on U.S phone?
Being pedantic, if you listen to the timing carefully you'll probably find it's not quite a British ring. Standard U.K. ring is 0.4 sec. on, 0.2 off, 0.4 on, then a 2-second interval before it repeats. The double-ring in the U.S. generally has a longer interval.
You can also find variant rings on a PBX (Private Branch eXchange) system. If the office in question is on a PBX, then it could have been programmed to give a normal ring on internal calls and a double-ring on calls originating from outside the building, or vice versa. Double-rings have actually been around in the U.S. a long time, as they were common on the old party lines in the past. Some rural areas could have as many as ten parties on a line, with distinctive ringing codes for each house (i.e. single long ring, two short rings, three short, long-short, short-long, etc.) By the way, in the very early days of automatic switching British phones also used a single ring. The double ring was adopted as standard after studies showed that people found it sounded more urgent and tended to answer more quickly. |
Re: UK Ring on U.S phone?
Originally Posted by PBC_1966
Being pedantic, if you listen to the timing carefully you'll probably find it's not quite a British ring. Standard U.K. ring is 0.4 sec. on, 0.2 off, 0.4 on, then a 2-second interval before it repeats. The double-ring in the U.S. generally has a longer interval.<snip>
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Re: UK Ring on U.S phone?
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Re: UK Ring on U.S phone?
Put it down to being an occupational hazard! I used to work for the phone company and freely admit to being a grade-A, card-carrying nutty geek type when it comes to telephone equipment. :D
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Re: UK Ring on U.S phone?
Originally Posted by PBC_1966
Being pedantic, if you listen to the timing carefully you'll probably find it's not quite a British ring. Standard U.K. ring is 0.4 sec. on, 0.2 off, 0.4 on, then a 2-second interval before it repeats. The double-ring in the U.S. generally has a longer interval.
You can also find variant rings on a PBX (Private Branch eXchange) system. If the office in question is on a PBX, then it could have been programmed to give a normal ring on internal calls and a double-ring on calls originating from outside the building, or vice versa. Double-rings have actually been around in the U.S. a long time, as they were common on the old party lines in the past. Some rural areas could have as many as ten parties on a line, with distinctive ringing codes for each house (i.e. single long ring, two short rings, three short, long-short, short-long, etc.) By the way, in the very early days of automatic switching British phones also used a single ring. The double ring was adopted as standard after studies showed that people found it sounded more urgent and tended to answer more quickly. :scared: |
Re: UK Ring on U.S phone?
Originally Posted by tony_2003
RING RING...................RING RING...................RING RING................
I have heard a UK ring eminating from closed office doors a number of times and I know it's not coming from a mobile phone. So how do you get this ring on a land line? Anyone done it? Would be an intresting novelty. |
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