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Intercoms--Suggestions Appreciated!

Started by stopthemachine, January 13, 2011, 09:40:30 PM

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stopthemachine

Hi all,

I'm pretty new to this site (and I LOVE it!), but certainly not to phones--however, I need some help with intercoms/phones used in a regular house set-up.

I've read some great posts on here about hooking magneto phones together to ring in a house, also the intercom Connecticut phones, etc.

OK, I am in the processing of fixing up an old, three-story house (slow but steady process due to limited funds at times)--the old plaster walls have been knocked out, and in the (hopefully) next few months, drywall will go back up.  As a "phone-atic," I have greatly considered the idea of hooking up some kind of private phone system into the house, but I'm not sure what would be the best plan.

The magneto phones are cheap enough to pick up on eBay (SC and Kellogg especially), but would that be the best set up?  I think this might be the option to go with--and a way to make good use of the crank phones which often get neglected.  Now, I know I'd need a battery source to actually make voice connection between phones so would it be a daunting task to wire the phones up together...?  Would a switchboard of some sort be a necessary option/alternative?

I've also seen the Connecticut intercoms which are cute, but I am guessing that you could only hook two up together? 

I would love to hear what those with intercom experience (or anyone else for that matter) would suggest. 

Thanks in advance,
Dan  8)

bingster

If I had an opportunity like that, I'd simply wire the house for telephone service in every room/area, and then put a Panasonic PBX unit in the basement.  That will allow you to use standard telephones in every room AND give those standard phones intercom capabilities.  But when doing that, you can't daisychain the connecting blocks/jacks--each block has to have it's own dedicated line back to the PBX. 
= DARRIN =



Greg G.

Quote from: bingster on January 14, 2011, 01:37:56 AM
If I had an opportunity like that, I'd simply wire the house for telephone service in every room/area, and then put a Panasonic PBX unit in the basement.  That will allow you to use standard telephones in every room AND give those standard phones intercom capabilities. 

First thing I thought of too, easier and much less "daunting" to use a PBX.  You would just have to dial the extension #.
The idea that a four-year degree is the only path to worthwhile knowledge is insane.
- Mike Row
e

dsk

I have done mush of this, actually starting without a good plan.  :'(
This has caused some rewiring.  :-\
If you are going to connect more than 5 magnetos together you will need to consider a manual switchboard, and someone to operate it :D
If this really is an option all wires should be ending up at that location.
The only other solution is to choose a central point in the hose, Basement, attic, or a technical room. From this point you should run wires to each point you may need a telephone or wired internet connection. Cat 5 works well for me.
Each cable contains 8 wires (4 twisted pairs) 2 pairs is usually used for internet. The other to may well be used to 2 different telephone connections. This may slow down the internet in that short period the ringer rings, but probably not.
At  each location you terminate either  an ordinary internet jack, and use a splitter when needed, or you put up a double jack.
At the central point you may end up in some kind of panel. I have used Krone  LSA+  http://tinyurl.com/6lx2y3v
At this point you may patch the wires as you want, and you may reconfigure everyting without  lots of work. You may put up a switchboard or a pabx later.
(The Panasonic analog pabx 's like kxt 616 or 308 is outstanding!)

:) Just remember to put one cable to this point from  1 where your phoneline enters the house, and from where your internets coming in. 

It may be smart do do the same with TV antenna outlets.

dsk

stopthemachine

Quote from: Brinybay on January 14, 2011, 05:40:11 AM
Quote from: bingster on January 14, 2011, 01:37:56 AM
If I had an opportunity like that, I'd simply wire the house for telephone service in every room/area, and then put a Panasonic PBX unit in the basement.  That will allow you to use standard telephones in every room AND give those standard phones intercom capabilities. 

First thing I thought of too, easier and much less "daunting" to use a PBX.  You would just have to dial the extension #.
I think that this Panasonic PBX in the basement sounds like a great idea.  I hope it's not too technical because I surely am not.  Haha.  I have a friend who MAY be able to help me though as he's an electrician, but I won't hold my breath on it.  Would I be able to use both TT and rotary phones on the Panasonic PBX? 

Hey, on top of that, I could always wire a bunch of Connecticut intercoms together, one-on-one, and just make sure I label which room they would reach.  Haha.  That'd actually pretty a funny idea, especially since they're so small.  In my bedroom, I could have one connected to the kitchen; then, I could have a separate one from my bedroom to the basement, and so forth. 

Ah, the possibilites are endless!  Thanks for your suggestions and keep 'em coming!  :)

P.S.-I wouldn't be able to tap the PBX into the landline, would I?  If not, it's really not a big deal at all. 

Doug Rose

I have a Panasonic 616 working on default programming (I just pulled the battery strap). 16 intercom extensions that can have up to 4 phones on them. Rings on incoming calls and you can dial ext to ext internally.  I get to show off phones working in my phone room to visitors. The best part is I have phones working of off it in my house and use three ports on my test bench. I have a Comcast Digital line hanging off of this and it works like a champ. The 616 is the BEST investment in phones you will ever make....Doug
Kidphone

dsk

The 616 is just to hang on the wall, and has 6 telephone jacks for lines to the central office, and 16 jacks for local telephones. Just plug and play.
If you want to change the parameters you will need a special Panasonic telephone for programming. Default should work OK.

dsk

bingster

And yes, it works with TouchTone and rotary, both.
= DARRIN =



Adam

#8
Being the local Asterisk geek I'd just like to remind everybody that, while I know the originator of this thread said he wasn't technically savvy, if you know anything at all about computers, you can set up a PBX using the free Asterisk software and any old PC you happen to have laying around.  Then boxes that you plug your phones into (ATAs) that connect with the Asterisk system over a computer network are only about $50 each for two separate phones.

If you have an Asterisk system you can do cool things like being able to set up a phone to ring by dialing your full childhood telephone number, and lots more.

If anyone would like to talk about or needs help with Asterisk, please feel free to send me a private message.
Adam Forrest
Los Angeles Telephone - A proud part of the global C*Net System
C*Net 1-383-4820

Greg G.

Quote from: stopthemachine on January 14, 2011, 10:06:49 AM
I think that this Panasonic PBX in the basement sounds like a great idea.  I hope it's not too technical because I surely am not. P.S.-I wouldn't be able to tap the PBX into the landline, would I?  If not, it's really not a big deal at all. 

I have mine rigged to my land line.  You can still use it as an intercom by just dialing the extension number.  The signal is different when dialing the extension # on mine, two short rings instead of one long ring.  Here's an example of how mine works, I use a Panasonic 308.  You can hear me dial the two-digit extension.  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmnJPLFgPBU

I just ran a mod-to-mod cord from the nearest jack to Com 1, then plugged the phones into the extension jacks on the PBX.  Kinda cool the way they all ring in numerical sequence with each signal sent.  You could hook a few up, call your land line from your cell, then see if you can make it from one end of the house to the other before the farthest phone finishes ringing!  My place isn't big enough for that, but my goal is to find 5 phones that have the right pitch so that they play the Close Encounters tune!
The idea that a four-year degree is the only path to worthwhile knowledge is insane.
- Mike Row
e

AE_Collector

#10
I had a telephone based intercom working in my parents house when I was a teenager. I got an old AE 10 station electromechanical intercom unit and began installing seperate telephone sets as stations around the house. This system had no access to the phone line, it was strictly an intercom with single digit dialling to the other stations. It was a common talking (single channel) system as well and the ringing was accomplished via a second pair to each telephone with a 10 VAC buzzer in each phone. All the Intercom did was supply talk battery to any off hook phone and the mechanical selector switch determined which phone/buzzer to signal. With an electromechanical selector switch it sounder great when dialing!

Since about 1980 I have always had sone type of electronic phone system in my house. All of these systems used proprietary digital phones like the Panasonic CAN do as well. I started with a Northern Electric Vantage system (which was the predecessor to the NT Norstar) which was replaced later by a Norstar. More recently I converted to a NT Venture system which handles call display much better than the Norstar did.

Meanwhile, standing by I have a SxS demo unit that can process 7 digit calls. Not sure how it is going to do with Call Display though!

You want to work towards having one distribution point in your home for everything as technology moves forward. I have a BIX panel in the basement where everything in the house terminates. There is a 4 pair from my outside telephone protector feeding to the panel and every station run in the house goes there. My phone system is there as is my security system with all of its runs. All of my network wires terminate there as does all of the coax in my house. I have coax feeds from the cable box outside AND 4 feeds from my Satelitte dish up near the roof. I actually have Cable TV service, a satellite dish AND ADSL based Mediaroom based TV (Telus version of AT&T U-verse TV). Tiime to eliminate some TV providers around here!

Terry

stopthemachine

All of your suggestions have been very helpful, and I thank you for them.  How much is the Panasonic PBX?  I really hope it's not too complicated!  Haha.

I really would like to install some of those Connecticut intercom-type telephones too because they're cute and seem like they would keep some basic communication between the more important rooms if necessary.  What do you all think?  They can be picked up so reasonably too.  Besides, they'd look classy on the walls!  Haha. (Since most are in pretty decent shape for the most part.)

bingster

The Connecticut intercoms would probably work well point-to point, but the problem is (as far as I know) they can only be used from one point to one other point.  There's no capability for using more than two in a system.
= DARRIN =



GG



Yo Stopthamachine: do both! 

The Connecticut intercoms probably require two wires for talk path plus one additional wire per station for the buzzer path.  So a 4-pair (8-conductor) station cable can handle six separate stations. 

If the occupants of the house are a couple w/o kids, then you can do the magneto phones: if you hear it ring, it's your spouse calling, so it doesn't matter what room you're in.   What I used to do for magneto intercom was use 2 pair, whereby one pair was a power supply: any 6-volt to 12-volt AC adaptor will do, and put a relay coil or similar coil (a 1a2 station buzzer with blue wires will do) in series with the output of the power supply to get rid of most of the nasty hum that most of those have, and provide some protection against shorts.  The other pair was connected as the talk pair between the stations.  Strictly speaking it's "cheating" because the power supply is centralized to all stations, but it's more than acceptable because it works. 

The PBX is most useful when you need to call whoever is in a specific room.  Though you can also hook it up to a paging system and dial the code to page over the speakers:  "Hey kids!  Dinner is on!"

I have a couple of Panasonic 616s around that I'm likely to sell (PBX eng. here, Panasonic dealer), and I'll be putting together price lists for the newer Panasonic hardware as well.  Also 1232s which start out as 8x16s, and some extension cards to expand to 24 and 32 stations; however the station outputs on these is via Amphenol connectors that need to be wired to cross-connect blocks. 

The main thing for residences is, you're usually calling by person rather than by room, because any given person can be in any room.  That tends to lead to the preference for something that'll page throughout a house, or have a distinct ringing sound for each person and have ringer boxes with those sounds installed where they can be heard throughout. 

For example a family of four in a house with two floors plus a basement workshop and attic rec room for the kids:  now you have effectively four floors, and four ringer boxes on each floor: uh-oh, you need to get four of each type of ringer box, and train the family to recognize the sounds:  this one is Dad, that one is Mom, this one is Sister, and that one is Brother.  Then you need to train everyone to dial the "pick up ring" code from whichever phone they are at when they want to answer the common bells.  This assumes a PBX, with enough power to ring four ringer boxes on one extension number. 

Alternately, with magneto phones, you can develop a code ringing system where one long ring = any grownup pick up the phone; and two short rings = any kid pick up the phone.  That usually works pretty well if the kids hang out together.   And then you can do something like "one very long ring around dinner time means everyone to the kitchen for dinner." 

Whatever you're doing, you might also consider integrating an emergency alarm system into it, whereby pushing the red button in any bedroom or kitchen etc. turns on common alarm bells, for example in a fire or if there's a burglar.

stopthemachine

Hi GG,

I love your suggestions, but, unfortunately, I'm not too well-versed in mechanics so I'm in the slow-but-steady explanation category.  Haha.

Now, to begin, where does one find the suggested station cables for the Connecticut intercom phones?  The Conn. phones are merely station-to-station though, right?  Can they be wired to work together on more than a two-intercom set-up?  (So--let's say--anyone on one of six intercoms can pick up and be heard from one of five other different phones?)

I'm glad you suggested both ideas because I have no objections to putting a  Panasonic system AND the Connecticut phones in the hosue together.  Haha.  (If for no other reason, the charm of the Conn. phones as usable intercoms in the house and not just there hanging on the wall or setting in a box.)

In terms of the magneto phones, they are also a simple possibility because some of them are so cheap to pick up on eBay (such as the Leich desk sets). 

Thanks again,
Dan