Telephone Museum Tour

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  • Опубликовано: 13 апр 2020
  • Join A&H's Experiences Director Randall Webster for a tour of our Telephone Museum! The museum takes visitors on an overview of communications technology and the history of the telephone. Try your hand at the working switchboard and then take a look at how communications change throughout time. This exciting collection features several hands-on displays and includes the story of the Winter Park Telephone Company, founded in Maitland by Carl Hill Galloway. A very special thank you to J. Rodrick Chapman for his volunteer assistance in maintaining the A&H's interactive Telephone Museum.

Комментарии • 25

  • @michaelvalcourt9978
    @michaelvalcourt9978 2 года назад +10

    I'm a retired System Engineer. Started my career with NY Telephone. Nice to see the old tech at this museum. Thank you.

  • @Steinninn
    @Steinninn 2 года назад +5

    Thank you for the tour. Hello from Iceland

  • @christenewaldon961
    @christenewaldon961 2 года назад +6

    Awesome video 🤗

  • @karenrich9092
    @karenrich9092 День назад

    In the intro of this video is a beige phone with the receiver on top. I believe it is a ROLM phone and I have one in my garage. My husband built our phone system with leftover 6 button sets and cable leftover from jobs he did. Thank you for this tour of the museum.

  • @tieline1333
    @tieline1333 3 года назад +6

    I got to tour two ex-Winter Park Telephone central offices in Winter Park. 151 New York Ave & 500 New York Ave. They used to be NX-1 Crossbar but now they are DMS-100. I did the tour a few years ago in 2017 or 2018. The Winter Park Time & Temp number (646-3131) is an Audichron Z-10 or maybe the version prior to that. I also got to touch and physically see the Time & Temperature machine at the 151 central office It sits at the top of a 23" relay rack on a miscellaneous equipment frame. The thing all together takes less than 4U of rack space! There are recordings of when those offices used to be NX-1 Crossbar on Evan Doorbell's website. And recreations of it on the NPSTN network! :)

  • @CoimbatoreCulturalClub
    @CoimbatoreCulturalClub 2 года назад +5

    Super sir
    I support u ever...am from India a HAM RADIO OPERATOR.

    • @karenroy9045
      @karenroy9045 Год назад +2

      Wow people still use ham radios.

  • @rapidrabbit7175
    @rapidrabbit7175 5 месяцев назад +1

    What many people don't know is that the first Touch Tone phones had to be converted back to dial pulses so the existing equipment could "understand" what digits the tones represented. Overall, calls took longer because of the tone to pulse conversion. Yet they charged more money for a touch tone phone. In 1995 we were all put out of a job thanks to the computer age. Of late, they took away our promiced life insurance and HRA (Health Reimbursement Account). I wonder how many had to go back to work while in their 80's?

  • @Stache987
    @Stache987 Год назад +5

    Great production, although putting your finger and holding the dial against its stop doest send a interrupted signal until you release it.
    Kids of today have no idea what a wired phone is much less know how to use a rotary phone.
    Good ole UTS, universal takeover system.. LOL they were big in Missouri and CenturyLink ultimately took them over, what a mess to get customer service, let alone service. I was moving into a location with a overdue bill from a previous Tennant and it took 10 days of complaining to finally be told that's why I had soft restriction dialtone.. my landlord had to call, and 3 more days later I had service "from a run that had service live to the switch".. I am a former Verizon landline service rep, no way would that fly!

    • @AHMaitland
      @AHMaitland  Год назад +3

      Wow! We're so happy our Telephone Museum could bring up so many interesting memories. Thanks for sharing your first-hand knowledge!

  • @ScottGrammer
    @ScottGrammer Год назад +1

    Subscribed.

  • @dalemettee1147
    @dalemettee1147 Год назад

    Now, do you remember the chimes used to ring the phones in a home. They were so pleasing that some customers would just let the chimes sound without answering the incoming call. They were finally removed. One phone model I didn't see in the array of styles was the 1930's desk set that was heavy because it was metal and the bells were in a box on a wall not in the set.

  • @alanhartmann3355
    @alanhartmann3355 День назад

    Great video, thanks! At 4:04, what's the device with the rotating disks just to the left of the 8102 ringing generators?

  • @oliverharris7366
    @oliverharris7366 Год назад

    My mom Hated them wall phones. When a neighbor moved out my dad would get the cord off their phone and splice it onto are phone. My mom could watch us kids while on the phone.

  • @tiinau6562
    @tiinau6562 2 месяца назад +1

    😂👍😱På den gamla goda tiden
    Jag minns
    .... 1966..1971... 😂😂... När det 😂fanns telefon katalogerna och.... Telefon kiosker.... 👍🌻✌️❤️🇫🇴🌼👍🐏

  • @jamesdavis5096
    @jamesdavis5096 Год назад

    1:22 Steve Martin the phone books are here the phone books are here look I'm finally somebody

  • @Pacificbell
    @Pacificbell 15 дней назад

    i have alot of cellphones i should make a museum

  • @BrianBrownDr
    @BrianBrownDr Год назад +2

    STM ≠ Small Town Machine; STM = Speaking Time Machine.

  • @georgercsd4771
    @georgercsd4771 Год назад

    It's great to maintain some of this old technology - bravo. But please talk to someone who is technically savvy who can clue you in. Lifting the handset on a central office phone does not "send a light" nor "an electronic signal" it completes an ELECTRICAL circuit resulting in a light turning on and an audible signal to sound (but not an audible signal at a busy switchboard). I stopped listening when the gaffes piled up too high, but I hope you will do more, and better, videos soon.

    • @thechuckyboi1438
      @thechuckyboi1438 2 месяца назад

      Lmfao don’t listen to this guy. This video was really informative on the history of the phones. That’s what I expected when I clicked on the video… I was not expecting an in-depth highly accurate explanation of how an ancient telephone worked. Maybe keep quiet unless you have a good comment to make!

  • @larryg.9187
    @larryg.9187 Год назад

    ..... There used to be a number to call, and get the time, in ten second intervals...
    ... Also, in our basement was a phone with no dial...It was part of a party line system... From time to time, I would carefully lift the receiver and hear different near neighbors talking ... Lol ...
    ... When I was just under ten, about 1961, my Mom had a job as an operator at some 12 story building in downtown Detroit... Once in a while, she would take my brothers and I with her... I watched in fascination as she answered and plugged the cables... The rest of the time my brothers and I would ride the elevator or look out the windows... Great fun when your 8 or 9 ...lol 🤣 ... 📞 ...

  • @johnlupo3919
    @johnlupo3919 Год назад

    WINNER PARK???????????????????? OR WINTER PARK???????????????????????????????????