WO1979000078A1 - Hold control for a key telephone system - Google Patents

Hold control for a key telephone system Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1979000078A1
WO1979000078A1 PCT/US1978/000056 US7800056W WO7900078A1 WO 1979000078 A1 WO1979000078 A1 WO 1979000078A1 US 7800056 W US7800056 W US 7800056W WO 7900078 A1 WO7900078 A1 WO 7900078A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
line
hold
condition
voltage
impedance
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1978/000056
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
H Rasmussen
Original Assignee
H Rasmussen
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from US05/820,785 external-priority patent/US4132860A/en
Priority claimed from US05/842,569 external-priority patent/US4133985A/en
Application filed by H Rasmussen filed Critical H Rasmussen
Publication of WO1979000078A1 publication Critical patent/WO1979000078A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M9/00Arrangements for interconnection not involving centralised switching
    • H04M9/002Arrangements for interconnection not involving centralised switching with subscriber controlled access to a line, i.e. key telephone systems

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to telephone station equipment, and more particularly to multiple telephone set installations serviced by 5 multiple telephone lines from a central office.
  • a standard KTS desk set may provide for five or more line select buttons, even though the customer is only using the system for two lines and thus only two of the available buttons are functional.
  • an overall object of the invention is to provide a nov key telephone system capable of being installed at a relatively low cost.
  • a more particular object of the invention is to provide a hold contr for use in a key telephone system, that is capable of placing a line in a hol condition while a telephone set is temporarily disconnected from the line and, capable of generating a hold indicating signal on the line for indicating to the oth stations in the system that the line is on "hold".
  • a related object is to provide suc a hold control circuit in which the placing of the line in the hold condition, and th generating of the hold indicating signal on the line do not interfere with the norm supervisory signalling between the central office, and the telephone sets.
  • Still another object of the invention is to provide such a hold contr which has the further characteristic of providing reliable and consistent operatio in key telephone systems installed at widely varying line distances from the centr office.
  • the hold control circuit of the invention is intended for use in a k telephone system having at least two telephone lines that extend between a centr office and two or more telephone stations.
  • Each telephone station is equipped wit a telephone set, which may be a standard set intended for a single line installatio
  • a plurality of control units are provided, one at each of the telephone station
  • Each control un includes at least one hold control circuit of the invention which is responsive to manually-actuated hold select switch, and provides for establishing a hold conditio on one of the lines over which a telephonic connection has been made through th central office.
  • the hold control circuit comprises means f connecting a line terminating impedance across the line that is to be held an concurrently applying a hold condition indicating signal onto such line periodically varying such line terminating impedance.
  • the line terminati impedance establishes an impedance condition on the line that is interpreted by th central office as an off-hook condition and thus in effect simulates an off-ho condition which causes the central office to maintain the connection with th j remote party.
  • the periodic variation of the line terminating impedance produces a fluctuating voltage across the line which is communicated to the other control units, over the telephone line itself, to indicate that the line is on hold.
  • Visual indicating means at each control unit respond to the hold indicating signal by 5 producing a visual display at the respective telephone station, indicating that the applicable line is in a hold condition, awaiting to be picked up at any one of the available stations.
  • the hold condition is automatically terminated when the held line assumes an actual off-hook condition indicating that one of the stations has picked up the line.
  • the line terminating impedance is associated with a circuit means for periodically shunting a portion of such terminating impedance so as to cause the effective impedance that appears across the line to fluctuate and thereby produce the fluctuating voltage which serves as the hold indicating signal.
  • the line terminating impedance is preferrably provided by one or more serially connected voltage breakdown devices, such as zener diodes, so that the voltage drop developed across the terminating impedance or impedances is independent of variations in loop resistance due to differences in the loop length and conductor size and type. 20 .
  • Figure 1 is a generalized block diagram of the key telephone system 25 of the invention.
  • Figure 2 is a more detailed block diagram of one of the plurality A plurality of control 1.
  • FIG 3 is a detailed block and schematic diagram of the control unit 30 shown in Figure 2 in accordance with one preferred embodiment of the invention.
  • Figure 4 is a simplified block and schematic diagram of the line terminating impedance and hold signal generator of the invention in circuit with a telephone line from a central office.
  • KTS 11 The key telephone system (KTS) 11 in which the invention is used is shown in Figure 1 for a two line installation.
  • First and second telephone lines, LI and L2 extend from the central office 12 to a customer's installation which i ⁇ .f » l ⁇ dfis KTS 11.
  • Lines LI and L2 are standard, two conductor lines, each including a
  • UREAU OMPI l tip and a ring conductor which carry both central office supervisory signals an telephonic voice signals between central office 12 and a customer's telephone set installed at his business or residence.
  • KTS 11 encompasses a plurality of telephone stations #1-N, each o . • which is equipped with a telephone station set and a KTS control unit, such a illustrated by telephone set 13 and control unit 14 for station #1.
  • Low voltage D power is supplied to control unit 14 of station #1 and to the corresponding contro units of the remaining stations #2-N by means of either a common power supply 1 as shown in Figure 1, or by a plurality of individual power supplies, one for eac station.
  • the illustrated power supply 15 operates from a source of dc at 8-16 volt which is applied to input 16. At the output of supply 15 a low supply voltage +Ve appears on line 17, while line 18 is reference ground.
  • Each of the control units such as unit 14 for station 1, includes control circuit ( Figures 2 and 3), a set of line select switches SI and S2 (one fo each of lines LI and L2), a hold select switch S3, and a set of line conditio indicator lights IL1 and IL2 (one for each of lines LI and L2).
  • Switches SI, S2 and S are pushbutton switches of the momentary contact type. Switches SI and S2, whe separately depressed, cause the associated one of lines LI and L2 to be coupled t the telephone set 13.
  • Indicator light IL1 and IL2 at each control unit visually display the instantaneous condition of th associated line.
  • the various telephone line conditions are: on-hook (sometime called idle), off-hook (sometimes called busy), holding, and ringing.
  • Each of lines LI and L2 includes a tip conductor indicated by a T an a ring conductor indicated by an R.
  • the tip and ring conductors of lines LI and L are connected in parallel to the control units of all of the available stations #1-N Thus, as illustrated in Figure 1, each station receives as inputs, to the statio control unit, the tip and ring conductors of every one of the available lines fro central office 12.
  • the outputs of each control unit 14 include common output tip an ring conductors, designated as T and R', respectively, which are connected to th tip and ring terminals of the station's telephone set 13.
  • Output tip and rin conductors T and R f are selectively connected to the tip and ring conductors o either one or both of lines LI and L2 by the station control unit 14 as describe " more fully below.
  • the outputs of each station control unit 14 also include a pair o bell ringing conductors represented as Bl and B2.
  • Conductors Bl and B2 exten from the control unit 14 to the station's telephone set 13 and provide for energizin the bell or other audible signalling device in the telephone set in response to ringing signal on either of lines LI and L2.
  • the telephone set 13 at each of the stations may be a standard single line telephone set.
  • a type 500 set conventional dialing
  • a type 2500 set Touch-Tone dialing - A service mark of AT&T
  • the circuitry, indicator lights and selector switches for each control unit 14 are constructed and assembled so as to form a small, compact unit that can be mounted directly to the case of the telephone set 13.
  • the control unit may be packaged in a housing mounted adjacent to but separate from the telephone set.
  • the former packaging and mounting of switches, SI, S2, S3, - indicator lights ILl and IL2, and the associated circuitry are described in eopending patent application, Serial No. 713,870 for CONTROL UNIT MOUNTING AND INTERCONNECTING APPARATUS FOR TELEPHONE SETS, filed August 12, 1976 by Harry R. Rasmussen.
  • control unit 14 includes a set of line relays 24 and 26 that serve as switching devices for selectively connecting the tip (T) and ring (R) conductors of lines LI and L2 to the common output tip (T') and ring (R') conductors which extend . to the telephone set 13.
  • a bell relay 28 is also connected to the tip and ring conductors of LI and L2 and serves as a switching device for selectively connecting a ringing signal of an incoming call, whether on line LI or L2, to the common bell ringing conductors Bl and B2. .
  • Lines LI and L2 are also separately and respectively connected to an
  • I_l interface circuit 30 and an L2 interface circuit 40 include electro-optical isolating devices that enable lines LI and L2 to be coupled to line condition sensing circuitry and hold signal generating circuitry of control unit 14 without direct connection of such circuitry to the telephone lines.
  • separate sensing circuits 50 and 60 are provided, one for each of lines LI and L2.
  • Sensing circuit 50 is connected to interface circuit 30 by means of connection 38 to receive signals developed by interface circuit 30 that indicate the operating condition, whether on-hook, off-hook, holding or ringing, of line LI. Sensing circuit 50 discriminates between the various signal conditions and develops certain control signals that govern the operation of other circuitry in control unit 14.
  • Sensing circuit 60 is coupled to interface circuit 40 over connection 42 and functions in the same manner as sensing circuit 50 except circuit 60 receives and interprets the line condition signals appearing on L2.
  • Indicator lights ILl and IL2 are connected to outputs 52 and 64 sensing circuits 50 and 60, respectively, for visually displaying the operatin condition of the respective lines as sensed by circuits 30 and 40.
  • the indicat lights ILl and IL2 operate independently, each displaying the instantaneo . operating condition of the associated one of lines LI and L2.
  • a line select circuit 80 of control unit 14 is responsive to outputs 5 and 64 of sensing circuits 40 and 60 and to line select switches SI and S2 and to ho select switch S3 for controlling the operation of line relays 24 and 26. Also, circu 80 coordinates the operation of line relays 24 and 26 for automatically dropping on of the lines when the other line is to be picked up at the same station, and f concurrently operating both relays 24 and 26 when a three-point conference call to be established as more fully described below.
  • the hold control circuitry is distributed among circuits 30, 40, 50, 6 and 80.
  • the hold condition is initiated by depressing switch S3 which causes lin select circuit 80 to produce control signals on lines 86 and 88 which in turn caus sensing circuits 50 and 60 and interface circuits 30 and 40 to latch one of lines and L2 in a hold condition.
  • the associate interface circuit 30 or 40 places a line terminating impedance across the applicabl line so as to simulate the internal impedance of a telephone set and thereb maintain the central office to hold the line in communication with the remot party.
  • a hold indicating signal is applied to the line connections 94 and 96 i response to a flash generator 90.
  • a bell transfer circuit 70 having a connection 71 to sensing circuit 6 operates bell relay 28 in a manner that will be described more fully below to insur that the ringing signal is applied to the bell of the station's telephone set regardle of which line receives an incoming call.
  • control unit 14 With reference to Figure 3, the circuit elements of control unit 14 an in particular, the elements of the hold control circuitry of the present inventio are described in greater detail as follows.
  • Line Relays Line relays 24 and 26 include separate relay coils 24a and 26 schematically located within the dotted line that circumscribes line select circu 80 ( Figure 3).
  • a set of normally closed relay contacts 24b and 24c of relay 2 connect the tip and ring conductors of line LI to the output tip and ring V and R'
  • control unit 14 Although contacts 24b and 24c of relay 24 are normally closed, the coil 24a is normally energized as will be described more fully herein so that functionally, contacts 24b and 24c are normally open and are closed only when coil 24a is selectively deenergized in order to couple line LI to V and R ⁇ and thus to the telephone set 13 ( Figure 1).
  • Relay 26 includes a set of normally open contacts 26b and 26c separately connected in series between the tip and ring conductors of line L2 and the output tip and ring conductors T' and R'. Unlike relay 24, the coil 26a of relay 26 is normally unenergized and is selectively energized by circuit 46 when line L2 is to be connected to T and R' and thus to the telephone set 13. The connection and operation of relays 24 and 26 in this manner insures that at least one telephone line will be connected to the telephone set 13 in the event of power failure. In such case both relay coils 24a and 24b will be forced to their deenergized state and line LI will in that case be connected to the telephone set 13 through contacts 24b and 24c.
  • Bell Transfer Relay and Circuit Bell transfer relay 28 includes a relay coil 28a located in bell transfer circuit 70 ( Figure 3) for selectively operating two sets of contacts including a normally closed set of contacts 28b and 28c, and a normally open set of contacts 28d and 28e.
  • Contacts 28b and 28c are separately and serially connected between the tip and ring conductors of line LI and the output bell ringing conductors Bl and B2 which extend to the bell ringing device of the telephone set 13.
  • normally open contacts 28b and 28e are separately serially connected between the tip and ring conductors of line L2 and the output bell ringing conductors Bl and B2. ' An incoming ringing signal on line LI will automatically appear on output conductors Bl and B2 to cause the telephone set 13 at station 14 to ring.
  • Bell transfer circuit 70 includes an input 71 connected to the L2 sensing circuit 60, a DC blocking capacitor 782 serially connected between input 71 and the junction of the anode of a blocking diode 783 and the cathode of a clamping. diode 781.
  • the anode of diode 781 is connected to ground and the cathode of diode 783 is connected through a parallel RC network of resistor 784 and capacitor 785 to ground.
  • the cathode of diode 783 is also connected to pins 2 and 6 of a linear integrated circuit 786 (described below).
  • the output of circuit 786 is provided at pin 7 and is connected through coil 28a to +Vec and a diode 787 is connected in shunt around coil 28a.
  • Circuit 786 is a commercially available device manufactured and sold by a number of companies including National Semiconductor Corporation of Santa Clara, California, and Raytheon Corporation of Boston, Massachusetts, and is
  • OMPI commonly designated in the electronic industry as a 555 timer. It is a multipurpo timer circuit that can be adapted for performing a wide variety of timing a control functions depending upon the external circuitry to which it is connecte
  • the operational characteristics of the 555 timer, in general, and its particular u as a circuit 786 are described below.
  • the particular functioning of the other 5 timer circuits, used throughout control unit 14, will be covered hereinafter.
  • Supply voltage for the 555 timer is applied between pin 1 and pin with pin 1 being tied to ground and pin 8 to +Vcc.
  • the active inputs and outputs the timer are: a first output pin 3, second output pin 7 (which is operationally similar to pin 3), a first input pin 2 and second input pin 6.
  • a reset input pin 4 is also shown (connected to +Vcc) but t reset function is not used in the present circuitry and the connection to +Vcc merely to prevent false triggering of the reset function.
  • 555 timer Details of the construction and operation of 555 timer are availab from the above-mentioned manufacturers. For the present disclosure, a brie generalized description of the construction of the 555 timer will suffice. It comprised of first and second comparator stages, a bistable flip-flop stage and voltage divider impedance network.
  • the voltage divider impedance network connected between pin 8 and ground and thus serves to divide the supply volta +Vcc into predetermined fractions, namely 1/3 +Vec and 2/3 +Vcc.
  • the first a second comparators are each connected to compare the input voltage applied to associated one of the first and second input pins 2 and 6, respectively, with t fractional 1/3 and 2/3 +Vcc voltage levels developed by the divider network.
  • T input impedances at the input pins 2 and 6 are characteristically very high.
  • T outputs of the first and second comparators are connected so as to set and rese respectively, the flip-flop stage.
  • the flip-flop stage is normally reset and in th state output pin 3 is high (at or near +Vec) and output pin 7 is an open circuit.
  • P 7 is connected to the collector of a transistor which has its emitter grounded, a is switched between a nonconducting state (when the flip-flop stage is reset) and conducting state (when the flip-flop stage is set).
  • the output the first comparator enables the flip-flop stage to be switched to its set state, b only after the input voltage at pin 6 subsequently rises to 2/3 +Vcc.
  • the flip-fl stage will remain in the set state until both the voltage at pin 2 drops below 1 + Vee and the voltage at pin 6 drops below 2/3 +Vcc. Unless both these volta conditions are met, the flip-flop stage will remain in its set state.
  • In the set stat output pin 3 is low (grounded) and output pin 7 is also low (grounded through t collector-emitter path of the above-mentioned transistor which has now be switched to its conducting state).
  • the required concurrence of voltage conditions at input pins 2 and 6 provides the 555 timer with an electronic AND logic function. Once the flip-flop stage is in its set state, it may be latched in such state by maintaining the voltage at either one of pins 2 and 6 above its threshold
  • the 555 timer has the capability of performing as an electronic latch.
  • the input pins 2 and 6 are adapted to be connected to external resistive-capacitive delay networks in a manner that conditions the 555 0 timer to function as a timing circuit.
  • the timing intervals of the circuit are determined by the values of the externally connected resistive and capacitive elements.
  • input pins 2 and 6 may be connected together to receive a common input voltage, or they may be connected separately in order to tailor the timing function to each particular application. 5
  • the 555 timer it may be operated as an inverter.
  • the input pins 2 and 6 are tied together for receiving an input voltage. Output pin 3 swings high when the voltage at input pins 2 and 6 is low (below 1/3 +Vcc) and output pin 3 swings low when the voltage at input pins 2 and 6 is high (above 2/3 +Vcc).
  • the 555 timer is a versatile, integrated circuit capable of being connected so as to provide one or more of the functions of an AND logic circuit, a latching circuit, a timing circuit and an inverting circuit. Because its most common use is for timing, it is usually called a timer circuit and is referred to as such herein.
  • timer circuit 786 and other identical integrated circuits used throughout the control unit are shown as a single integrated circuit unit known by the designation 555.
  • a dual integrated timer circuit known in the industry as a 556 which packages two
  • the 555 timer used for circuit 786 has its input pins 2 and 6 tied together to respond to the voltage across the RC network of resistor 784 and capacitor 785. As the voltage at pin 2 rises from ground potential in response to a
  • pin 2 becomes enabled at 1/3 +Vce and thereafter the flip-flop stage of circuit 786 switches when pin 6 reaches 2/3 +Vcc.
  • the output pin 7 thereupon switches to ground and causes relay coil 28a to be energized.
  • circuit 786 does not switch until the voltage at pin 2 fal below 1/3 +Vcc.
  • the RC network of resistor 784 and capacitor 785 hold the volta at pin 2 above 1/3 +Vcc during the silent intervals of a ringing signal and there maintain relay coil 28a energized from one burst of AC ringing to the next.
  • Line interface circuits 30 and 40 are identical and therefore on circuit 30 for line 1 will be described in detail.
  • the tip and ring conductors of li LI are connected directly to input terminals 302 and 304 so that the sign condition on line LI is continuously applied to circuit 30.
  • the positive side of t tip and ring conductors (usually tip is positive) is connected to terminal 302 sin circuit 30 is polarity sensitive.
  • a full-wave rectification bridge m be connected and poled between the tip and ring conductors and input terminals 3 . and 304 to insure a proper application of polarity to the input of circuit regardless of the tip and ring polarity. Connected across input terminals 302 a
  • 304 is a first network 306 including an electro-optical isolator that detects t voltage on LI without interfering with the normal communication of signa between the telephone set and the central office.
  • a second network 30 constructed in accordance with the present invention, that functions during t hold condition to apply a line terminating impedance across LI (that simulates off-hook condition) and at the same time apply a hold indicating signal across li LI, again within interfering with the normal signalling between the telephone li and its associated central office.
  • Network 306 includes a diode 310, a low impedance resistor 312 of 4 ohms, integrated Darlington paired transistors 314 (although only one transist symbol is shown, the accompanying letter “D” designates the fact that t Darlington connected transistors are used in an integrated package), a zener dio 316, a base bias resistor 318 of 470 K ohms, an integrated electro-optical isolat 320, another base biasing resistor 322 of 2.2 K ohms and a current limiting dio 324.
  • Diode 310 and resistor 312 are connected in series to pass positive curre from the tip conductor of line LI to a junction between the collectors of Darlingt transistors 314 and the cathode of zener diode 316.
  • Resistor 312 is of relatively lo ⁇ value so as to enable zener diode 316 to respond to the line voltage.
  • Diode 3 limits the amount of current flowing in the circuit loop formed by the connecti of network 306 across the terminals 302 and 304 to a preselected maximu current. In this embodiment, diode 324 limits the current to 0.5 milliamperes prevent excessive current drain on the central office voltage source that supplies line LI.
  • Darlington transistors 314, zener diode 316, electro-optical isolator 320 and the associated biasing resistors 318 and 322 serve to sense the voltage on ' line LI and cause an output signal to be produced on output connection 38 that reflects the instantaneous signal condition on line LI.
  • the collector emitter paths of Darlington transistors 314 are connected in series with a light emitting diode 320a of isolator 320 so that when the Darlington transistors 314 are conducting, diode 320a is energized and emits light that impinges on the input base electrode of Darlington paired photo transistors 320b and 320c of isolator 320.
  • the emitter of transistor 320c is connected to ground and its collector is connected to the junction between output connection 38 and biasing resistor 322.
  • the collector of transistor 320b is connected to +Vcc and to the opposite end of resistor 322 from the collector of transistor 320c.
  • isolator 320 Switching of isolator 320 is controlled by Darlington transitors 314 in response to the voltage at a junction 326 between the anode of zener diode 316 and resistor 318, which voltage is in turn responsive to the voltage condition appearing across the tip and ring conductors of line LI.
  • the voltage across line LI changes significantly between on-hook and off-hook conditions.
  • This change in voltage together with a careful selection of the break-down voltage for zener diode 316, serve to cause the voltage at junction 326 to change in an abrupt, discrete manner as the line voltage swings between the on-hook and off-hook values.
  • the discrete change in voltage at junction 326 serves to bias Darlington transistors 314 on when " LI is in an on-hook condition, and to bias the Darlington transistors 314 off when LI is in an off-hook condition.
  • a ringing signal on line LI after rectification by diode 310, also causes on/off switching of Darlington transistors 314 in synchronization with each burst of ac ringing.
  • the breakdown voltage for zener diode 316 should be within the range . of 15-20 volts, and a breakdown voltage of 15 volts is preferred.
  • zener diode 316 has a very high impedance relative to resistors 312 and 318 and thus the entire line voltage is dropped across diode 316.
  • the input base of Darlington transistors 314 is essentially the same potential as the output emitter of transistors 314 and therefore Darlingto transistors 314 are biased off.
  • Network 308 is selectively connected to the input terminals 302 an 304 by a hold control relay 29 that includes a relay coil 29a and a set of normall open relay contacts 29b.
  • Coil 29a of the hold relay is schematically located withi the dotted line that circumscribes sensing circuit 34, while the normally ope contacts 29b are shown in circuit 30 and are connected in series between inp terminal 302 and network 308.
  • Network 308 includes a set of serially-connected, like-poled zen diodes 330 and 332 with the cathode of diode 330 disposed for connection t terminal 302 through normally open hold relay contacts 29b and the anode of diod 332 connected to terminal 304.
  • Connected in shunt across diode 330 is th transistor output stage of another photo-optical isolator 334.
  • isolato 334 includes a light emitting diode 334a having its anode connected to +Vcc and i cathode joined to connection 94 that extends to flash generator 90.
  • diode 334a Light produce by diode 334a when energized impinges on the base electrode of one of a pair Darlington paired phototransistors 334b and 334c. In the absence of light fro diode 334a, the collector-emitter paths through transistors 334b and 334c are at high impedance such that a virtual open circuit appears across zener diode 33 When light is produced by diode 334a in response to a signal from flash generator 9 over connector 94, transistors 334b and 334c conduct providing a short circuit pat in shunt around zener diode 330. .
  • the serially connected zener diod 330 and 332 when connected across line LI by means of contacts 29b, cause predetermined, zener-regulated voltage to be presented across the tip and rin conductors of line LI so as to simulate the connection of the internal impedance o a telephone set across the telephone line as occurs when the telephone set is off hook.
  • the switching of photo-transistors 334b and 334c by diode 334a when zene diodes 330 and 332 are connected across line LI causes the upper zener diode 330 t be periodically shunted in synchronization with the pulsating signal developed b generator 90.
  • the voltage of line LI due to the combination of the seriall connected zener diodes 330 and 332 fluctuates between the sum of the break-dow voltages of both zener diodes (when the phototransistors of isolator 334 ar nonconducting), and the voltage due solely to the lower zener diode 332 (when th phototransistors of isolator 334 are conducting).
  • zener diodes 330 and 332 are carefully selected in accordance with the following design constraints.
  • the voltage fluctuation appearing across the tip and ring conductors of line LI caused by the periodic shunting of zener diode 330 by generator 90 must be sufficient to produce a hold indicating signal having sufficient amplitude to enable reliable response by the sensing circuits of the other control units in KTS 11.
  • the combined break ⁇ down voltages of zener diodes 330 and 332 which occurs when diode 330 is unshunted must be sufficiently low so as to enable a minimum loop current to flow in the telephone line. The minimum loop current is needed to maintain the connection at central office to the remote party.
  • a combined break-down voltage of approximately 20 volts meets this constraint, and will cause, a minimum of 20 milliamperes to flow in the line.
  • diode 330 is shunted, a minimum residual voltage should be maintained across the line, and this is provided by selecting zener diode 332 to have a breakdown voltage of approximately 5 volts.
  • the resulting voltage swing of 15 volts across the tip and ring conductors of the line during the hold flesh condition has been found adequate as a reliable hold indicating signal.
  • Sensing Circuit Except for the difference described immediately below, sensing circuits 50 and 60 are identical and thus only circuit 50 will be described in detail.
  • the one difference that does exist is the provision of bell transfer circuit 70 in association with sensing circuit 60. Only one bell transfer circuit is used and in this instance it cooperates with sensing circuit 60 in a manner that is described more fully below.
  • sensing circuit 50 is composed of a line select enable control and indicator light driver network 540, a hold latching network 542 and a hold enable network 544. All three of these networks are jointly connected to a control signal bus 546 which in turn is connected to output connection 38 from line interface circuit 30.
  • Network 540 responds to the signal condition on line LI as represented by the signal on output connection 38 and, when an off-hook condition appears on telephone line LI, network 540 enables line select circuit 80 to respond to actuation of line select switch SI to thereby operate line relay 29.
  • network 540 includes a timer circuit 548 that is identical to the above-described circuit 786. Input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 548 are connected through a nonlinear RC delay network including resistor 550, capacitor 552 and diode 554 to bus 546.
  • Resistor 550 has a value of 150 K ohms and capacitor 552 has a value of 1.0 microfarad and together they form an RC delay network that prevents the response of network 54 to dial pulses appearing on line LI after line LI has gone off-hook.
  • Diode 55 connected in shunt across resistor 550 allows circuit 548 to respond immediately t an off-hook signal on line LI, but delays the response at pins 2 and 6 of circuit 54 ' to the low going pulses on bus 546 caused by the dialing pulses on LI so that circui 548 remains in a switched condition during the dialing phase following an off-hoo signal on line LI.
  • connection 52a fo energizing indicator light ILl
  • connection 52b fo applying a line select enable signal to line select circuit 80.
  • connection 52a extends through a serial connection of resistor 556 and indicato light ILl to a terminal 558 to which +Vcc is applied.
  • Indicator light ILl is energize when the output at pin 7 of circuit 548 is clamped to a ground potential in respons to the signal applied at input pins 2 and 6.
  • the function of output 52b at pin 3 i described below.
  • Network 542 is made up of another timer circuit 560 identical t circuit 786, and having a first and second input pins 2 and 6 connected to nonlinear RC delay network including resistor 562 having a value of 470 K ohm capacitor 564 of 1 microfarad and a diode 566.
  • Input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 560 ar connected to a junction between a resistor 562 and a capacitor 564 which are i turn respectively connected at their opposite ends to bus 546 and to ground Circuit 560 responds to the voltage at the junction between resistor 562 an capacitor 564 and switches when such voltage rises to 2/3 +Vcc as bus 546 swing high.
  • Diode 566 is connected in shunt about resistor 562 and becomes forwar biased so as to short circuit the resistive portion of the RC network and rapidl discharge capacitor 564 when the ' voltage on bus 546 swings low and drops below 1/ +Vcc.
  • diode 566 is reversed biased an restores the delaying effect of resistor 562 and capacitor 564 causing a time dela in the response of circuit 560. As described more fully herein, this time dela operates to maintain hold relay 29 energized during the application of the hol indicating signal to LI by network 308 and to deenergize the hold relay 29 when goes to an off-hook condition.
  • circuit 560 The output of circuit 560 is taken from pin 3 which is seriall connected through a blocking diode 568 and through normally open latchin contacts 29c of hold relay 29 and thence to one side of hold relay coil 29a. Th opposite side of coil 29a is joined over connection 570 to the output pin 7 of stil another timer circuit 572 of hold enable network 544. Additionally, connection 8 from line select circuit 80 is joined to the junction of hold contacts 29c and coi 29a. A current surge limiting diode 576 is connected in shunt about coil 29a.
  • coil 29a is initially energized over connection 86 from circuit 80 and is thereafter latched in an energized state during the hold condition through a latching circuit including hold relay contacts 29c, diode 568 and circuit 560.
  • the connection 570 to circuit 572 functions to enable the energization of hold relay coil 29a only under certain operating conditions of network 544, which are described below.
  • Hold enable network 544 includes, in addition to linear integrated circuit 572, a nonlinear RC input circuit composed of diode 578, resistor 584 and capacitor 586, and a second nonlinear RC network of diode 582 and resistor 588 and capacitor 590.
  • the RC network of resistor 584 and capacitor 586 is joined to connection 59 from line select switch SI through blocking diode 578 and thence to input pin 6 of circuit 572.
  • Bus 546 is connected to pin 2 of circuit 572 via the RC network of resistor 588 and capacitor 590, while diode 582 is connected in shunt about resistor 588 to selectively short circuit the resistor when bus 546 is positive with respect to the voltage at pin 2.
  • Capacitor 586 is charged through diode 578 to maintain +Vcc at pin 6 for a predetermined interval after release of SI. The interval is set by the time constant of resistor 584, being 1 megohm, and capacitor 586, being 1 microfarad. Before capacitor 586 discharges, line relay 24 is operated and control signal bus 546 goes to +Vcc in response to LI going off-hook. The +Vcc on bus 546 is applied to pin
  • circuit 572 through diode 582 which, in accordance with the latching feature of circuit 572 damps output pin 7 of the circuit at ground potential even though the voltage at input pin 6 thereafter goes low as capacitor 586 discharges through resistor 584.
  • the RC network of resistor 588 of 100 K ohms and capacitor 590 of 10 microfarad maintains the voltage, at pin 2 high to hold the output pin 7 of circuit
  • circuit 572 at ground potential for a predetermined time after bus 546 goes low so as to continue the hold enable during the hold condition when bus 546 is fluctuating between +Vcc and ground.
  • circuit 572 reverts to its normal state causing output pin 7 to assume an open circuit condition.
  • line select circuit 80 includes a line relay switching network 802 for operating coil 24a of relay 24 which in turn controls contacts 24b, 24c that connect LI to the telephone set.
  • Another line relay switching network 804 operates coil 26a of relay 26 which has contacts 26b, 26e that connect L2 to the telephone set.
  • circuit 80 includes first and second hold initiate transistor networks 806 and 808 connected between hold select
  • Network 802 includes a time circuit 810, identical to circuit 78 described above.
  • Output pin 3 of circuit 786 is connected to one end of coil 24a ⁇ ⁇ elay 24.
  • the opposite end of coil 24a is grounded and a surge-current suppressin diode 812 is connected in shunt about coil 24a.
  • coil 2 is normally energized so as to maintain the set of normally closed contacts 24b an 24c in an open condition, closing these contacts only when LI is to be connected t the telephone set associated with control unit 14.
  • output pin 3 of circuit 81 is normally at +Vcc to energize coil 24a and switches low when the voltages inputs pins 2 and 6 swing toward +Vcc.
  • a diode 814 is serially connected between LI select switch SI and pin of circuit 810 and is poled to apply +Vcc to pin 2 when SI is depressed to close t normally open contacts thereof.
  • An RC delay network of resistor 818 of 10 K oh and capacitor 820 of 10.0 microfarads is joined to connection 816 to maintain pin high for approximately 100 milliseconds after SI is released to allow time for circu 810 to be latched by a signal applied to pin 2 over a connection 822 as describe below.
  • Network 802 includes an additional timer circuit 824, identical circuit 786, best in this ease connected to function as a polarity inverter.
  • Outp pin 3 of circuit 824 is coupled to pin 2 of circuit 810 through a 100 K ohm resist 826 serially joined to connection 822.
  • Circuit 824 has its input pins 2 and 6 jointl connected through a 100 K ohm input resistor 828 to connection 52b from sens circuit 50 to maintain these input pins at +Vce so long as Li is on-hook and to dri these pins to ground potential when LI goes off -hook.
  • the voltage pin 3 of circuit 824 is the inverse of the voltage at the input pins and is normally ground potential and swings to +Vcc when Li goes off-hook.
  • Input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 824 are also connected through a couplin capacitor 830 to the cathodes of a pair of diodes 832 and 834.
  • the anode of diod 832 is connected to the normally open contacts of hold select switch S3 which described more fully herein causes circuits 824 and 810 to energize coil 24a an thereby disconnect LI from the telephone set when S3 is depressed.
  • the anode diode 834 is connected to L2 select switch S2 and also causes circuits 834 and 81 to energize relay coil 24a when S2 is depressed.
  • Line relay switching network 804 is similar to network 802 except that coil 26a of L2 line relay 26 is connected between pin 3 of a timer circuit 840 and +Vcc so that coil 26a is normally unenergized as described above and is -energized to close normally open contacts 26b and 26c only when L2 is to be connected to the telephone set 13.
  • the remaining components of network 804 are identical to network 802.
  • a current-suppressing diode 842 is connected in shunt about coil 26a.
  • a diode 844 is connected between S2 and input pin 2 of circuit 840 while S2 is connected directly to pin 6 of circuit 840 and is also connected to an RC delay network including resistor 846 and 848.
  • An additional timer circuit 850 corresponding to circuit 824 of network 802 and connected to function as an inverter, has its output pin 3 coupled to pin 2 of circuit 840 over connection 852 that includes a series resistor 854, and has input pins 2 and 6 jointly connected through an input resistor 856 to connection 64 from sensing circuit 60.
  • Diodes 858 and 860 corresponding to diodes 832 and 834 described above, apply signals from switches S3 and SI to input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 850 through coupling capacitor 862.
  • Hold initiate transistor network 806 includes Darlington paired transistors 864 having the emitter output joined to connection 86 that extends to hold timer network 542 of sensing circuit 50.
  • the collectors of transistors 864 are connected to +Vcc.
  • Transistors 864 are operated between their conducting and nonconducting states by a signal from hold select switch S3 applied through an RC delay network of a 10 K ohm resistor 872 and a 10 microfarad capacitor 870 joined to the input base of Darlington transistors 864.
  • Hold initiate transistor network 808 is identical to network 806 and thus includes Darlington paired transistors 874, an RC network including resistor 882 and a capacitor 880.
  • S3 When S3 is depressed, Darlington transistors 874 conduct causing connection 88 to swing to +Vce for. energizing the coil of an L2 hold relay corresponding to the above described hold relay 29 for line LI.
  • Generator 90 is a conventional free-running multivibrator connected between +Vee and ground and having a square wave output signal swinging between
  • W1PO circuits 30 and 40 as described above with respect to connection 94 and isolator 3 for LI line interface circuit 30.
  • KTS 11 Operation of KTS The operation of KTS 11 is best described by separately consideri the following operating modes: initiating an outgoing call at one of stations #1- receiving an incoming call at one of the stations; ending a call; holding a call; a establishing a three-point conference call.
  • network 306 including zener diode 3 immediately senses the drop in voltage on LI and becomes nonconducting, turni Darlington transistors 314 off and causing output connection 38 to rise to +Vcc v optical isolator 320.
  • the control signal bus 546 of sensing circuit 50 is now at near ⁇ Vec which results in the switching of the voltage at output pins 3 and 7 timer circuit 548 to ground potential turning on indicator light Hi and causi timer circuit 824 of line select circuit 80 to maintain pin 2 of timer circuit 810 +Vcc.
  • circuit 810 becomes latched in a condition that maintains the c 24a of LI line relay 24 in a deenergized state which in turn maintains t connection of line LI to telephone set 13 even though the contacts of SI open as t SI pushbutton is released.
  • each of the other control units of stations #2-N respond to the off -hook conditi on LI and turn on their respective indicator lights ILl in the same above-describ manner that line interface circuit 30 and sensing circuit 50 of unit 14 responded the off-hook voltage on line LI.
  • the illumination of Hi at each of the contr stations informs telephone users at these stations that line Ii is busy.
  • ⁇ j #1 has just completed a call over L2 and wishes to place another call over L.
  • unit 14 automatically operates to disconnect L2 from set 13 when SI is depressed.
  • the momentary closure of the contacts of SI cause a positive voltage spike to be applied to pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 850 of line select circuit 80 via diode 860 and capacitor 862.
  • circuit 850 which is part of network 804 that controls the L2 line relay 26, goes to ground potential, causing pin 2 of integrated circuit 840 to also go to ground potential.
  • Pin 6 of circuit 840 is already at ground potential, since any voltage previously applied to pin 6 and capacitor 848 by the momentary closure of the contacts of S2 has been discharged through resistor 846 to ground.
  • Timer circuit 840 thus switches its output pin 3 from ground potential to +Vcc thereby denergizing coil 26a of L2 line relay 26, disconnecting L2 from the station set.
  • switches SI or S2 are individually operated to select one of the available lines, the opposite line is automatically disconnected ("dumped"), unless the opposite line has been previously placed in a hold condition in the manner described hereinafter.
  • telephone set 13 has been connected by control unit 14 to line Li and a dial tone is received at set 13.
  • the user now signals central office using either standard dialing or Touch-Tone (service mark of AT&T) signalling to reach the called party via the central office.
  • the tone frequencies associated with Touch-Tone dialing do not have any appreciable effect on the operation of control circuit 14.
  • Dial pulse signalling produces a series of high-going voltage pulses on Ii, the peaks of which exceed approximately 36 volts dc.
  • Line interface circuit 30 and sensing circuit 50 respond by producing a series of low going transitions on output connection 38 and on control signal bus 546. These low going pulse transitions do not register at indicator light Hi because diode 554 of network 540 becomes reverse biased during the low going pulses on bus 546 and forces any change in the voltage at pin 2 of circuit 548 to be slowly discharged through the RC circuit of resistor 550 and capacitor 552.
  • circuit 548 remains switched and indicator light Hi remains continuously energized, discriminating against any response due to the pulse dialing sequence.
  • central office 12 ( Figure 12) couples Ii to the called party's line to establish telephonic communication therebetween.
  • the ringing signal of an incoming call that appears on lines L2 is coupled by control unit 14 to telephone set 13 by means of bell transfer rel 28.
  • contacts 28b and 28c of the bell transfer relay a normally closed to connect the T and R conductors of Ii to Bl and B2 that are turn joined to the bell or other audible signalling device of the telephone set.
  • the ringing signal of a call coming in on line Ii will be immediately applied to t bell of telephone set 13 without requiring any responsive change of the circuitry relays in control unit 14.
  • the telephone sets associated with each of t other stations #2-N will sound the ringing signal through the normally closed b transfer relay contacts of their respective control units. Additionally, the ringing signal is applied to input terminals 302 a
  • the ringing signal may vary somewh in voltage and frequency, it is typically a 90 volt peak-to-peak ac signal at 20 or Hz superimposed on the on-hook dc voltage, typically 48 volts, developed at cent office and appearing on the line during an on-hook condition.
  • the ringi signal causes the T conductor of line Ii to swing between approximately +138 vo and -42 volts relative to the R conductor. A burst of these ac cycles will be spac in time by intervals of silence during which the voltage on line Ii returns to the volt dc level representing an on-hook condition.
  • the superimposed ac signal rectified by diode 310 and the resulting positive voltage swings, varying from ze volts to +138 volts are applied across network 306 including zener diode 316.
  • Zener diode 316 is thus periodically switched off as the voltage dro below the breakdown voltage of diode 316.
  • Darlington transistors 314 and electr optical isolator 320 are thus similarly, periodically switched off, causing t voltage on output connection 38 to fluctuate between ground potential and +Vec the pulsating rate of the ac ringing signal.
  • Sensing circuit 50 and in particular, network 540 thereof receives t pulsating signal from bus 546 and detects each burst of ac ringing to turn on Hi f the duration of each such burst. This is accomplished by setting the time consta of the RC network of resistor 550 and capacitor 552 to hold the charge capacitor 552 so that pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 548 are maintained above 1 +Vcc for the duration of eaeh burst of closely spaced positive voltage swings on b 546, with capacitor 552 discharging slowly through resistor 550 at the end of ea burst. In this way indicator light Hi is maintained on for the duration of ea burst.
  • the interviewing silent intervals between ringing signal bursts are lo enough to allow capacitor 552 to discharge and thereby force timer circuit 548 turn Hi off.
  • Indicator light Hi thus flashes a visual signal to alert the user at t station of a ringing signal representing an incoming call, and can be used by its or in conjunction with the audible ringing signal device of the telephone set.
  • the ringing signal of an incoming call that arrives on line L2 does not immediately reach Bl and B2 because of the intervening, normally open contacts 28d and 28e of relay 28.
  • the ringing signal is applied to the T and R inputs of line interface circuit 40 for line L2, corresponding to the input terminals 302 and 304 of line interface circuit 30 for line 1, and circuit 40 in conjunction with sensing circuit 60 responds to the ringing signal and causes bell transfer circuit 70 to close contacts 28d and 28e and open contacts 28b and 28c.
  • the ringing signal on L2 is thereby transferred to the Bl and B2 outputs for sounding the bell of set 13.
  • circuit 40 responds to the ringing signal, as described above for Ii line interface circuit 30, to produce a fluctuating signal on output connection 42 in synchronization with the burst of ac ringing.
  • the fluctuating signal on connection 42 due to the ringing signal bursts has two functions.
  • the pulsating signal is applied via bus 646 (corresponding to bus 546 of circuit 50) and hence to input 71 of bell transfer circuit 70 such that each positive voltage swing at input terminal 70 is coupled through capacitor 752 and forward biased diode 783 to capacitor 785, charging the capacitor and causing the voltage thereacross to rise toward +Vcc.
  • Pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 786 thus receive +Vcc, causing output pin 7 to be clamped to ground potential and causing the energization of bell transfer relay coil 28a.
  • Energization of coil 28a causes the above mentioned opening of contacts 28b and 28c and the correlative closing of contacts 28d and 28e, so as to apply the ringing signal on L2 to Bl, B2 shortly after the ringing signal is received at control unit 14.
  • the time constant of the RC network formed by resistor 784 and capacitor 785 is long enough to hold the voltage charge on capacitor 785 resulting from the positive pulses developed by line interface circuit 40 on output connection 42 for spanning the interval of silence between bursts of ac ringing.
  • Pins 2 and 6 of circuit 786 thus remain at a level greater than 1/3 +Vcc during the silent intervals between rings thereby maintaining coil 28a energized.
  • capacitor 785 is discharged to drop the potential at pins 2 and 6 of circuit 786 below the 1/3 +Vcc switching threshold of the circuit, allowing pin 7 to assume an open circuit, and thereby deenergize coil 28a and restore contacts 28d-e to their conditions as shown in Figure 3.
  • the fluctuating positive going signal on connection 42 from line interface circuit 40 is effective via circuit 60 to turn indicator light IL2 on during each burst of the ac ringing signal.
  • IL2 is energized through a resistor 656 that serially connects IL2 to output connection 64 of circuit 60 which in turn is joined to the timer circuit corresponding to circuit 548 of network 540 of the above-described Ii sensing circuit 50.
  • the functioning of sensing circuit 60 in this respect is identical to the above-described operation of sensing circuit 50.
  • the signal bus 546 swings low to ground potential and afte 150 millisecond delay caused by the RC network 550 and capacitor 552, output pi of timer circuit 548 assumes an open circuit extinguishing indicator light Hi. At the same time, output pin 3 of integrated circuit 548 swings
  • Circuit 810 now energizes line relay coil 24a to disconnect from T', R'. The call has been completed and the telephone line has be disconnected from the station's set, and control unit 14 is restored to an i condition. The idle or on-hook condition is indicated by the fact that Hi is off.
  • line interface circuit 40 sensing circuit 60 function in the same manner described above for circuits 30 a 50 to cause L2 line relay 26 to disconnect the T' and R' conductors from the T a . R conductors of L2 and return unit 14 to an idle condition.
  • Telephone calls are also ended automatically when a person at a particular station depresses the line select switch of the opposite line from that which a call is in progress. This feature is described in detail above under section dealing with the initiation of an outgoing call. Holding a Call
  • the hold select switch S3 is depressed. This applies a positive voltage spike to pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 824 of line select circuit 80 thereby overriding the latching voltage applied to pin 2 of timer circuit 810 and causing Ii line relay 24 to be energized. Contacts 24b and 24c open and thus disconnect T' and R' from line Ii.
  • hold enable network 544 of sensing circuit 50 has been preconditioned by the initial operation of Ii select switch SI (when the telephone call over line 1 was first established) so that the output pin 7 of timer circuit 572 is at ground potential enabling the energization of relay coil 29a over connection 570.
  • the enabling signal applied to the lower end of hold relay coil 29a over connection 570 insures that only the party at the particular station that received or made the call can place li in a hold status.
  • Coil 29a is now energized and remains energized for a delay interval established by the RC network of resistor 868 and capacitor 870 of network 806 even after the contacts of- S3 open following the release of S3.
  • the hold relay contacts 29b within line interface circuit 30 are now closed, connecting network 308 of circuit 30 across the tip and ring conductors of Ii.
  • Zener diodes 330 and 332 of line interface circuit 30 are now connected across Ii to limit the maximum voltage that can appear across the tip and ring conductors of Ii to 19.7 volts, which is the sum of the combined breakdown voltages of zener diodes 330 and 332. From this maximum, the voltage across Ii drops to 4.7 volts each time zener diode 330 is shunted by the photo-optical isolator 334 in response to hold flash generator 90. The change in voltage level across Ii between the maximum of 19.7 volts and the minimum of 4.7 volts at the 30 impulses per minute rate of generator 90 creates the hold indicating signal that is issued - over Ii to the control units at the other stations of the KTS. Moreover, the maximum voltage allowed to exist across line Ii during the hold status is 19.7 volts, which is a low enough voltage to simulate the presence of a line terminating impedance that is equivalent to the internal impedance of a telephone set when
  • OMPI off-hook and that enables an adequate minimal loop current to flow in the line hold the central office connection to the remote party.
  • central office continues to sense an off-hook condition at Ii.
  • the breakdown voltage of zener diode 316 selected to lie within the range of 15 - 20 volts in order to detect the volta change on the line between an on-hook condition and an off-hook condition.
  • the breakdown voltage of zener diode 316 is selected lie below the combined voltages of zener diodes 330 and 332 and above the volta due solely to diode 332, so that diode 316 is switched between its conducting a nonconducting states each time the voltage on line Ii swings between the maximu of 19.7 volts and the minimum of 4.7 volts at the rate of flash generator 90.
  • Line interface circuit 30 responds to the fluctuating hold indicati signal on Ii and causes the voltage on connection 38 to fluctuate between grou potential and +Vcc as the zener diode 316 is switched between its conducting a nonconducting states.
  • the control signal bus 546 of sensing circuit 50 receives th fluctuating hold indicating signal and applies it to networks 540, 542 and 544.
  • network 540 the RC network of resistor 550 and capacitor 552 a selected to provide a short enough delay to enable timer circuit 548 to respond the hold indicating signal on bus 546 and thereby cause indicator light Hi to fla on and off at approximately the rate of generator 90.
  • the associated RC components are selected such th timer circuit 560 does not respond to the fluctuating signal on control bus 546.
  • capacitor 564 is charged slowly through resistor 562 when bus 5 swings high toward +Vcc and is quickly discharged through diode 566 when the b swings low to ground potential.
  • the time constant of resistor 562 and capacit 564 is such that the frequency of the hold indicating signal is too rapid to allow t voltage on pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 560 to rise to the 2/3 +Vcc thresho switching level of circuit 560 and thus pin 3 of circuit 560 is maintained high +Vce during the presence of the hold indicating signal on line Ii.
  • coil 29a of hold relay 29 is latched in the energized sta through the normally open hold relay contacts 29c.
  • the ho relay 29 maintains the line interface circuit 30 and sensing circuit 50 in the ho condition, so as to continuously generate and apply the hold indicating signal to and maintain the simulated line terminating impedance across L.
  • network 544 the nonlinear RC network of resistor 588, capacitor 590 and diode 58 provide a time constant when diode 582 is reverse biased that maintains pin 2 timer circuit 527 high throughout the hold condition even though bus 5 periodically swings low.
  • the hold indicating signal on Ii is received at each of the control units, causing their respective line interface and sensing circuits, corresponding to circuits 30 and 50 to pulse the associated indicator light, corresponding to light Hi, ' on and off in synchronization with the hold indicating signal.
  • a visual signal is thereby received at each station indicating that the line is in a hold condition. Note that only the hold relay 29 associated with the line and station at which a call has been made or received will be operated and held energized by the timer network 542 because of the required enabling signal from network 544 as described above.
  • the time constant of resistor 562 and capacitor 564 of network 542 is sufficiently long so that circuit 560 does not switch in response to dial pulses which might otherwise enable the latching of the hold relay 29 by an inadvertent operation of hold switch S3 during dialing. Additionally, the hold enable signal from network 544 over connection
  • the hold enable network 544 in each of the sensing circuits prevents this occurrence by enabling only the hold latching network or networks associated with the line or lines that have been selected by the select switches SI and S2 at the subject station.
  • zener diodes 330 and 332 maintain a certain minimum current flow through the loop associate with line Ii and its is that current flow that the central office senses in determining whether the station is on-hook or off-hook.
  • the minimum current flow will be established by the source voltage at the central office, less the breakdown voltages of the zener diodes 330 and 332, divided by the loop impedance which includes the line resistance. So long as the loop current flow in the line remains greater than approximately 20 milliamperes, it usually varies within the range of 20 to 65 milliamperes after seizure of the line at central office, then the central office will sense on off-hook condition and will remain seized on the line.
  • zener diodes 3 and 332 provide, in the broad sense, first and second impedance elements . whi are connected across line Ii and serve the dual functions of (1) simulating t internal impedance of the telephone set when off-hook or otherwise disconnect from the line, and (2) generating and applying a fluctuating hold indicating sig across the line (in conjunction with the periodic shunting of at least one of th impedanee elements by optical isolator 334).
  • resistive or ot impedance elements can be used in lieu of zener diodes 330 and 332 to provide t abovementioned dual functions, the zener diodes are preferred because of th ability to compensate for large variations in the loop impedance of the telepho line. In particular, this loop impedance varies, for example, with the distance the customers installation from the central office and with the type and size conductors used in the telephone line. If ordinary impedance elements are used one of both of the zener diodes 330 and 332, it is necessary to uniquely select adjust the values of such elements relative to the line impedance for ea installation.
  • the zener diodes because of the nature of their spec breakdown voltage versus current characteristics, automatically adjust the curr and voltage levels for proper operation of the voltage level detecting function network 306.
  • Such automatic adjustment or compensation has proved success for most all installations, embracing a wide range of distances from the cent office and thus wide range of line impedance levels.
  • the amplitude of t fluctuations of the hold indicating signal which appear on the line do not affect t switching functions at the central office since the fluctuating signal is terminat into a large inductive coil at the central office end of the line and since t inherent distributed resistance, capacitance and inductance of the line significan attenuate the fluctuating hold indicating signal before it reaches the central offi equipment.
  • the periodic shunting of zener diode 330 serves in the bro sense as a means for varying the magnitude of the terminating impedance, and t while the short circuit shunting of diode 330 has been found to provide shar defined and easily detected voltage fluctuations it will be recognized that other impedance varying means may be used.
  • line interface circuit 40, sensing circuit 60 and hold initiating transistor network 808 of line select circuit 80 ' function in an identical manner to that described above for line Ii to cause a hold indicating signal to be generated and applied to line L2 at the output signal rate of hold flash generator 90.
  • indicator light IL2 and its counterparts in the control units ' associated with stations #2-N will display the on/off hold indicating signal to indicate that line L2 rather than line Ii is on hold.
  • the hold condition existing on either of the lines is terminated by the same procedure that is described above for initiating an outgoing call or receiving an incoming call.
  • the handset of the telephone at any of the available stations is lifted off the cradle and Ii select switch Si is depressed.
  • the line relay 24 hereupon operates to connect Ii to the T' and R' terminals of the telephone set 13 thereby connecting the internal impedance of the telephone set across line Ii and forcing the dc voltage on Ii to assume the off-hook level which lies below the breakdown voltage of zener diode 316.
  • the internal impedance of the telephone set is such as to mask the maximum voltage produced by zener diodes 330 and 332, thereby preventing the voltage from reaching the breakdown threshold of zener diode 316.
  • Connection 38 and signal bus 546 thereupon assume a steady +Vcc voltage level.
  • the disappearance of the low-going fluctuations on bus 546 allows
  • both lines Ii and L2 to the station set 13 in order to permit a conference call between the party at the station and two remote parties connected separately over lines Ii and L2.
  • the conference call will be established after a call between the station and a remote party has been effected over one of the lines and that line is placed in a hold condition in order to receive or place a second call over the opposite line.
  • the control unit responds by energizing relay 26 and thus closing 26b and 26 coupling the telephone set to L2 and the party at station #1 answers the caller o L2 who is to be the third party to the three-point conference.
  • th conference call is established by simultaneously depressing both line selec switches SI and S2.
  • the closure of the SI contacts applies +Vce to both pins 2 and of circuit 810 of network 802 forcing pin 3 of circuit 810 to deenergize the lin relay 24 and connect Ii through contacts 24b and 24c to the station's set.
  • Both lines Ii and L2 are thereby jointly connected to the telephon set and will remain so until the three-point conference call has been completed an one or both of lines Ii and L2 are to be disconnected.
  • KTS 11 In installing KTS 11 at a particular location, consideration should be given to the relationship between the ability of the line interface circuit 30 to discern between on-hook and off-hook signal conditions and the type of central office involved and distance of the KTS stations from the central office. For central offices that require approximately 45 milliamperes of initial current flow to seize a line in response to an off-hook condition at the customer station, reliable operation of KTS U has been achieved for line distances of up to 1 mile from the central office. For central offices that need only 36 milliamperes of initial current flow to seize a line when it goes off-hook, then the system has operated reliably at distances of as much as 1 to 2 miles.
  • the capability of the various control units to reliably detect a fluctuating hold indicating signal generated by a control unit at another station (and to consistently suppress such signal when the telephone set is taken off-hook at another station) depends, among other factors, on the line distance or distances between stations, and on the line distances from such stations to the central office.
  • the fluctuating hold signal can be consistently detected (and consistently suppressed by the off-hook impedance of a telephone set) over interstation distances of more than one mile.

Abstract

To convert a multiple line, multiple telephone set installation into a key telephone system (11), a control unit (14) is provided at each telephone set (13). The control unit (14) includes a regulated power supply (15), a control circuit (3090), pushbutton line select and hold switches (S1-S3), and indicator lights (IL1-IL2) packaged in a compact assembly which can be readily attached to the base of a standard telephone set or mounted separately. Electrically controlled switching devices within each control circuit respond to the pushbutton line select switches (S1-S3) to couple the telephone set to a selected one of the lines (L1-L2) and automatically disconnect the set from the line when the call has been completed. An incoming ringing signal on any one of the telephone lines is detected by the control circuit and the ringing signal is automatically applied to the bell of the telephone set. A line on which a call is in progress may be placed in a hold condition by operating the hold select button (S3) which thereafter enables the telephone set to be coupled to another line, if desired, for receiving or placing another call. A conference call can be established by simultaneously operating the two or more line select switches (S1-S2) which in turn cause the selected lines to be jointly connected to the telephone set. The indicator lights (IL1-IL2) on each control unit (14) respond to standard central office supervisory signals which appear on the telephone lines (L1-L2) and which represent on-hook (idle), ringing and off-hook (busy) line conditions, and also respond to a special hold indicating signal which is applied (308, 334) to the line by the control unit during the hold condition. The control units of the various telephone sets operate solely in conjunction with the standard telephone lines that extend from the central office and no additional interphone wiring is required and no central control unit is needed.

Description

HOLD CONTROL FOR A KEY TELEPHONE SYSTEM
Background In general the present invention relates to telephone station equipment, and more particularly to multiple telephone set installations serviced by 5 multiple telephone lines from a central office.
Many telephone customers, especially businesses, need a telephone installation in which calls can be placed or received at any one of a number of telephone sets, and over any one of a plurality of available telephone lines from a central office. Such installations are in general available and are called key
■10 telephone systems (or KTS). One of the most commonly used systems of this type is intended for meeting the needs of customers that require a relatively large number of telephone lines, such as five or more lines, and for these customers the cost of the service is not unreasonable on a per line basis. However, there is a need for a less complex, lower cost key telephone system capable of efficiently meeting
15 the needs of customers that have phone traffic requiring less than five lines but more than one line. For example, it is believed that there are many customers, in small businesses for example, that have a definite need for two line, key telephone service, but cannot justify the cost of such service because most available key telephone systems are cost efficient when used with five or more telephone lines.
2° One of the reasons for the prohibitively high cost of key telephone systems when used for two line installations is that the system includes a central control unit that must be set up and stored at a location remote from the telephone sets. The central control unit in turn involves a substantial installation cost, both for the control unit itself and also for the auxiliary wiring that must be strung
25 between the control unit and each of the. multiple telephone sets. Also, the telephone sets themselves must be specially made to accommodate the maximum number of key functions for which the system has been designed. For example, a standard KTS desk set may provide for five or more line select buttons, even though the customer is only using the system for two lines and thus only two of the available buttons are functional.
Although other telephone systems are available for providing a for of two line service on a relatively low cost basis, none of these existing two lin systems have the capability or offer the convenience and flexibility of ke • telephone systems.*
Accordingly, an overall object of the invention is to provide a nov key telephone system capable of being installed at a relatively low cost.
A more particular object of the invention is to provide a hold contr for use in a key telephone system, that is capable of placing a line in a hol condition while a telephone set is temporarily disconnected from the line and, capable of generating a hold indicating signal on the line for indicating to the oth stations in the system that the line is on "hold". A related object is to provide suc a hold control circuit in which the placing of the line in the hold condition, and th generating of the hold indicating signal on the line do not interfere with the norm supervisory signalling between the central office, and the telephone sets.
Still another object of the invention is to provide such a hold contr which has the further characteristic of providing reliable and consistent operatio in key telephone systems installed at widely varying line distances from the centr office. Summary
The hold control circuit of the invention is intended for use in a k telephone system having at least two telephone lines that extend between a centr office and two or more telephone stations. Each telephone station is equipped wit a telephone set, which may be a standard set intended for a single line installatio A plurality of control units are provided, one at each of the telephone station
The telephone lines are connected- to separate inputs provided on each control un at each station so that telephone calls can be received or initiated over any one the multiple lines using the telephone set at that station. Each control un includes at least one hold control circuit of the invention which is responsive to manually-actuated hold select switch, and provides for establishing a hold conditio on one of the lines over which a telephonic connection has been made through th central office. For this purpose, the hold control circuit comprises means f connecting a line terminating impedance across the line that is to be held an concurrently applying a hold condition indicating signal onto such line periodically varying such line terminating impedance. The line terminati impedance establishes an impedance condition on the line that is interpreted by th central office as an off-hook condition and thus in effect simulates an off-ho condition which causes the central office to maintain the connection with th j remote party. The periodic variation of the line terminating impedance produces a fluctuating voltage across the line which is communicated to the other control units, over the telephone line itself, to indicate that the line is on hold. Visual indicating means at each control unit respond to the hold indicating signal by 5 producing a visual display at the respective telephone station, indicating that the applicable line is in a hold condition, awaiting to be picked up at any one of the available stations. The hold condition is automatically terminated when the held line assumes an actual off-hook condition indicating that one of the stations has picked up the line. 0 In the preferred form of the hold control circuit, the line terminating impedance is associated with a circuit means for periodically shunting a portion of such terminating impedance so as to cause the effective impedance that appears across the line to fluctuate and thereby produce the fluctuating voltage which serves as the hold indicating signal. 5 The line terminating impedance is preferrably provided by one or more serially connected voltage breakdown devices, such as zener diodes, so that the voltage drop developed across the terminating impedance or impedances is independent of variations in loop resistance due to differences in the loop length and conductor size and type. 20. These and further features, objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description and appended drawings.
Brief Description of the Drawings Figure 1 is a generalized block diagram of the key telephone system 25 of the invention.
Figure 2 is a more detailed block diagram of one of the plurality A plurality of control 1.
Figure 3 is a detailed block and schematic diagram of the control unit 30 shown in Figure 2 in accordance with one preferred embodiment of the invention.
Figure 4 is a simplified block and schematic diagram of the line terminating impedance and hold signal generator of the invention in circuit with a telephone line from a central office.
Detailed Description
35 The key telephone system (KTS) 11 in which the invention is used is shown in Figure 1 for a two line installation. First and second telephone lines, LI and L2, extend from the central office 12 to a customer's installation which iτ.f»lιιdfis KTS 11. Lines LI and L2 are standard, two conductor lines, each including a
" UREAU OMPI l tip and a ring conductor, which carry both central office supervisory signals an telephonic voice signals between central office 12 and a customer's telephone set installed at his business or residence.
KTS 11 encompasses a plurality of telephone stations #1-N, each o . which is equipped with a telephone station set and a KTS control unit, such a illustrated by telephone set 13 and control unit 14 for station #1. Low voltage D power is supplied to control unit 14 of station #1 and to the corresponding contro units of the remaining stations #2-N by means of either a common power supply 1 as shown in Figure 1, or by a plurality of individual power supplies, one for eac station. The illustrated power supply 15 operates from a source of dc at 8-16 volt which is applied to input 16. At the output of supply 15 a low supply voltage +Ve appears on line 17, while line 18 is reference ground.
Each of the control units, such as unit 14 for station 1, includes control circuit (Figures 2 and 3), a set of line select switches SI and S2 (one fo each of lines LI and L2), a hold select switch S3, and a set of line conditio indicator lights IL1 and IL2 (one for each of lines LI and L2). Switches SI, S2 and S are pushbutton switches of the momentary contact type. Switches SI and S2, whe separately depressed, cause the associated one of lines LI and L2 to be coupled t the telephone set 13. Switch S3, when depressed, places the line over which telephonic communication has been established in a hold condition. Indicator light IL1 and IL2 at each control unit visually display the instantaneous condition of th associated line. The various telephone line conditions are: on-hook (sometime called idle), off-hook (sometimes called busy), holding, and ringing.
Each of lines LI and L2 includes a tip conductor indicated by a T an a ring conductor indicated by an R. The tip and ring conductors of lines LI and L are connected in parallel to the control units of all of the available stations #1-N Thus, as illustrated in Figure 1, each station receives as inputs, to the statio control unit, the tip and ring conductors of every one of the available lines fro central office 12. The outputs of each control unit 14 include common output tip an ring conductors, designated as T and R', respectively, which are connected to th tip and ring terminals of the station's telephone set 13. Output tip and rin conductors T and Rf are selectively connected to the tip and ring conductors o either one or both of lines LI and L2 by the station control unit 14 as describe " more fully below. The outputs of each station control unit 14 also include a pair o bell ringing conductors represented as Bl and B2. Conductors Bl and B2 exten from the control unit 14 to the station's telephone set 13 and provide for energizin the bell or other audible signalling device in the telephone set in response to ringing signal on either of lines LI and L2.
The telephone set 13 at each of the stations may be a standard single line telephone set. For example, a type 500 set (conventional dialing) or a type 2500 set (Touch-Tone dialing - A service mark of AT&T) are suitable. • The circuitry, indicator lights and selector switches for each control unit 14 are constructed and assembled so as to form a small, compact unit that can be mounted directly to the case of the telephone set 13. Alternatively, the control unit may be packaged in a housing mounted adjacent to but separate from the telephone set. The former packaging and mounting of switches, SI, S2, S3, - indicator lights ILl and IL2, and the associated circuitry are described in eopending patent application, Serial No. 713,870 for CONTROL UNIT MOUNTING AND INTERCONNECTING APPARATUS FOR TELEPHONE SETS, filed August 12, 1976 by Harry R. Rasmussen.
Station Control Unit . The control units for stations #1-N are identical, and thus only one control unit, namely unit 14, will be shown and described in detail. With reference to Figure 2, control unit 14 includes a set of line relays 24 and 26 that serve as switching devices for selectively connecting the tip (T) and ring (R) conductors of lines LI and L2 to the common output tip (T') and ring (R') conductors which extend . to the telephone set 13.
A bell relay 28 is also connected to the tip and ring conductors of LI and L2 and serves as a switching device for selectively connecting a ringing signal of an incoming call, whether on line LI or L2, to the common bell ringing conductors Bl and B2. . Lines LI and L2 are also separately and respectively connected to an
I_l interface circuit 30 and an L2 interface circuit 40. Circuits 30 and 40 include electro-optical isolating devices that enable lines LI and L2 to be coupled to line condition sensing circuitry and hold signal generating circuitry of control unit 14 without direct connection of such circuitry to the telephone lines. Similarly, separate sensing circuits 50 and 60 are provided, one for each of lines LI and L2. Sensing circuit 50 is connected to interface circuit 30 by means of connection 38 to receive signals developed by interface circuit 30 that indicate the operating condition, whether on-hook, off-hook, holding or ringing, of line LI. Sensing circuit 50 discriminates between the various signal conditions and develops certain control signals that govern the operation of other circuitry in control unit 14. Sensing circuit 60 is coupled to interface circuit 40 over connection 42 and functions in the same manner as sensing circuit 50 except circuit 60 receives and interprets the line condition signals appearing on L2. Indicator lights ILl and IL2 are connected to outputs 52 and 64 sensing circuits 50 and 60, respectively, for visually displaying the operatin condition of the respective lines as sensed by circuits 30 and 40. The indicat lights ILl and IL2 operate independently, each displaying the instantaneo . operating condition of the associated one of lines LI and L2.
A line select circuit 80 of control unit 14 is responsive to outputs 5 and 64 of sensing circuits 40 and 60 and to line select switches SI and S2 and to ho select switch S3 for controlling the operation of line relays 24 and 26. Also, circu 80 coordinates the operation of line relays 24 and 26 for automatically dropping on of the lines when the other line is to be picked up at the same station, and f concurrently operating both relays 24 and 26 when a three-point conference call to be established as more fully described below.
The hold control circuitry is distributed among circuits 30, 40, 50, 6 and 80. The hold condition is initiated by depressing switch S3 which causes lin select circuit 80 to produce control signals on lines 86 and 88 which in turn caus sensing circuits 50 and 60 and interface circuits 30 and 40 to latch one of lines and L2 in a hold condition. Connections 59 and 6] between SI, S2 and circuits 5 60, respectively, insure that only the line then connected to the telephone set, placed on hold in response to actuation of the single hold select switch S3. - During a hold condition on either one of lines LI or L2, the associate interface circuit 30 or 40 places a line terminating impedance across the applicabl line so as to simulate the internal impedance of a telephone set and thereb maintain the central office to hold the line in communication with the remot party. At the same time that the line terminating impedance is connected acro the line, a hold indicating signal is applied to the line connections 94 and 96 i response to a flash generator 90.
A bell transfer circuit 70 having a connection 71 to sensing circuit 6 operates bell relay 28 in a manner that will be described more fully below to insur that the ringing signal is applied to the bell of the station's telephone set regardle of which line receives an incoming call.
With reference to Figure 3, the circuit elements of control unit 14 an in particular, the elements of the hold control circuitry of the present inventio are described in greater detail as follows.
Line Relays Line relays 24 and 26 include separate relay coils 24a and 26 schematically located within the dotted line that circumscribes line select circu 80 (Figure 3). A set of normally closed relay contacts 24b and 24c of relay 2 connect the tip and ring conductors of line LI to the output tip and ring V and R'
. control unit 14. Although contacts 24b and 24c of relay 24 are normally closed, the coil 24a is normally energized as will be described more fully herein so that functionally, contacts 24b and 24c are normally open and are closed only when coil 24a is selectively deenergized in order to couple line LI to V and Rτ and thus to the telephone set 13 (Figure 1).
• * Relay 26 includes a set of normally open contacts 26b and 26c separately connected in series between the tip and ring conductors of line L2 and the output tip and ring conductors T' and R'. Unlike relay 24, the coil 26a of relay 26 is normally unenergized and is selectively energized by circuit 46 when line L2 is to be connected to T and R' and thus to the telephone set 13. The connection and operation of relays 24 and 26 in this manner insures that at least one telephone line will be connected to the telephone set 13 in the event of power failure. In such case both relay coils 24a and 24b will be forced to their deenergized state and line LI will in that case be connected to the telephone set 13 through contacts 24b and 24c.
Bell Transfer Relay and Circuit Bell transfer relay 28 includes a relay coil 28a located in bell transfer circuit 70 (Figure 3) for selectively operating two sets of contacts including a normally closed set of contacts 28b and 28c, and a normally open set of contacts 28d and 28e. Contacts 28b and 28c are separately and serially connected between the tip and ring conductors of line LI and the output bell ringing conductors Bl and B2 which extend to the bell ringing device of the telephone set 13. Similarly, normally open contacts 28b and 28e are separately serially connected between the tip and ring conductors of line L2 and the output bell ringing conductors Bl and B2. ' An incoming ringing signal on line LI will automatically appear on output conductors Bl and B2 to cause the telephone set 13 at station 14 to ring.
Bell transfer circuit 70 includes an input 71 connected to the L2 sensing circuit 60, a DC blocking capacitor 782 serially connected between input 71 and the junction of the anode of a blocking diode 783 and the cathode of a clamping. diode 781. The anode of diode 781 is connected to ground and the cathode of diode 783 is connected through a parallel RC network of resistor 784 and capacitor 785 to ground. The cathode of diode 783 is also connected to pins 2 and 6 of a linear integrated circuit 786 (described below). The output of circuit 786 is provided at pin 7 and is connected through coil 28a to +Vec and a diode 787 is connected in shunt around coil 28a.
Circuit 786 is a commercially available device manufactured and sold by a number of companies including National Semiconductor Corporation of Santa Clara, California, and Raytheon Corporation of Boston, Massachusetts, and is
-BUREAU
OMPI commonly designated in the electronic industry as a 555 timer. It is a multipurpo timer circuit that can be adapted for performing a wide variety of timing a control functions depending upon the external circuitry to which it is connecte The operational characteristics of the 555 timer, in general, and its particular u as a circuit 786 are described below. The particular functioning of the other 5 timer circuits, used throughout control unit 14, will be covered hereinafter.
Supply voltage for the 555 timer is applied between pin 1 and pin with pin 1 being tied to ground and pin 8 to +Vcc. The active inputs and outputs the timer, as used in the circuitry disclosed herein, are: a first output pin 3, second output pin 7 (which is operationally similar to pin 3), a first input pin 2 and second input pin 6. A reset input pin 4 is also shown (connected to +Vcc) but t reset function is not used in the present circuitry and the connection to +Vcc merely to prevent false triggering of the reset function.
Details of the construction and operation of 555 timer are availab from the above-mentioned manufacturers. For the present disclosure, a brie generalized description of the construction of the 555 timer will suffice. It comprised of first and second comparator stages, a bistable flip-flop stage and voltage divider impedance network. The voltage divider impedance network connected between pin 8 and ground and thus serves to divide the supply volta +Vcc into predetermined fractions, namely 1/3 +Vec and 2/3 +Vcc. The first a second comparators are each connected to compare the input voltage applied to associated one of the first and second input pins 2 and 6, respectively, with t fractional 1/3 and 2/3 +Vcc voltage levels developed by the divider network. T input impedances at the input pins 2 and 6 are characteristically very high. T outputs of the first and second comparators are connected so as to set and rese respectively, the flip-flop stage. The flip-flop stage is normally reset and in th state output pin 3 is high (at or near +Vec) and output pin 7 is an open circuit. P 7 is connected to the collector of a transistor which has its emitter grounded, a is switched between a nonconducting state (when the flip-flop stage is reset) and conducting state (when the flip-flop stage is set).
When the input voltage at pin 2 rises above 1/3 +Vcc, the output the first comparator enables the flip-flop stage to be switched to its set state, b only after the input voltage at pin 6 subsequently rises to 2/3 +Vcc. The flip-fl stage will remain in the set state until both the voltage at pin 2 drops below 1 +Vee and the voltage at pin 6 drops below 2/3 +Vcc. Unless both these volta conditions are met, the flip-flop stage will remain in its set state. In the set stat output pin 3 is low (grounded) and output pin 7 is also low (grounded through t collector-emitter path of the above-mentioned transistor which has now be switched to its conducting state). The required concurrence of voltage conditions at input pins 2 and 6 provides the 555 timer with an electronic AND logic function. Once the flip-flop stage is in its set state, it may be latched in such state by maintaining the voltage at either one of pins 2 and 6 above its threshold
5 .switching level, respectively, 1 3 +Vcc and 2/3 +Vcc, even though the voltage at the remaining input pin goes low. Thus the 555 timer has the capability of performing as an electronic latch.
Additionally, the input pins 2 and 6 are adapted to be connected to external resistive-capacitive delay networks in a manner that conditions the 555 0 timer to function as a timing circuit. The timing intervals of the circuit are determined by the values of the externally connected resistive and capacitive elements. When used as a timing circuit input pins 2 and 6 may be connected together to receive a common input voltage, or they may be connected separately in order to tailor the timing function to each particular application. 5 In still another use of the 555 timer, it may be operated as an inverter. In such ease, the input pins 2 and 6 are tied together for receiving an input voltage. Output pin 3 swings high when the voltage at input pins 2 and 6 is low (below 1/3 +Vcc) and output pin 3 swings low when the voltage at input pins 2 and 6 is high (above 2/3 +Vcc).
20 Accordingly, it will be appreciated that the 555 timer is a versatile, integrated circuit capable of being connected so as to provide one or more of the functions of an AND logic circuit, a latching circuit, a timing circuit and an inverting circuit. Because its most common use is for timing, it is usually called a timer circuit and is referred to as such herein.
25. For the purpose of illustrating control unit 14, timer circuit 786 and other identical integrated circuits used throughout the control unit are shown as a single integrated circuit unit known by the designation 555. In the actual manufacture of control unit 14, it has been found preferable to use a dual integrated timer circuit known in the industry as a 556 which packages two
30 integrated circuits, each of which is functionally identical to a 555 timer, into a single integrated component.
The 555 timer used for circuit 786 has its input pins 2 and 6 tied together to respond to the voltage across the RC network of resistor 784 and capacitor 785. As the voltage at pin 2 rises from ground potential in response to a
35. ringing signal detected by sensing circuit 60 as described herein, pin 2 becomes enabled at 1/3 +Vce and thereafter the flip-flop stage of circuit 786 switches when pin 6 reaches 2/3 +Vcc. The output pin 7 thereupon switches to ground and causes relay coil 28a to be energized. When the voltage at pins 2 and 6 starts to drop from
*BU EA tT
OMPl +Vcc toward ground, circuit 786 does not switch until the voltage at pin 2 fal below 1/3 +Vcc. The RC network of resistor 784 and capacitor 785 hold the volta at pin 2 above 1/3 +Vcc during the silent intervals of a ringing signal and there maintain relay coil 28a energized from one burst of AC ringing to the next. " Line Interface Circuits
(Including the Line Terminating Impedance and the
Holding Signal Generator of the Hold Control Circuitry)
Line interface circuits 30 and 40 are identical and therefore on circuit 30 for line 1 will be described in detail. The tip and ring conductors of li LI are connected directly to input terminals 302 and 304 so that the sign condition on line LI is continuously applied to circuit 30. The positive side of t tip and ring conductors (usually tip is positive) is connected to terminal 302 sin circuit 30 is polarity sensitive. Alternatively, a full-wave rectification bridge m be connected and poled between the tip and ring conductors and input terminals 3 . and 304 to insure a proper application of polarity to the input of circuit regardless of the tip and ring polarity. Connected across input terminals 302 a
304 is a first network 306 including an electro-optical isolator that detects t voltage on LI without interfering with the normal communication of signa between the telephone set and the central office. Connected in parallel wi network 306 across input terminals 302 and 304 is a second network 30 constructed in accordance with the present invention, that functions during t hold condition to apply a line terminating impedance across LI (that simulates off-hook condition) and at the same time apply a hold indicating signal across li LI, again within interfering with the normal signalling between the telephone li and its associated central office.
Network 306 includes a diode 310, a low impedance resistor 312 of 4 ohms, integrated Darlington paired transistors 314 (although only one transist symbol is shown, the accompanying letter "D" designates the fact that t Darlington connected transistors are used in an integrated package), a zener dio 316, a base bias resistor 318 of 470 K ohms, an integrated electro-optical isolat 320, another base biasing resistor 322 of 2.2 K ohms and a current limiting dio 324. Diode 310 and resistor 312 are connected in series to pass positive curre from the tip conductor of line LI to a junction between the collectors of Darlingt transistors 314 and the cathode of zener diode 316. Resistor 312 is of relatively lo ■ value so as to enable zener diode 316 to respond to the line voltage. Diode 3 limits the amount of current flowing in the circuit loop formed by the connecti of network 306 across the terminals 302 and 304 to a preselected maximu current. In this embodiment, diode 324 limits the current to 0.5 milliamperes prevent excessive current drain on the central office voltage source that supplies line LI.
Darlington transistors 314, zener diode 316, electro-optical isolator 320 and the associated biasing resistors 318 and 322 serve to sense the voltage on ' line LI and cause an output signal to be produced on output connection 38 that reflects the instantaneous signal condition on line LI. For this purpose the collector emitter paths of Darlington transistors 314 are connected in series with a light emitting diode 320a of isolator 320 so that when the Darlington transistors 314 are conducting, diode 320a is energized and emits light that impinges on the input base electrode of Darlington paired photo transistors 320b and 320c of isolator 320. The emitter of transistor 320c is connected to ground and its collector is connected to the junction between output connection 38 and biasing resistor 322. The collector of transistor 320b is connected to +Vcc and to the opposite end of resistor 322 from the collector of transistor 320c. When transistors 320b and 320c are conducting as a result of the light emitted by diode 320a, transistor 320c clamps the voltage on connection 38 to ground, and when these transistors are nonconducting as a result of diode 320a being unenergized, then the potential on connection 38 rises to +Vcc. Thus, for an on-hook condition, the voltage on connection 38 is low and for on off-hook condition it is high. Switching of isolator 320 is controlled by Darlington transitors 314 in response to the voltage at a junction 326 between the anode of zener diode 316 and resistor 318, which voltage is in turn responsive to the voltage condition appearing across the tip and ring conductors of line LI.
As described more fully below, the voltage across line LI changes significantly between on-hook and off-hook conditions. This change in voltage together with a careful selection of the break-down voltage for zener diode 316, serve to cause the voltage at junction 326 to change in an abrupt, discrete manner as the line voltage swings between the on-hook and off-hook values. The discrete change in voltage at junction 326 serves to bias Darlington transistors 314 on when "LI is in an on-hook condition, and to bias the Darlington transistors 314 off when LI is in an off-hook condition. A ringing signal on line LI, after rectification by diode 310, also causes on/off switching of Darlington transistors 314 in synchronization with each burst of ac ringing.
The breakdown voltage for zener diode 316 should be within the range . of 15-20 volts, and a breakdown voltage of 15 volts is preferred. When the line voltage across the tip and ring conductors of LI is below 15 volts, reflecting an off- hook condition on the line, then zener diode 316 has a very high impedance relative to resistors 312 and 318 and thus the entire line voltage is dropped across diode 316. Under these conditions, the input base of Darlington transistors 314 is essentially the same potential as the output emitter of transistors 314 and therefore Darlingto transistors 314 are biased off. When the line voltage rises above the 15 volts brea down voltage of diode 316, reflecting an on-hook condition, the excess voltage dropped across resistor 318. The voltage drop across resistor 318 causes the inp base of transistors 314 to swing to a positive potential and turn transistors 314 on.
Network 308 is selectively connected to the input terminals 302 an 304 by a hold control relay 29 that includes a relay coil 29a and a set of normall open relay contacts 29b. Coil 29a of the hold relay is schematically located withi the dotted line that circumscribes sensing circuit 34, while the normally ope contacts 29b are shown in circuit 30 and are connected in series between inp terminal 302 and network 308.
Network 308 includes a set of serially-connected, like-poled zen diodes 330 and 332 with the cathode of diode 330 disposed for connection t terminal 302 through normally open hold relay contacts 29b and the anode of diod 332 connected to terminal 304. Connected in shunt across diode 330 is th transistor output stage of another photo-optical isolator 334. In particular, isolato 334 includes a light emitting diode 334a having its anode connected to +Vcc and i cathode joined to connection 94 that extends to flash generator 90. Light produce by diode 334a when energized impinges on the base electrode of one of a pair Darlington paired phototransistors 334b and 334c. In the absence of light fro diode 334a, the collector-emitter paths through transistors 334b and 334c are at high impedance such that a virtual open circuit appears across zener diode 33 When light is produced by diode 334a in response to a signal from flash generator 9 over connector 94, transistors 334b and 334c conduct providing a short circuit pat in shunt around zener diode 330. .
As described more fully below, the serially connected zener diod 330 and 332 when connected across line LI by means of contacts 29b, cause predetermined, zener-regulated voltage to be presented across the tip and rin conductors of line LI so as to simulate the connection of the internal impedance o a telephone set across the telephone line as occurs when the telephone set is off hook. The switching of photo-transistors 334b and 334c by diode 334a when zene diodes 330 and 332 are connected across line LI causes the upper zener diode 330 t be periodically shunted in synchronization with the pulsating signal developed b generator 90. Thus the voltage of line LI due to the combination of the seriall connected zener diodes 330 and 332 fluctuates between the sum of the break-dow voltages of both zener diodes (when the phototransistors of isolator 334 ar nonconducting), and the voltage due solely to the lower zener diode 332 (when th phototransistors of isolator 334 are conducting).
The values of zener diodes 330 and 332 are carefully selected in accordance with the following design constraints. The voltage fluctuation appearing across the tip and ring conductors of line LI caused by the periodic shunting of zener diode 330 by generator 90 must be sufficient to produce a hold indicating signal having sufficient amplitude to enable reliable response by the sensing circuits of the other control units in KTS 11. Secondly, the combined break¬ down voltages of zener diodes 330 and 332 which occurs when diode 330 is unshunted, must be sufficiently low so as to enable a minimum loop current to flow in the telephone line. The minimum loop current is needed to maintain the connection at central office to the remote party. A combined break-down voltage of approximately 20 volts meets this constraint, and will cause, a minimum of 20 milliamperes to flow in the line. Also, when diode 330 is shunted, a minimum residual voltage should be maintained across the line, and this is provided by selecting zener diode 332 to have a breakdown voltage of approximately 5 volts. The resulting voltage swing of 15 volts across the tip and ring conductors of the line during the hold flesh condition has been found adequate as a reliable hold indicating signal.
Sensing Circuit Except for the difference described immediately below, sensing circuits 50 and 60 are identical and thus only circuit 50 will be described in detail. The one difference that does exist is the provision of bell transfer circuit 70 in association with sensing circuit 60. Only one bell transfer circuit is used and in this instance it cooperates with sensing circuit 60 in a manner that is described more fully below.
Now with reference, to Figure 3, sensing circuit 50 is composed of a line select enable control and indicator light driver network 540, a hold latching network 542 and a hold enable network 544. All three of these networks are jointly connected to a control signal bus 546 which in turn is connected to output connection 38 from line interface circuit 30.
Network 540 responds to the signal condition on line LI as represented by the signal on output connection 38 and, when an off-hook condition appears on telephone line LI, network 540 enables line select circuit 80 to respond to actuation of line select switch SI to thereby operate line relay 29. For this purpose, network 540 includes a timer circuit 548 that is identical to the above-described circuit 786. Input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 548 are connected through a nonlinear RC delay network including resistor 550, capacitor 552 and diode 554 to bus 546. Resistor 550 has a value of 150 K ohms and capacitor 552 has a value of 1.0 microfarad and together they form an RC delay network that prevents the response of network 54 to dial pulses appearing on line LI after line LI has gone off-hook. Diode 55 connected in shunt across resistor 550 allows circuit 548 to respond immediately t an off-hook signal on line LI, but delays the response at pins 2 and 6 of circuit 54 ' to the low going pulses on bus 546 caused by the dialing pulses on LI so that circui 548 remains in a switched condition during the dialing phase following an off-hoo signal on line LI.
The output of circuit 548 at pin 7 is joined to connection 52a fo energizing indicator light ILl, and the output of pin 3 is joined to connection 52b fo applying a line select enable signal to line select circuit 80. In particular connection 52a extends through a serial connection of resistor 556 and indicato light ILl to a terminal 558 to which +Vcc is applied. Indicator light ILl is energize when the output at pin 7 of circuit 548 is clamped to a ground potential in respons to the signal applied at input pins 2 and 6. The function of output 52b at pin 3 i described below.
Network 542 is made up of another timer circuit 560 identical t circuit 786, and having a first and second input pins 2 and 6 connected to nonlinear RC delay network including resistor 562 having a value of 470 K ohm capacitor 564 of 1 microfarad and a diode 566. Input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 560 ar connected to a junction between a resistor 562 and a capacitor 564 which are i turn respectively connected at their opposite ends to bus 546 and to ground Circuit 560 responds to the voltage at the junction between resistor 562 an capacitor 564 and switches when such voltage rises to 2/3 +Vcc as bus 546 swing high. Diode 566 is connected in shunt about resistor 562 and becomes forwar biased so as to short circuit the resistive portion of the RC network and rapidl discharge capacitor 564 when the'voltage on bus 546 swings low and drops below 1/ +Vcc. When the voltage on bus 546 swings high, diode 566 is reversed biased an restores the delaying effect of resistor 562 and capacitor 564 causing a time dela in the response of circuit 560. As described more fully herein, this time dela operates to maintain hold relay 29 energized during the application of the hol indicating signal to LI by network 308 and to deenergize the hold relay 29 when goes to an off-hook condition.
The output of circuit 560 is taken from pin 3 which is seriall connected through a blocking diode 568 and through normally open latchin contacts 29c of hold relay 29 and thence to one side of hold relay coil 29a. Th opposite side of coil 29a is joined over connection 570 to the output pin 7 of stil another timer circuit 572 of hold enable network 544. Additionally, connection 8 from line select circuit 80 is joined to the junction of hold contacts 29c and coi 29a. A current surge limiting diode 576 is connected in shunt about coil 29a.
As described more fully hereinafter, coil 29a is initially energized over connection 86 from circuit 80 and is thereafter latched in an energized state during the hold condition through a latching circuit including hold relay contacts 29c, diode 568 and circuit 560. The connection 570 to circuit 572 functions to enable the energization of hold relay coil 29a only under certain operating conditions of network 544, which are described below.
Hold enable network 544 includes, in addition to linear integrated circuit 572, a nonlinear RC input circuit composed of diode 578, resistor 584 and capacitor 586, and a second nonlinear RC network of diode 582 and resistor 588 and capacitor 590. The RC network of resistor 584 and capacitor 586 is joined to connection 59 from line select switch SI through blocking diode 578 and thence to input pin 6 of circuit 572. Bus 546 is connected to pin 2 of circuit 572 via the RC network of resistor 588 and capacitor 590, while diode 582 is connected in shunt about resistor 588 to selectively short circuit the resistor when bus 546 is positive with respect to the voltage at pin 2.
Capacitor 586 is charged through diode 578 to maintain +Vcc at pin 6 for a predetermined interval after release of SI. The interval is set by the time constant of resistor 584, being 1 megohm, and capacitor 586, being 1 microfarad. Before capacitor 586 discharges, line relay 24 is operated and control signal bus 546 goes to +Vcc in response to LI going off-hook. The +Vcc on bus 546 is applied to pin
2 of circuit 572 through diode 582 which, in accordance with the latching feature of circuit 572 damps output pin 7 of the circuit at ground potential even though the voltage at input pin 6 thereafter goes low as capacitor 586 discharges through resistor 584. The RC network of resistor 588 of 100 K ohms and capacitor 590 of 10 microfarad maintains the voltage, at pin 2 high to hold the output pin 7 of circuit
572 at ground potential for a predetermined time after bus 546 goes low so as to continue the hold enable during the hold condition when bus 546 is fluctuating between +Vcc and ground. When the hold condition is terminated as described herein and thereafter line LI goes back on hook, then circuit 572 reverts to its normal state causing output pin 7 to assume an open circuit condition.
Line Select Circuit As shown in Figure 3, line select circuit 80 includes a line relay switching network 802 for operating coil 24a of relay 24 which in turn controls contacts 24b, 24c that connect LI to the telephone set. Another line relay switching network 804 operates coil 26a of relay 26 which has contacts 26b, 26e that connect L2 to the telephone set. Additionally, circuit 80 includes first and second hold initiate transistor networks 806 and 808 connected between hold select
*BU EA tT O PI switch S3 and connections 86 and 88, respectivley that extend to sening circuits 5 and 60.
Network 802 includes a time circuit 810, identical to circuit 78 described above. Output pin 3 of circuit 786 is connected to one end of coil 24a ■ τelay 24. The opposite end of coil 24a is grounded and a surge-current suppressin diode 812 is connected in shunt about coil 24a. As briefly described above, coil 2 is normally energized so as to maintain the set of normally closed contacts 24b an 24c in an open condition, closing these contacts only when LI is to be connected t the telephone set associated with control unit 14. Thus, output pin 3 of circuit 81 is normally at +Vcc to energize coil 24a and switches low when the voltages inputs pins 2 and 6 swing toward +Vcc.
A diode 814 is serially connected between LI select switch SI and pin of circuit 810 and is poled to apply +Vcc to pin 2 when SI is depressed to close t normally open contacts thereof. An RC delay network of resistor 818 of 10 K oh and capacitor 820 of 10.0 microfarads is joined to connection 816 to maintain pin high for approximately 100 milliseconds after SI is released to allow time for circu 810 to be latched by a signal applied to pin 2 over a connection 822 as describe below.
Network 802 includes an additional timer circuit 824, identical circuit 786, best in this ease connected to function as a polarity inverter. Outp pin 3 of circuit 824 is coupled to pin 2 of circuit 810 through a 100 K ohm resist 826 serially joined to connection 822. Circuit 824 has its input pins 2 and 6 jointl connected through a 100 K ohm input resistor 828 to connection 52b from sens circuit 50 to maintain these input pins at +Vce so long as Li is on-hook and to dri these pins to ground potential when LI goes off -hook. As a result, the voltage pin 3 of circuit 824 is the inverse of the voltage at the input pins and is normally ground potential and swings to +Vcc when Li goes off-hook.
Input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 824 are also connected through a couplin capacitor 830 to the cathodes of a pair of diodes 832 and 834. The anode of diod 832 is connected to the normally open contacts of hold select switch S3 which described more fully herein causes circuits 824 and 810 to energize coil 24a an thereby disconnect LI from the telephone set when S3 is depressed. The anode diode 834 is connected to L2 select switch S2 and also causes circuits 834 and 81 to energize relay coil 24a when S2 is depressed. Momentary closure of S2 or S causes a positive voltage spike to be applied to pins 2 and 6 of circuit 824 throug diodes 834 or 832, respectively, and through coupling capacitor 830, causing th output pin 3 to swing high thereby cancelling a latching signal that otherwise hol pin 2 of circuit 810 high, allowing circuit 810 to revert to its normal,' unswitche jU condition, and causing relay coil 24a to be energized.
Line relay switching network 804 is similar to network 802 except that coil 26a of L2 line relay 26 is connected between pin 3 of a timer circuit 840 and +Vcc so that coil 26a is normally unenergized as described above and is -energized to close normally open contacts 26b and 26c only when L2 is to be connected to the telephone set 13. The remaining components of network 804 are identical to network 802. Thus a current-suppressing diode 842 is connected in shunt about coil 26a. A diode 844 is connected between S2 and input pin 2 of circuit 840 while S2 is connected directly to pin 6 of circuit 840 and is also connected to an RC delay network including resistor 846 and 848. An additional timer circuit 850 corresponding to circuit 824 of network 802 and connected to function as an inverter, has its output pin 3 coupled to pin 2 of circuit 840 over connection 852 that includes a series resistor 854, and has input pins 2 and 6 jointly connected through an input resistor 856 to connection 64 from sensing circuit 60. Diodes 858 and 860, corresponding to diodes 832 and 834 described above, apply signals from switches S3 and SI to input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 850 through coupling capacitor 862.
Hold initiate transistor network 806 includes Darlington paired transistors 864 having the emitter output joined to connection 86 that extends to hold timer network 542 of sensing circuit 50. The collectors of transistors 864 are connected to +Vcc. Transistors 864 are operated between their conducting and nonconducting states by a signal from hold select switch S3 applied through an RC delay network of a 10 K ohm resistor 872 and a 10 microfarad capacitor 870 joined to the input base of Darlington transistors 864. When hold select switch S3 is depressed, Darlington transistors 864 conduct causing connection 86 to swing up to +Vcc and thereby energize coil 29a in sensing circuit 50, assuming coil 29a has been enabled by network 544.
Hold initiate transistor network 808 is identical to network 806 and thus includes Darlington paired transistors 874, an RC network including resistor 882 and a capacitor 880. When S3 is depressed, Darlington transistors 874 conduct causing connection 88 to swing to +Vce for. energizing the coil of an L2 hold relay corresponding to the above described hold relay 29 for line LI.
Hold Flash Generator
Generator 90 is a conventional free-running multivibrator connected between +Vee and ground and having a square wave output signal swinging between
+Ycc and ground at the rate of approximately .50 Hz to produce a 30 impulse per minute hold indicating signal. The output of multivibrator 90 is extended over output connections 94 and 96 to the electro-optical isolators of line interface
*βURE tT
OMP1
, W1PO circuits 30 and 40 as described above with respect to connection 94 and isolator 3 for LI line interface circuit 30.
Operation of KTS The operation of KTS 11 is best described by separately consideri the following operating modes: initiating an outgoing call at one of stations #1- receiving an incoming call at one of the stations; ending a call; holding a call; a establishing a three-point conference call.
Initiating An Outgoing Call Assuming that a call is to be placed at station #1 using telephone s 13 (Figure 1), it will be observed that lines LI and L2 are both in an on-ho condition and the telephone set 13 is disconnected from lines LI and L2 by contr unit 14. The telephone sets at stations #2-N are also disconnected from lines and L2 by their associated control units.
The person using set 13 now depresses either SI or S2 to connect set to line LI or L2, respectively. Assuming that line 1 is selected, then SI will depressed causing circuit 810 (Figure 3) to deenergize the LI line relay 24 a thereby cause contacts 24b, 24e to connect set 13 to the T' and R' output leads fro control unit 14. The internal impedance of set 13 immediately causes the centr office voltage on line 1 to drop from an on-hook voltage of from 48 to 96 volts depending upon the type of central office, to a lower off -hook voltage of from 3 20 volts dc. Within line interface circuit 30, network 306 including zener diode 3 immediately senses the drop in voltage on LI and becomes nonconducting, turni Darlington transistors 314 off and causing output connection 38 to rise to +Vcc v optical isolator 320. The control signal bus 546 of sensing circuit 50 is now at near ÷Vec which results in the switching of the voltage at output pins 3 and 7 timer circuit 548 to ground potential turning on indicator light Hi and causi timer circuit 824 of line select circuit 80 to maintain pin 2 of timer circuit 810 +Vcc. As a result circuit 810 becomes latched in a condition that maintains the c 24a of LI line relay 24 in a deenergized state which in turn maintains t connection of line LI to telephone set 13 even though the contacts of SI open as t SI pushbutton is released.
Concurrently with the above-described operation of control unit 1 each of the other control units of stations #2-N respond to the off -hook conditi on LI and turn on their respective indicator lights ILl in the same above-describ manner that line interface circuit 30 and sensing circuit 50 of unit 14 responded the off-hook voltage on line LI. The illumination of Hi at each of the contr stations informs telephone users at these stations that line Ii is busy.
Another related operating sequence occurs when the person at stati
^j #1 has just completed a call over L2 and wishes to place another call over L. In such case unit 14 automatically operates to disconnect L2 from set 13 when SI is depressed. The momentary closure of the contacts of SI cause a positive voltage spike to be applied to pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 850 of line select circuit 80 via diode 860 and capacitor 862. Responsively, circuit 850, which is part of network 804 that controls the L2 line relay 26, goes to ground potential, causing pin 2 of integrated circuit 840 to also go to ground potential. Pin 6 of circuit 840 is already at ground potential, since any voltage previously applied to pin 6 and capacitor 848 by the momentary closure of the contacts of S2 has been discharged through resistor 846 to ground. Timer circuit 840 thus switches its output pin 3 from ground potential to +Vcc thereby denergizing coil 26a of L2 line relay 26, disconnecting L2 from the station set. Thus, when either one of switches SI or S2 is individually operated to select one of the available lines, the opposite line is automatically disconnected ("dumped"), unless the opposite line has been previously placed in a hold condition in the manner described hereinafter. It is now assumed that telephone set 13 has been connected by control unit 14 to line Li and a dial tone is received at set 13. The user now signals central office using either standard dialing or Touch-Tone (service mark of AT&T) signalling to reach the called party via the central office. The tone frequencies associated with Touch-Tone dialing do not have any appreciable effect on the operation of control circuit 14. Dial pulse signalling produces a series of high-going voltage pulses on Ii, the peaks of which exceed approximately 36 volts dc. Line interface circuit 30 and sensing circuit 50 respond by producing a series of low going transitions on output connection 38 and on control signal bus 546. These low going pulse transitions do not register at indicator light Hi because diode 554 of network 540 becomes reverse biased during the low going pulses on bus 546 and forces any change in the voltage at pin 2 of circuit 548 to be slowly discharged through the RC circuit of resistor 550 and capacitor 552. Thus, circuit 548 remains switched and indicator light Hi remains continuously energized, discriminating against any response due to the pulse dialing sequence. Thereafter, central office 12 (Figure 12) couples Ii to the called party's line to establish telephonic communication therebetween.
While a call is in progress over line 1 at station #1, the remaining stations #2-N are available for receiving an incoming call or initiating an outgoing call over L2 by operating L2 select switch S2 of the control unit at the associated station.
Receiving an Incoming Call The ringing signal of an incoming call that appears on lines L2 is coupled by control unit 14 to telephone set 13 by means of bell transfer rel 28. As shown in Figure 3, contacts 28b and 28c of the bell transfer relay a normally closed to connect the T and R conductors of Ii to Bl and B2 that are turn joined to the bell or other audible signalling device of the telephone set. Th • the ringing signal of a call coming in on line Ii will be immediately applied to t bell of telephone set 13 without requiring any responsive change of the circuitry relays in control unit 14. Similarly, the telephone sets associated with each of t other stations #2-N will sound the ringing signal through the normally closed b transfer relay contacts of their respective control units. Additionally, the ringing signal is applied to input terminals 302 a
304 of line interface network 30. Although the ringing signal may vary somewh in voltage and frequency, it is typically a 90 volt peak-to-peak ac signal at 20 or Hz superimposed on the on-hook dc voltage, typically 48 volts, developed at cent office and appearing on the line during an on-hook condition. Thus, the ringi signal causes the T conductor of line Ii to swing between approximately +138 vo and -42 volts relative to the R conductor. A burst of these ac cycles will be spac in time by intervals of silence during which the voltage on line Ii returns to the volt dc level representing an on-hook condition. The superimposed ac signal rectified by diode 310 and the resulting positive voltage swings, varying from ze volts to +138 volts are applied across network 306 including zener diode 316.
Zener diode 316 is thus periodically switched off as the voltage dro below the breakdown voltage of diode 316. Darlington transistors 314 and electr optical isolator 320 are thus similarly, periodically switched off, causing t voltage on output connection 38 to fluctuate between ground potential and +Vec the pulsating rate of the ac ringing signal.
Sensing circuit 50 and in particular, network 540 thereof, receives t pulsating signal from bus 546 and detects each burst of ac ringing to turn on Hi f the duration of each such burst. This is accomplished by setting the time consta of the RC network of resistor 550 and capacitor 552 to hold the charge capacitor 552 so that pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 548 are maintained above 1 +Vcc for the duration of eaeh burst of closely spaced positive voltage swings on b 546, with capacitor 552 discharging slowly through resistor 550 at the end of ea burst. In this way indicator light Hi is maintained on for the duration of ea burst. The interviewing silent intervals between ringing signal bursts are lo enough to allow capacitor 552 to discharge and thereby force timer circuit 548 turn Hi off. Indicator light Hi thus flashes a visual signal to alert the user at t station of a ringing signal representing an incoming call, and can be used by its or in conjunction with the audible ringing signal device of the telephone set. The ringing signal of an incoming call that arrives on line L2 does not immediately reach Bl and B2 because of the intervening, normally open contacts 28d and 28e of relay 28. Rather, the ringing signal is applied to the T and R inputs of line interface circuit 40 for line L2, corresponding to the input terminals 302 and 304 of line interface circuit 30 for line 1, and circuit 40 in conjunction with sensing circuit 60 responds to the ringing signal and causes bell transfer circuit 70 to close contacts 28d and 28e and open contacts 28b and 28c. The ringing signal on L2 is thereby transferred to the Bl and B2 outputs for sounding the bell of set 13.
In particular, circuit 40 responds to the ringing signal, as described above for Ii line interface circuit 30, to produce a fluctuating signal on output connection 42 in synchronization with the burst of ac ringing.
The fluctuating signal on connection 42 due to the ringing signal bursts has two functions. First, the pulsating signal is applied via bus 646 (corresponding to bus 546 of circuit 50) and hence to input 71 of bell transfer circuit 70 such that each positive voltage swing at input terminal 70 is coupled through capacitor 752 and forward biased diode 783 to capacitor 785, charging the capacitor and causing the voltage thereacross to rise toward +Vcc. Pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 786 thus receive +Vcc, causing output pin 7 to be clamped to ground potential and causing the energization of bell transfer relay coil 28a. Energization of coil 28a causes the above mentioned opening of contacts 28b and 28c and the correlative closing of contacts 28d and 28e, so as to apply the ringing signal on L2 to Bl, B2 shortly after the ringing signal is received at control unit 14. The time constant of the RC network formed by resistor 784 and capacitor 785 is long enough to hold the voltage charge on capacitor 785 resulting from the positive pulses developed by line interface circuit 40 on output connection 42 for spanning the interval of silence between bursts of ac ringing. Pins 2 and 6 of circuit 786 thus remain at a level greater than 1/3 +Vcc during the silent intervals between rings thereby maintaining coil 28a energized. At approximately 3 seconds after the last burst of ac ringing voltage, capacitor 785 is discharged to drop the potential at pins 2 and 6 of circuit 786 below the 1/3 +Vcc switching threshold of the circuit, allowing pin 7 to assume an open circuit, and thereby deenergize coil 28a and restore contacts 28d-e to their conditions as shown in Figure 3.
Secondly, the fluctuating positive going signal on connection 42 from line interface circuit 40 is effective via circuit 60 to turn indicator light IL2 on during each burst of the ac ringing signal. IL2 is energized through a resistor 656 that serially connects IL2 to output connection 64 of circuit 60 which in turn is joined to the timer circuit corresponding to circuit 548 of network 540 of the above-described Ii sensing circuit 50. The functioning of sensing circuit 60 in this respect is identical to the above-described operation of sensing circuit 50.
It is noted that the contacts of the bell transfer relay 28 are arrang so that line Ii is normally connected to Bl, B2 of the station's set and will rem so connected in the event of a power failure in the supply voltage for control u • 14. With the above described arrangement of Ii line relay 24 in which the norma closed contacts 24b, 24c automatically connect line Ii to the T' and R' terminals the station's telephone set, and in the event of a power failure, a fully opera telephone line and set is ensured at each of the available stations.
Ending a Call Assuming that a call over line Ii at station 1 has been completed a the handset of telephone set 13 is returned to its cradle, this action disconnects t internal impedance of the phone set from Ii causing Ii to assume an on-ho condition. The voltage on the tip and ring conductors of Ii rises to the on-ho voltage of 48 to 96 volts dc depending upon the type of central office and a consequence zener diode 316 begins conducting. Network 306 including Darlingt transistors 314 and photo-optical isolator 320 are turned on to clamp connection to ground potential. The signal bus 546 swings low to ground potential and afte 150 millisecond delay caused by the RC network 550 and capacitor 552, output pi of timer circuit 548 assumes an open circuit extinguishing indicator light Hi. At the same time, output pin 3 of integrated circuit 548 swings
+Vcc causing pin 3 of circuit 824 of line select circuit 80 to be switched to gro potential, thereby cancelling the latching signal theretofore applied to input pi of timer circuit 810. Circuit 810 now energizes line relay coil 24a to disconnect from T', R'. The call has been completed and the telephone line has be disconnected from the station's set, and control unit 14 is restored to an i condition. The idle or on-hook condition is indicated by the fact that Hi is off.
To end a call established over line L2, line interface circuit 40 sensing circuit 60 function in the same manner described above for circuits 30 a 50 to cause L2 line relay 26 to disconnect the T' and R' conductors from the T a . R conductors of L2 and return unit 14 to an idle condition.
Telephone calls are also ended automatically when a person at a particular station depresses the line select switch of the opposite line from that which a call is in progress. This feature is described in detail above under section dealing with the initiation of an outgoing call. Holding a Call
When a call is in progress over Ii or L2 and the station's set connected to the applicable line, then that line may be placed in a hold condition accordance with the following operation. To illustrate this operation, it will assumed that a call is in progress over Ii at station #1 and thus telephone set 13 is connected to the tip and ring conductors of Ii through line relay contacts 24b and 24c. Now the party at station #1 wishes to place the call on Ii in a hold condition so as to enable the telephone set 13 to be disconnected from Ii (so as, for example, ' t'o answer an incoming call on L2) while still maintaining the telephonic connection of line Ii through the central office to the remote party on L2.
To accomplish this, the hold select switch S3 is depressed. This applies a positive voltage spike to pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 824 of line select circuit 80 thereby overriding the latching voltage applied to pin 2 of timer circuit 810 and causing Ii line relay 24 to be energized. Contacts 24b and 24c open and thus disconnect T' and R' from line Ii.
Concurrently therewith, the closure of the S3 contacts applies a positive voltage to the base of Darlington transistors 864 of hold initiate transistor network 806 which in turn energizes hold relay coil 29a of hold relay 29. At this time, hold enable network 544 of sensing circuit 50 has been preconditioned by the initial operation of Ii select switch SI (when the telephone call over line 1 was first established) so that the output pin 7 of timer circuit 572 is at ground potential enabling the energization of relay coil 29a over connection 570. The enabling signal applied to the lower end of hold relay coil 29a over connection 570 insures that only the party at the particular station that received or made the call can place li in a hold status.
Coil 29a is now energized and remains energized for a delay interval established by the RC network of resistor 868 and capacitor 870 of network 806 even after the contacts of- S3 open following the release of S3. The hold relay contacts 29b within line interface circuit 30 are now closed, connecting network 308 of circuit 30 across the tip and ring conductors of Ii.
Zener diodes 330 and 332 of line interface circuit 30 are now connected across Ii to limit the maximum voltage that can appear across the tip and ring conductors of Ii to 19.7 volts, which is the sum of the combined breakdown voltages of zener diodes 330 and 332. From this maximum, the voltage across Ii drops to 4.7 volts each time zener diode 330 is shunted by the photo-optical isolator 334 in response to hold flash generator 90. The change in voltage level across Ii between the maximum of 19.7 volts and the minimum of 4.7 volts at the 30 impulses per minute rate of generator 90 creates the hold indicating signal that is issued - over Ii to the control units at the other stations of the KTS. Moreover, the maximum voltage allowed to exist across line Ii during the hold status is 19.7 volts, which is a low enough voltage to simulate the presence of a line terminating impedance that is equivalent to the internal impedance of a telephone set when
-^UREA^
OMPI off-hook and that enables an adequate minimal loop current to flow in the line hold the central office connection to the remote party. Thus, so long as t voltage across Ii is maintained at or below the 19.7 volts established by the zen diodes 330 and 332, central office continues to sense an off-hook condition at Ii. As mentioned above, the breakdown voltage of zener diode 316 selected to lie within the range of 15 - 20 volts in order to detect the volta change on the line between an on-hook condition and an off-hook condition. addition to this constraint, the breakdown voltage of zener diode 316 is selected lie below the combined voltages of zener diodes 330 and 332 and above the volta due solely to diode 332, so that diode 316 is switched between its conducting a nonconducting states each time the voltage on line Ii swings between the maximu of 19.7 volts and the minimum of 4.7 volts at the rate of flash generator 90.
Line interface circuit 30 responds to the fluctuating hold indicati signal on Ii and causes the voltage on connection 38 to fluctuate between grou potential and +Vcc as the zener diode 316 is switched between its conducting a nonconducting states. The control signal bus 546 of sensing circuit 50 receives th fluctuating hold indicating signal and applies it to networks 540, 542 and 544.
In network 540 the RC network of resistor 550 and capacitor 552 a selected to provide a short enough delay to enable timer circuit 548 to respond the hold indicating signal on bus 546 and thereby cause indicator light Hi to fla on and off at approximately the rate of generator 90.
In network 542, the associated RC components are selected such th timer circuit 560 does not respond to the fluctuating signal on control bus 546. particular, capacitor 564 is charged slowly through resistor 562 when bus 5 swings high toward +Vcc and is quickly discharged through diode 566 when the b swings low to ground potential. • The time constant of resistor 562 and capacit 564 is such that the frequency of the hold indicating signal is too rapid to allow t voltage on pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 560 to rise to the 2/3 +Vcc thresho switching level of circuit 560 and thus pin 3 of circuit 560 is maintained high +Vce during the presence of the hold indicating signal on line Ii. With pin 3 circuit 560 at +Vcc, coil 29a of hold relay 29 is latched in the energized sta through the normally open hold relay contacts 29c. When thus latched, the ho relay 29 maintains the line interface circuit 30 and sensing circuit 50 in the ho condition, so as to continuously generate and apply the hold indicating signal to and maintain the simulated line terminating impedance across L. Similarly, network 544 the nonlinear RC network of resistor 588, capacitor 590 and diode 58 provide a time constant when diode 582 is reverse biased that maintains pin 2 timer circuit 527 high throughout the hold condition even though bus 5 periodically swings low.
The hold indicating signal on Ii is received at each of the control units, causing their respective line interface and sensing circuits, corresponding to circuits 30 and 50 to pulse the associated indicator light, corresponding to light Hi, ' on and off in synchronization with the hold indicating signal. A visual signal is thereby received at each station indicating that the line is in a hold condition. Note that only the hold relay 29 associated with the line and station at which a call has been made or received will be operated and held energized by the timer network 542 because of the required enabling signal from network 544 as described above.
The time constant of resistor 562 and capacitor 564 of network 542 is sufficiently long so that circuit 560 does not switch in response to dial pulses which might otherwise enable the latching of the hold relay 29 by an inadvertent operation of hold switch S3 during dialing. Additionally, the hold enable signal from network 544 over connection
570 prevents the inadvertent operation of the hold relay under the following circumstances. When line Ii is picked up by operating Ii select switch SI, the hold relay 29 associated with line Ii is enabled by network 544 as above described. Now assume that while the party at the station is talking over Ii, a call comes in over L2. Intending to hold Ii while L2 is answered, the person at the station depresses hold select switch S3. Because of the presence of the incoming ringing signal concurrently on line L2 when S3 is depressed, there is the possibility (in the absence of a hold enable network such as network 544) that the fluctuating signal condition on bus 464 of sensing circuit 60 will cause the hold timer of sensing circuit 60 to latcH the associated hold relay and thereby inadvertently place L2 in a hold mode. The hold enable network 544 in each of the sensing circuits prevents this occurrence by enabling only the hold latching network or networks associated with the line or lines that have been selected by the select switches SI and S2 at the subject station. During operation of the hold control, zener diodes 330 and 332 maintain a certain minimum current flow through the loop associate with line Ii and its is that current flow that the central office senses in determining whether the station is on-hook or off-hook. The minimum current flow will be established by the source voltage at the central office, less the breakdown voltages of the zener diodes 330 and 332, divided by the loop impedance which includes the line resistance. So long as the loop current flow in the line remains greater than approximately 20 milliamperes, it usually varies within the range of 20 to 65 milliamperes after seizure of the line at central office, then the central office will sense on off-hook condition and will remain seized on the line. There is a cert initial threshold current level (in excess of the minimum sustaining curre required to cause the central office to switch from an unseized to a seized sta however, once the line has been seized, it will continue to hold it so long t -minimum sustaining current is maintained. For most all central offices and m all operating conditions, a minimum substaining current of 20 milliamps sufficient. Under certain "best case" conditions as little as 13 milliamps may adequate.
It is thus seen that in accordance with the invention, zener diodes 3 and 332 provide, in the broad sense, first and second impedance elements . whi are connected across line Ii and serve the dual functions of (1) simulating t internal impedance of the telephone set when off-hook or otherwise disconnect from the line, and (2) generating and applying a fluctuating hold indicating sig across the line (in conjunction with the periodic shunting of at least one of th impedanee elements by optical isolator 334). Although resistive or ot impedance elements can be used in lieu of zener diodes 330 and 332 to provide t abovementioned dual functions, the zener diodes are preferred because of th ability to compensate for large variations in the loop impedance of the telepho line. In particular, this loop impedance varies, for example, with the distance the customers installation from the central office and with the type and size conductors used in the telephone line. If ordinary impedance elements are used one of both of the zener diodes 330 and 332, it is necessary to uniquely select adjust the values of such elements relative to the line impedance for ea installation. In contrast, the zener diodes, because of the nature of their spec breakdown voltage versus current characteristics, automatically adjust the curr and voltage levels for proper operation of the voltage level detecting function network 306. Such automatic adjustment or compensation has proved success for most all installations, embracing a wide range of distances from the cent office and thus wide range of line impedance levels. The amplitude of t fluctuations of the hold indicating signal which appear on the line do not affect t switching functions at the central office since the fluctuating signal is terminat into a large inductive coil at the central office end of the line and since t inherent distributed resistance, capacitance and inductance of the line significan attenuate the fluctuating hold indicating signal before it reaches the central offi equipment.
Also, the periodic shunting of zener diode 330 serves in the bro sense as a means for varying the magnitude of the terminating impedance, and t while the short circuit shunting of diode 330 has been found to provide shar defined and easily detected voltage fluctuations it will be recognized that other impedance varying means may be used.
To place L2 in a hold condition, line interface circuit 40, sensing circuit 60 and hold initiating transistor network 808 of line select circuit 80 ' function in an identical manner to that described above for line Ii to cause a hold indicating signal to be generated and applied to line L2 at the output signal rate of hold flash generator 90. In this instance, indicator light IL2 and its counterparts in the control units 'associated with stations #2-N will display the on/off hold indicating signal to indicate that line L2 rather than line Ii is on hold. The hold condition existing on either of the lines is terminated by the same procedure that is described above for initiating an outgoing call or receiving an incoming call. Thus, to terminate a hold condition on line Ii, the handset of the telephone at any of the available stations is lifted off the cradle and Ii select switch Si is depressed. The line relay 24 hereupon operates to connect Ii to the T' and R' terminals of the telephone set 13 thereby connecting the internal impedance of the telephone set across line Ii and forcing the dc voltage on Ii to assume the off-hook level which lies below the breakdown voltage of zener diode 316. In other words, the internal impedance of the telephone set is such as to mask the maximum voltage produced by zener diodes 330 and 332, thereby preventing the voltage from reaching the breakdown threshold of zener diode 316.
Connection 38 and signal bus 546 thereupon assume a steady +Vcc voltage level. The disappearance of the low-going fluctuations on bus 546 allows
-capacitor 564 of hold latching network 542 to accumulate a steady positive charge that raises the voltage at pins 2 and 6 of timer circuit 560 to its switching threshold, forcing output pin 3 to go low to ground potential and thereby deenergizing hold relay coil 29a. ' Contacts 29c of the hold relay open and thus unlatch the hold relay terminating the hold mode and allowing circuit 810 of line select switching network 802 to latch line relay 24 in a condition that maintains Ii connected to the station's set. Establishing a Conference Call
Many times it will be desirable to join both lines Ii and L2 to the station set 13 in order to permit a conference call between the party at the station and two remote parties connected separately over lines Ii and L2. Usually, the conference call will be established after a call between the station and a remote party has been effected over one of the lines and that line is placed in a hold condition in order to receive or place a second call over the opposite line.
Taking each of these examples in succession, first assume that a call is in progress over Ii and control unit 14 of Figure 3 has connected Ii to the
IJURE T
OMPI
,Λ>^_ W1PO - station's telephone set 13. Now a ringing signal appears on L2 representing a incoming call. The party at station #1 tells the remote party on Ii that he is goin to place the latter on hold which he does by depressing hold select switch S3. Lin Ii is thereby released from the T' and R' output conductors of unit 14 by th • opening of line relay contacts 24b and 24c. Set 13 is thus available for connectio to L2 and the party at station- #1 accomplishes this by depressing line select switc S2. The control unit responds by energizing relay 26 and thus closing 26b and 26 coupling the telephone set to L2 and the party at station #1 answers the caller o L2 who is to be the third party to the three-point conference. Now with Ii on hold and L2 connected to the station's set, th conference call is established by simultaneously depressing both line selec switches SI and S2. The closure of the SI contacts applies +Vce to both pins 2 and of circuit 810 of network 802 forcing pin 3 of circuit 810 to deenergize the lin relay 24 and connect Ii through contacts 24b and 24c to the station's set. L2 i already connected to the station's set through the contacts 24b and 24c which hav been previously closed by circuit 840 and continue to remain closed when lin select switch S2 applies +Vcc to both input pins 2 and 6 of circuit 840.
By simultaneously depressing Si and S2, the automatic dumping of th opposite telephone line through the cross coupled circuits formed by seriall connected diode 860 and capacitor 862 and serially connected diode 834 an capacitor 830 is negated by the overriding, positive voltages applied to the inp pins of circuits 810 and 840 from the simultaneously closed contacts of SI and S For example, when SI is depressed, a positive voltage spike is applied to circuit 85 via diode 860 and capacitor 862 which tries to force input pin 2 of circuit 840 to g to ground potential via resistor 854. However, at the same time S2 overrides' th low going output of circuit 850 and maintains input pin 2 at +Vec to hold circuit 84 in a state that continues to energize L2 line relay 26.
Similarly, the low going signal normally applied to input , pin 2 o circuit 810 through resistor 826 when S2 is depressed is overridden by the direc application of +Vcc to input pin 2 by the simultaneous closure of the SI contacts.
Both lines Ii and L2 are thereby jointly connected to the telephon set and will remain so until the three-point conference call has been completed an one or both of lines Ii and L2 are to be disconnected.
At the end of the conference call, if both callers are to b disconnected, then the party at station #1 simply hangs up station's set 13. Bot lines Ii and L2 assume their respective on-hook conditions and force the circuitr of control unit 14 to switch line relays 24 and 26 so as to restore the system to a idle state. If only one of the remote calls is to be disconnected, then the party at station #1 simply presses the opposite line select switch. Thus, if the con erence caller on Ii is to be disconnected and the call on L2 is to be continued, then line select switch S2 is depressed thereby automatically dumping line Ii in the manner described above under the section on terminating a call.
It is also possible to place both of the remote parties on hold in order to split the calls for talking to the remote parties individually, or allowing another station to talk to one of the remote callers while station #1 resumes its conversation with the remaining remote party. When hold select switch S3 is depressed, the above described hold control circuitry associated with both Ii and L2 is activated placing both lines Ii and L2 in a hold status. Now any one of stations #1-N may pick up one of the lines by depressing the appropriate select switch to connect the associated telephone set to the selected line. The other line remains on hold and may be picked up at another station. Installation of KTS 11
In installing KTS 11 at a particular location, consideration should be given to the relationship between the ability of the line interface circuit 30 to discern between on-hook and off-hook signal conditions and the type of central office involved and distance of the KTS stations from the central office. For central offices that require approximately 45 milliamperes of initial current flow to seize a line in response to an off-hook condition at the customer station, reliable operation of KTS U has been achieved for line distances of up to 1 mile from the central office. For central offices that need only 36 milliamperes of initial current flow to seize a line when it goes off-hook, then the system has operated reliably at distances of as much as 1 to 2 miles.
Furthermore, the capability of the various control units to reliably detect a fluctuating hold indicating signal generated by a control unit at another station (and to consistently suppress such signal when the telephone set is taken off-hook at another station) depends, among other factors, on the line distance or distances between stations, and on the line distances from such stations to the central office. In particular, for a KTS 11 installation that is at a relatively long distance from the central office such that the control units are separated from the central office voltage source by a substantial amount of loop impedance, then the fluctuating hold signal can be consistently detected (and consistently suppressed by the off-hook impedance of a telephone set) over interstation distances of more than one mile.
When, however, KTS 11 is installed relatively close to the central office, then there is a lesser amount of loop impedance between the voltage source and the control units. Consequently, the interstation distance ov which the fluctuating signal can be reliably detected (and suppressed)is diminish because of the greater influence of the central office source voltage on the varyi line voltage at the control units, and the limits of the permissible interstati distance, for reliable operation, are reduced in proportion to. the proximity of t installation to the central office. For example, with the embodiment disclos herein, at an installation distance of 1000 feet or less from the central office, t interstation separation should be limited to a maximum of one mile.
Although the above installation considerations are stated with respe to line distances, it will be recognized that there are other variables, including wi size and type, which to a lesser extent affect the loop impedance and thus w alter somewhat the permissible interstation distances.
While only a limited number of embodiments of the present inventi have been disclosed, it will be readily apparent to persons skilled in the art th numerous changes and modifications may be made to these embodiments witho departing from the spirit of the invention. For example, the particular circuit used for sensing the hold condition signal (e.g., sensing circuits 50 and 60 of unit 1 and for selecting the lines (line select circuit 80 of unit 14) can be modified various ways, such as by using primarily digital logic circuitry for these functio rather than the disclosed analog type of circuits. Nevertheless, the basic principl of the hold control circuitry which cooperates with the sensing and line sele circuits through the line interface circuit, will remain the same.

Claims

The embodiments of the invention in which an exclusive property or privilege is claimed are defined as follows:
1. A hold control circuit for a telephone system of the type that includes a telephone line extending between a central office and a telephone set ' which has an internal line terminating impedance, and that signals the central office of an off-hook condition by connecting said internal line terminating impedance across the line when the telephone set is off-hook, and that signals the central office of an on-hook condition by disconnecting said internal line terminating impedance from across the line when said telephone set is on-hook, said circuit comprising: hold condition line terminating impedance means that when connected across said line simulates an off-hook condition on said line even though the internal line terminating impedance of the telephone set is disconnected from the line; means for connecting said hold condition line terminating impedance means across the line; means for varying said hold condition line terminating impedance means to cause a varying voltage signal to appear on the line signalling that the line is in a hold condition; means for sensing said varying voltage signal; and means responsive to said means for sensing for indicating that the line is in said hold condition.
2. The hold control circuit of Claim 1, wherein said hold condition line terminating impedance means comprises at least one device having voltage versus current breakdown characteristics.
3. The hold control circuit of Claim 1, wherein said hold condition line terminating impedance means comprises first and second serially connected impedance elements and said means for varying said hold condition line terminating impedance means comprises means for periodically shunting one of said first and second impedance elements.
4. The hold control circuit of Claim 3, wherein at least one of said first and second impedance elements is a device having voltage versus current breakdown characteristics.
5. The hold control circuit of Claim 3, wherein said first and second impedance elements are semiconductors having avalanche-breakdown characteristics.
6. The hold control circuit of Claim 1, wherein said hold condiiton line terminating impedance means comprises first and second serially c se mi-conductors, each having avalanche-breakdown voltage versus curre characteristics, and said means for varying said impedance comprises switchi
- means connected in shunt about one of said semiconductors for periodically sho circuiting such semiconductor.
7. A hold condition indicating circuit for a telephone system the type that includes a telephone line extending between a central office and telephone set, and that signals the central office of an off-hook condition of sai telephone set by connecting a line terminating impedance across the line when sai telephone set is off-hook, and that signals the central office of an onhook conditi by disconnecting said line terminating impedance from across the line when sa telephone set is on-hook, said circuit comprising: a hold condition impedance means that when connected across sa line terminates said line so as to simulate an off-hook condition on said line ev though the line terminating impedance of the telephone set is disconnected fro the line; a hold condition signal generator means for selectively producing hold indicating signal that when applied to the line indicates that the line is in hold condition; a hold condition switching means having first and second states, sa hold condition switching means normally assuming said first state and bei switchable to said second state in which it connects said hold condition impedan means across the line and causes said hold condition signal generator means apply said hold indicating signal to the line, said hold condition switching mea when in its first state disconnecting said hold condition impedance from across t line and causing said hold condition signal generator means to remove said ho indicating signal from the line; manually aetuable means for causing said hold condition switchi means to switch from its first state to its second state; and means for automatically causing said hold condition switching mea to revert to its first state when the line terminating impedance of a telephone s is connected across the line.
8. The hold condition indicating circuit of Claim 7, wherein sa hold condition impedance means comprises at least one device having volta versus current breakdown characteristics.
9. The hold condition indicating circuit of Claim 7, wherein sa hold condition impedance means comprises first and second serially connect impedance elements, and said hold condition signal generator means compris means for periodically shunting one of said first and second impedance elements produce said hold indicating signal on said line.
10. The hold condition indicating circuit of Claim 9, wherein at least one of said first and second impedance elements is a semiconductor having avalanche-breakdown, voltage versus current characteristics.
11. The hold condition indicating circuit of Claim 9, wherein both said first and second impedance elements are semiconductors having avalanche- breakdown, voltage versus current characteristics.
12. In a key telephone system for use with at least first and second telephone lines extending from a central office to at least first and second telephone stations, in which each station has an associated telephone set and a control unit that includes first and second switching means for separately connecting a selected one of the first and second lines, respectively, to the telephone set at the associated station for establishing telephonic communication on the selected line with a remote party's line through a connection in the central office, the combination therewith of first and second hold control means in at least one of the control units for separately placing a selected one of the first and second lines that has been previously connected to the telephone set at the associated station in a hold condition, each of said first and second hold control means comprising: a hold condition switching means, a line terminating impedance means, a hold condition signal generator means, a line condition sensing means and a line condition indicating means; said hold condition switching means of said first hold control means coupling said line terminating impedance means and said hold condition signal generator means of said first hold control means to the first line when the first line is to be placed in a hold condition, and said hold condition switching means of said second hold control means coupling said line terminating impedance means and said hold condition signal generator means of said second hold control means to the second line when the second line is to be placed in a hold condition, said line terminating impedance means of said first and second hold control means when coupled to the first and second lines, respectively, causing the central office to maintain the connections with the remote partys' lines, and each of said hold condition signal generator means of said first and second hold control means when coupled to said first and second lines, respectively, producing a hold condition indicating signal on the respective line; and said line condition sensing means of said first hold control means sensing the presence of a hold condition indicating signal on the first line, and said line condition sensing means of said second hold control means sensing the presence
BUREAU
OMPl
' ' of a hold condition indicating signal on the second line, each of said line conditio indicating means of said first and second hold control means being separatel responsive to said line condition sensing means of said first and second hold contr means, respectively, so that the presence of said hold condition indicating signal o ; either or both of said first and second lines are indicated.
13. The key telephone system of Claim 12, wherein each of sai line terminating impedance means of said first and second hold control mea comprises at least a first impedance element that has an impedance such that whe connected across the associated one of said lines causes a predetermined minimu loop current to flow in the telephone line that is sufficient to cause the centr office to maintain a pre-established connection to a remote party's line, an wherein each of said hold condition signal generator means comprises means f periodically shunting said first impedance element of the associated said lin terminating impedance means to cause a fluctuating voltage to be developed acro the associated one of said lines for representing said hold condition indicatin signal, and wherein said first and second line condition sensing means eac including means for detecting said fluctuating voltage on the associated one of sai first and second lines.
14. The key telephone system of Claim 13, wherein said fir impedance elements of each of said line terminating impedance means comprises device having voltage versus current breakdown characteristics.
15. The key telephone system of Claim 13, wherein each of sai line terminating impedance means further comprises a second impedance eleme serially connected with said first impedance element, and said means f periodically shunting said first impedance element includes means for periodicall eausing a short circuit shunt around said first impedance element such that sai fluctuating voltage swings between a maximum voltage equal to the sum of th individual voltages across said first and second impedance elements and a minimu voltage due solely to the voltage across said second impedance element.
16. The key telephone system of Claim 15, wherein said fir impedance element of each of said line terminating impedance means comprises semiconductor device having avalanche-breakdown, voltage versus curre characteristics.
17. The key telephone system of Claim 16, wherein said secon impedance element of each of said line terminating impedance means comprises semiconductor device having avalanche-breakdown, voltage versus curre characteristics.
18. The key telephone system of Claim 12, wherein . each of sa hold condition signal generator means include means for producing a hold condition indicating signal that fluctuates between a predetermined maximum voltage and a predetermined minimum voltage, and wherein said line condition sensing means of each of said first and second hold control means includes means for detecting whether the voltage on the associated one of said first and second lines is above or below a predetermined threshold voltage, said predetermined threshold voltage being selected to lie between said predetermined maximum and minimum voltages of the fluctuating hold condition indicating signal.
19. The key telephone system of Claim 18, wherein each of said first and second telephone lines assumes a predetermined on-hook voltage when a telephone set that is connected to the line is on-hook and wherein each of said first and second telephone lines assumes a predetermined off-hook voltage when a telephone set that is connected to the line is off-hook, said predetermined maximum voltage being less than said on-hook voltage and said predetermined threshold voltage being greater than said off-hook voltage, and said first and second hold control means each further comprising means for causing their respective hold condition switching means to decouple said line terminating impedance means and said hold condition signal generator means from said lines when such lines assume said off-hook voltages.
'BUREAU
OMPI V
PCT/US1978/000056 1977-08-01 1978-07-28 Hold control for a key telephone system WO1979000078A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US820785 1977-08-01
US05/820,785 US4132860A (en) 1977-08-01 1977-08-01 Hold control for a key telephone system
US05/842,569 US4133985A (en) 1977-10-17 1977-10-17 Key telephone system

Publications (1)

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WO1979000078A1 true WO1979000078A1 (en) 1979-02-22

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PCT/US1978/000056 WO1979000078A1 (en) 1977-08-01 1978-07-28 Hold control for a key telephone system

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WO (1) WO1979000078A1 (en)

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3246082A (en) * 1962-03-26 1966-04-12 Levy Alfred Telephone hold program system
US3870831A (en) * 1973-06-27 1975-03-11 William I Mccarley Telephone hold circuit
US3906168A (en) * 1973-12-12 1975-09-16 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Visual status indicator circuit
US3909554A (en) * 1974-08-23 1975-09-30 Lordel Manufacturing Company Control circuit for key telephone system
US3916116A (en) * 1973-12-12 1975-10-28 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Hold bridge circuit
US4011413A (en) * 1976-01-12 1977-03-08 Gimix, Inc. Hold circuit for telephone
US4090038A (en) * 1977-07-14 1978-05-16 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Audio signal on hold circuit
US4093830A (en) * 1976-11-18 1978-06-06 Vortex Design Ltd. Key telephone system line circuit

Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3246082A (en) * 1962-03-26 1966-04-12 Levy Alfred Telephone hold program system
US3870831A (en) * 1973-06-27 1975-03-11 William I Mccarley Telephone hold circuit
US3906168A (en) * 1973-12-12 1975-09-16 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Visual status indicator circuit
US3916116A (en) * 1973-12-12 1975-10-28 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Hold bridge circuit
US3909554A (en) * 1974-08-23 1975-09-30 Lordel Manufacturing Company Control circuit for key telephone system
US4011413A (en) * 1976-01-12 1977-03-08 Gimix, Inc. Hold circuit for telephone
US4093830A (en) * 1976-11-18 1978-06-06 Vortex Design Ltd. Key telephone system line circuit
US4090038A (en) * 1977-07-14 1978-05-16 Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated Audio signal on hold circuit

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
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