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Often times with 500's, if the ringer's failing the wire on G on the network block needs to be moved to L1, it's a quick fix and was the only issue with about 30 of my 500 phones.
AtomicEraTom said:Often times with 500's, if the ringer's failing the wire on G on the network block needs to be moved to L1, it's a quick fix and was the only issue with about 30 of my 500 phones.
Atomic said:I rewired the entire set up in about 8 different configurations. Non of them worked. I pulled a bunch of different diagrams and I wasn't able to get anything. Since its a '62, could it be that the ringer motor is toast? Is there a way to check this?
AtomicEraTom said:There is a little tiewire like piece below just slightly below the gongs, it can be moved one way or the other, move it to the opposite slot of where it is now, that can help. This is a straight line ringer and will work with modern phone lines.
Did you try G to L1, that usually does the trick.
Phonephan, of course.AtomicEraTom said:What's your handle over there? I'm Atomic Era Tom there as well.
feltfan said:Phonephan, of course.
Check out the cuff links I posted in the fleamarket section
a couple of weeks ago.
Bingles said:Is there any way to disconnect the ringer without ruining the ringing mechanism? Eventually, I may want to reconnect the ringer.
Almost forgot about that moment in history. There were usually quite a few wires in the wall, but all were backups except for two or three I think! I still have the last phone I got from Mountain Bell, my first push button, with the break up, they must have just forgot, or it was old technology. Thats the phone I pull out when I need to trouble shoot, always works!John in Covina said:Yes, there is but I don't know the extact wire to unconnect. In the good old days before they came up with that modular plug all phones were wired directly. I think there are 3 or 4 wires, one of the wires is the one that tells the ringer to ring. If it is cut the ringer does not ring. This was a "Big Deal" because most phones were rented from the phone company and you were billed for how many phones you had, even if they were on the same line. The phone company could count the phones in service by the ringers that rang. So if you had one phone in the house with an operating ringer, and had picked up two old phones some place and hooked them in, if those ringers were not hooked up the phone company only charged for having one phone instead of 3. It's complicated but people used to have to do this stuff all the time. A hold over was that people like my parents had one phone in the house, in the kitchen, until sometime in the 1990's! old habits die hard.