The Beamish Automatic Telecom

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  • Опубликовано: 25 янв 2025

Комментарии • 14

  • @t13fox67
    @t13fox67 Год назад

    This brings back good memories. I worked as a SxS switchman back in the 70's for southwestern bell telephone company in the U.S.. everything was western electric switches. Worked both local and toll central offices. Such sense of accomplishment when fixing these switches, unlike today's equipment. Enjoyed the video. Thank you.

  • @stevedoubleu99B
    @stevedoubleu99B 5 лет назад +5

    Great that the equipment is actually used for communication within Beamish. Also, good on BT for providing it. Very interesting video.

  • @stagetelephone
    @stagetelephone 6 лет назад +3

    Fantastic to see a working Strowger exchange in actual daily us. Keep up the good work.

  • @livesteam_ss
    @livesteam_ss 7 лет назад +3

    excellent stuff, we need more of this at BCLM!

  • @HighlandSteam
    @HighlandSteam 7 лет назад +3

    Strowger exchange. I use to work on them in the late 80s and early 90s.

  • @richcampoverde
    @richcampoverde 4 года назад +1

    This museum gets better! A working telephone exchange now it just needs its own power station gas works water and sewage works and it is up and ready

  • @KeritechElectronics
    @KeritechElectronics 3 месяца назад

    11/10, I'd go there and put a Strowger selector together out of parts! :)

  • @lordred4116
    @lordred4116 3 года назад

    I remember Crosby exchange in Liverpool being a strowger frame, mid to late 1980s. Most of the others had already been changed.

  • @theenglishman9596
    @theenglishman9596 7 лет назад +1

    Plessey telephone company Liverpool made some of the strowger equipment. The switchers are called uniselectors which are mounted on banks which are mounted in frames called Racks which are cabled out to a IDF-Internal distribution frame which is then cable linked to the final frame called a MDF-main distribution frame, these frames are still used today in most telephone exchanges. Cables from the MDF go out to the street cabinets that you see usually on the corner of your street then the line is Jumpered out to your telephone at home.

    • @andrewwhite1793
      @andrewwhite1793 6 лет назад +1

      These are not uni-selectors. Because they are with the subscribers meters I think they are primary finders rather than group selectors or final selectors.

    • @Steven_Rowe
      @Steven_Rowe 5 лет назад +1

      A uni Selector is different. It is. A simple semi circular shape that subs lines connect to.
      When they pick up they try and find an outlet to the primary selector which is where dial tone comes from.

    • @ifn_media
      @ifn_media 4 года назад

      Not quite, smaller PBXs would indeed use uniselectors but UAXs tended to use SXS switches which would travel up a level then across a bank - lovely machines!

  • @derek-press
    @derek-press 4 года назад +1

    I spent 6 months of my youth in training cleaning those bloody relays ..start at the exchange forward left finish at the back right then guess what ...start again lol forward left

  • @TheUnclestein
    @TheUnclestein 5 лет назад

    Super