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Vintage Phones

Argee

One of the Regulars
Messages
116
Location
New Orleans, LA
Well I finally managed to get an AE34. here's what I looked like when I got it.

ae34.jpg


At some point in it's history, the dial was removed and a blank put on. How do I know this? well for one thing the dial blank is from Northern Electric. Also the wires added inside when the conversion took place are much newer than the phone. Anyway, Since the blank wasn't original to the phone, not to mention damaged, I decided to convert it back to a dial. While I was at it I put on the chrome handset bands to match the new dial. It's still got the original cloth cords.

ae34b.jpg


I'm really happy to finally have an AE34 in my collection. This phone is why I got into telephone collecting in the first place, and it took 4 years to finally get my hands on one.
 

Brinybay

Practically Family
Messages
571
Location
Seattle, Wa
Well I finally managed to get an AE34. here's what I looked like when I got it.

... While I was at it I put on the chrome handset bands to match the new dial. It's still got the original cloth cords.

I'm really happy to finally have an AE34 in my collection. This phone is why I got into telephone collecting in the first place, and it took 4 years to finally get my hands on one.

Nice! Where do you find chrome bands for AE's? I have an AE 40 and a few 50s that I would like to add chrome bands to.
 

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,178
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
I received the phone today. As always, when I buy something from ebay that has more than one moving part, I am concerned that I am going to get what I paid for, or better yet, the item in the condition it was described.

This phone is better than I had expected. It's very clean. It works. It dials out, it rings, and you can hear and be heard. The volume is a little low in the ear piece, but I'm going to try to remedy that using what Lizzie suggested earlier in the thread.

1125111514.jpg


Here it is next to one of my older prized possessions - an ACE desk stapler. Going by the numbers on the bottom, I like to think it's from 1941, but that's just a guess. If anyone knows for sure how to tell what year it was made, I'm all ears.

1125111517.jpg
 

Giftmacher

One Too Many
Messages
1,405
Location
Hohenmauth CZ
Well I finally managed to get an AE34. here's what I looked like when I got it.

ae34.jpg


At some point in it's history, the dial was removed and a blank put on. How do I know this? well for one thing the dial blank is from Northern Electric. Also the wires added inside when the conversion took place are much newer than the phone. Anyway, Since the blank wasn't original to the phone, not to mention damaged, I decided to convert it back to a dial. While I was at it I put on the chrome handset bands to match the new dial. It's still got the original cloth cords.

ae34b.jpg


I'm really happy to finally have an AE34 in my collection. This phone is why I got into telephone collecting in the first place, and it took 4 years to finally get my hands on one.

Well done indeed. Did you know, you can dial number only by cradle? :)
 

DeaconKC

One Too Many
Messages
1,732
Location
Heber Springs, AR
Giftmacher, that is a very handsome phone.
Argee, splendid job on the restoration. I picked up an old rotary at a flea market that is in need of some TLC, do you do outside work?
 

Giftmacher

One Too Many
Messages
1,405
Location
Hohenmauth CZ
If you know Morse code, you can dial a number using the cradle as a telegraph key, I'm not sure if it works on digital telephone exchange though.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,722
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
Tap dialing will work on any phone line that recognizes pulses -- you tap the receiver hook quickly in bursts for each digit. Dial 5, you tap the hook five times, dial 9, you tap the hook nine times, etc. The trick is to do this rapidly enough while pausing just enough for the switching system to recognize the individual digits. Not too many people have that level of skill, and it's something you see more in old detective movies than in real life.
 

MissMittens

One Too Many
Messages
1,628
Location
Philadelphia USA
Tap dialing will work on any phone line that recognizes pulses -- you tap the receiver hook quickly in bursts for each digit. Dial 5, you tap the hook five times, dial 9, you tap the hook nine times, etc. The trick is to do this rapidly enough while pausing just enough for the switching system to recognize the individual digits. Not too many people have that level of skill, and it's something you see more in old detective movies than in real life.

You're absolutely right, Lizzie. VoIP systems can use "pulse dial" with an adapter that converts the pulse to DTMF tones. I've tried the old Morse dialing before, debunked I'm afraid. However, if you tap the key for the digits instead of using actual Morse for the numbers, it does work.
 

scottyrocks

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,178
Location
Isle of Langerhan, NY
Tap dialing will work on any phone line that recognizes pulses -- you tap the receiver hook quickly in bursts for each digit. Dial 5, you tap the hook five times, dial 9, you tap the hook nine times, etc. The trick is to do this rapidly enough while pausing just enough for the switching system to recognize the individual digits. Not too many people have that level of skill, and it's something you see more in old detective movies than in real life.

Sort of like driving a stick without using the clutch. :)
 

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