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Difficulty installing a dial on a Galion 5H6 phone

Started by MesaMike, December 28, 2016, 11:23:34 PM

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MesaMike

I picked up a Galion 5H6 at a swapmeet a few weeks ago. It was a type with a blank instead of an actual dial. I obtained an automatic electric 51 dial from a parts vendor on the internet, but I am unable to figure out how to connect it.  The wiring diagram for the 5H6 I found on the internet shows how to connect a Western electric 5H dial and the contacts are laid out differently, and also conveniently labelled in that brand of dial. The contacts are not labelled at all on the AE dial.

The vendor mailed me some pictures of AE dials with the terminals labelled in similar lingo to the WE dial, but the images show dials with 3 or 5 shunt contacts.  My dial has 4, with the bottom two being jumpered together...

I think I have the impulse connectors wired up correctly, but the shunt connections have me stumped.

Any advice?


Jack Ryan

If your dial has 4 ON contacts it may be equivalent to a WE dial. A picture would help otherwise we might be talking cross purposes.

There are several diagrams in the TCI library here: http://www.telephonecollectors.info/index.php/browse/wiring-diagrams/north

I believe the AE dials with 3 ON (in this case shunt) contacts cause the receiver to click each side of a digit.

Jack

MesaMike

#2
I have uploaded the wiring diagram for the 5H6. I have traced the wires in the phone and they match the diagram.  I have also uploaded a picture of the back of the AE dial.  So my question is where do I make the three wiring connections marked R, BB and W on the wiring diagram on the AE dial?

I should add that the wire that connects to W currently does not exist in the phone. As you can see in the diagram, this wire is not routed to the blank if it is installed in the phone, but the other 4 wires are. I have attached a new wire to terminal 2 to make the W connection, but do not know where to make the opposite connection on the dial.

Jack Ryan

That dial looks like it has two normally open ON contacts - is that right?

If that is so, it is not equivalent to a WE dial. With the bridge connected as it is across the two centre ON contacts, it is a standard AE dial as used in most AE telephones.

This diagram: http://www.telephonecollectors.info/index.php/browse/wiring-diagrams/north/doc_details/11596-north-electric-7h6-wiring-h-199-s-7

shows how to connect it. The centre ON contact is the bridged pair.

As I noted previously, I believe this configuration will cause the receiver to pop before and after each digit. Try it and see how it works.

Jack

MesaMike

That is correct. The two sets of contacts are open, they both close when the dial is turned.  Currently, the dial is wired up (with 4 connections) as shown in the diagram you posted for the 7H6. The bridge between the center contacts is in position. The phone does not dial out. I hear the dial tone between each turn of the dial, and continue to hear it after dialing a number.

LarryInMichigan

This diagram: link from the TCI library should help you.

Larry

unbeldi

If indeed the off-normal contacts are a set of two normally-open switches, then this dial is equivalent to a Western Electric No. 7G, 7H, or 9G dial which were used for some of the Design Line sets, I believe, in circuits based on a 425-type network.  I suspect the dial came from a similar instrument made by another manufacturer.
The AE designation for this contact configuration is AK-28.
To use this dial you need to have installed a bridge between the two ON switches so that it acts as a three-way-make switch, and use a diagram designed for the standard AE dial with a AK-25 configuration, which has simply three contacts closing.


LarryInMichigan

Quote from: unbeldi on December 29, 2016, 10:44:01 AM
To use this dial you need to have installed a bridge between the two ON switches so that it acts as a three-way-make switch, and use a diagram designed for the standard AE dial with a AK-25 configuration, which has simply three contacts closing.

From the picture above, it appears that such a bridge is already in place.

Larry

MesaMike

I am pretty sure I have it wired us as in the 7H6 wiring diagram now.Connections are as shown in the picture, and the jumper is in place, also as shown.  I cannot dial out. After dialing each number, I hear the dialtone. After completing the whole phone number I still hear the dial tone.

unbeldi

What kind of dial service do you have ?
Do any other rotary dial telephones work on the same line ?

MesaMike

I have a western electric 202 that works on the same line.

Doug Rose

#11
Strap it ....see pic....Doug
Kidphone


LarryInMichigan

Have you verified that the pulsing contacts are physically separating as the dial returns?  Do you hear anything from the receiver as the dial is turned and returns?  If you separate the pulsing contacts with your finger, do you hear dial tone?  Does the dial break dial tone if the ringer is disconnected?  In your picture, it looks like the pulsing cam is not in the correct rest position. 

Larry

MesaMike

The contacts do separate when the dial is turned.  At rest they are touching, and I hear a dial tone.  (see picture for a close up of the at rest position). When I turn the dial both contacts move in towards the thick metal post. The dial tone goes away if I lift the long contact, or if I rotate the dial, then it returns after the dial returns to the rest position.