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W.E. selector switch #162

Started by Babybearjs, January 05, 2015, 07:21:09 PM

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Babybearjs

I caught this on ebay.... tried to use my paypal credit, but had to pay cash instead... I understand these where use for railroading.... or were they a talley counter?  I'm anxious to see what it looks like and how it works.... wonder what I can use it for? would it work on my 1A1 system??   hope it come fast! I've never had one of these!
John

unbeldi

#1
Looks like a late version in metal housing, they used to be in wood boxes earlier.
You can't use these in anything connected to the PSTN.
You have to construct a special high-voltage network. These were used for selective ringing of way stations. The ringing codes are mechanically programmed and pulses sent over the line used anywhere from 100 V to 400 V direct current, depending on the length of the line. Also, the impedance of the telephone sets attached was several thousand ohms, something like 7500 Ω, IIRC, to permit having many of them on the same line, many more than would be found on a PSTN party line, for example.  The telephone set consisted typically of a 501A or 502A subset with a candlestick or transmitter arm.

Check out the RR catalogs and instructional documents in the TCI library. Those contain detailed info on these devices.

Babybearjs

well, I got this today and was able to fill in some gaps.... first off, it was made by "General Communications Products, Inc." and has the W.E. #60AP selector in it. the original selector code is worn off except for the last digit of "2" I think the second number could have been a"8" but I'm not sure because most of the number is missing and the first number it totally gone.  its wired directly to the terminal strip as follows: L1, L2, 3,4, and 5. the B1, B2, and the EX terminals are disconnected and I don't know if they were originally attached to the selector, or something else.... also there is a part missing, possibly a capacitor... as there are 2 wires soldered together sticking up where the part would have mounted. now, it I connected L1 and L2 to a phone line and rang the circuit, would it make the selector work? this is A interesting toy.... as it could be used for all sorts of switching.... I took some pictures of the unit and will post them once they are looked over...  :)
John

unbeldi

Quote from: Babybearjs on January 10, 2015, 02:11:04 PM
well, I got this today and was able to fill in some gaps.... first off, it was made by "General Communications Products, Inc." and has the W.E. #60AP selector in it. the original selector code is worn off except for the last digit of "2" I think the second number could have been a"8" but I'm not sure because most of the number is missing and the first number it totally gone.  its wired directly to the terminal strip as follows: L1, L2, 3,4, and 5. the B1, B2, and the EX terminals are disconnected and I don't know if they were originally attached to the selector, or something else.... also there is a part missing, possibly a capacitor... as there are 2 wires soldered together sticking up where the part would have mounted. now, it I connected L1 and L2 to a phone line and rang the circuit, would it make the selector work? this is A interesting toy.... as it could be used for all sorts of switching.... I took some pictures of the unit and will post them once they are looked over...  :)

No, you can't use it on a phone line.  I wouldn't even have thought about connecting it to a phone line.  The selector operates by a sequence of high-voltage DC pulses.  It operates similarly to a Step-by-Step switch.  I don't know what the lowest workable voltage level is, but railway lines operated on anywhere from 400 Volts down to perhaps 100 V for very long lines, because they had to span long distances of hundreds of miles.  The selectors have dials inside that can be set for a specific pulse code to which the selector responds and consequently rings an attached way station phone.  The TCI library has railroad catalogs and manuals that explain much of this.

unbeldi

Just looking up some stuff...

Western Electric made the No. 60B Test Set for diagnosing #60 Selectors.  The 60B Test Set requires 3 x 22V batteries to operate and the circuit diagram specifies an operating voltage of 60 to 120 volts, so that's probably what is minimally necessary to operate one of these.

Babybearjs

so, a ringing voltage won't trigger this coil?  ok, then heres the next question.... what went here??
John

unbeldi

Quote from: Babybearjs on January 10, 2015, 04:37:51 PM
so, a ringing voltage won't trigger this coil?  ok, then heres the next question.... what went here??
It's not the voltage level that triggers the selection, but a code sequence, much like dial pulses from a rotary dial, but generated with a multi-lever device.

I don't know what went there... You need to study that circuit diagram and decide if anything is actually missing.  Perhaps this was by design for a certain application, perhaps it was a quick fix by someone...
You could also remove the 60AP and use it to build another waystation with WECo parts.


unbeldi

Here is a great site about railroad signaling and telephone systems:

http://www.railroad-signaling.com/telephones/wetdts.html

He has a similar 162R selector box:


Babybearjs

the schematic on mine was hard to decipher but I finally understood it. the blank space was for a capictor the was for the model S relay box. it took me while to figure it out... the schematic was hard to understand. so the pulses where more like morse code? instead of a regular ring pulse. I'll have to tinker with this unit  and see exactly what it can do....  the link to the website is neat. railroading is something I used to do as a kid....HO railroading.....model railroading has really gotten expensive as some of the stuff I used to have aren't even available anymore. When I lost my home on 2010, I gave my nephew all my HO scale train stuff so he could set it up for Christmas... if he even remembers he has it.....anyway, thank you for the link! its interesting.
John

Jim Stettler

I have a selector similar to this , mine  was used for a car phone. This was from the days of radio-telephony. I think the car selector is different than the railroad selector (different operating voltage) , however the operating principles are very similar.
I assume the car selector is 12 VDC.
JMO,
Jim S.
You live, You learn,
You die, you forget it all.

rdelius

Western Electric sold some of it's Railroad communication Parts and tooling to General Communication Products in Penna.All of this ended up in Gainsville Fla.While at COT we  bought new wooden jack boxes scissors mounts etc, Saw the origional tooling or moulds for the selector and the dome..parts were on hand for repair  etc.Do not know what happened to all of this stuff.