Telephone plug
A telephone plug is a type of connector used to connect a telephone set to the telephone wiring inside a building, establishing a connection to a telephone network. It is inserted into its counterpart, a telephone jack, commonly affixed to a wall or baseboard. The standard for telephone plugs varies from country to country, though the RJ11 modular connector has become by far the most common.
A connection standard, such as RJ11, specifies not only the physical aspects of an electrical connector, but also the pinout, i.e. the assignment or function of each contact.[1] Modular connectors are specified for the registered jack (RJ) series of connectors, as well as for Ethernet and other connectors, such as 4P4C (4 position, 4 contacts) modular connectors, the de facto standard on handset cords,[2] often improperly[3][4] referred to as RJ connectors.
History
Historically telephones were typically owned by the telephone company and were usually permanently wired to the telephone line. However, for many installations it was necessary or convenient to provide mobile telephone sets that could be moved to a different location within the customer's premises. For this purpose telephone companies developed jacks and plugs with a varying number of contacts. Before 1930 concentric connectors with three contacts were sufficient.
The most common connector type in the Bell System in the United States was developed by 1930. It was a cube-shaped four-prong connector type (No. 238) with uneven prong spacings to prevent improper insertion of the plug into the jack (type 404). This type was redesigned as a round version (No. 505A) in the mid 1960s. The four-prong connector type was used for several decades until it was superseded by the modular connector in the 1970s.
Many countries initially used different specifications for connectors, and some national connector types remain in service, but few are used for new installations for which modular connector types are prescribed.
Photos
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Bell system line cord with a 505A type plug as used in the mid-1960s
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The front of a US four-pronged telephone jack, 1964
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The back of a US four-pronged telephone jack, 1964
Connections
The installation of a conventional wired telephone set has four connection points, each of which may be hardwired, but more often use a plug and socket:
- telephone line to phone cord: The wall jack. This connection is the most standardized, and often regulated as the boundary between an individual's telephone and the telephone network. In many residences, though, the boundary between utility-owned and household-owned cabling is a network interface on an outside wall; all wall jacks in the home are part of the household's internal wiring.
- telephone cord to telephone set base: This connection is generally not regulated, but instead follows de facto standards. It is often a 6P4C connector, which is often RJ11, but may be proprietary or hardwired.
- telephone set base to handset cord: By de facto standard, this is usually a 4P4C connector.
- handset cord to handset: The handset end of the straight-through handset cord also uses a 4P4C connector.
Some of these may be absent: Wired telephones may not have a separate base and handset. The defining characteristic of wireless telephones is that they do not have a handset cord, and the defining characteristic of mobile telephones is that they do not have a phone cord.
Wiring
A standard specifies both a physical connector and how it is wired. Sometimes the same connector is used by different countries but wired in different ways.
For example, telephone cables in the UK typically have a BS 6312 (UK standard) plug at the wall end and a 6P4C or 6P2C modular connector at the telephone end: this latter may be wired as per the RJ11 standard (with pins 3 and 4), or it may be wired with pins 2 and 5, as a straight through cable from the BT plug (which uses pins 2 and 5 for the line, unlike RJ11, which uses pins 3 and 4). Thus cables are not in general compatible between different phones, as the phone base may have a socket with pins 2 and 5 (requiring a straight through cable), or have an RJ11 socket (requiring a crossover cable).
When modular connectors are used, the latch release of the connector should be on the ridge side of flat phone wire in order to maintain polarity.
Though four wires are typically used in U.S. phone cabling, only two are necessary for telecommunication. In the event that a second line is needed, the other two are used. They are also sometimes used to provide power for telephone dial lamps (6 volts AC, as in the Princess phone), or other features.
Compatibility
Different telephone connections are generally compatible with the use of an adapter: the physical connector and its wiring is the primary incompatibility.
See: gallery of telephone adapters.
List of plugs
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Modular connectors
- 4P4C and 4P2C for handset cables (often erroneously referred to as RJ9, RJ10, and RJ22)
- 6P2C for RJ11 single telephone line
- 6P4C for RJ14 two telephone lines
- 6P6C for RJ25 three telephone lines
- 8P8C for RJ61X four telephone lines, RJ48S and RJ48C for four-wire data lines, RJ31X single telephone line with equipment disconnect, RJ38X (similar to RJ31X but with continuity circuit)
Other connectors
- 50-pin miniature ribbon connector for RJ21X, used for up to 25 lines for multiline phones such as the ITT 2564, key telephone systems such as the 1A2 Key System, and PBX systems.
International standards
- RJ11, by far the most common
- BS 6312, British
- F-010, French
- TAE connector, German
National standards
- TDO-connector, Austria
- WT-4, Polish National Standard
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WT-4 and RJ11 telephone socket (double system)
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WT-4 telephone plug with RJ11 outlet (adapter)
- WT-4
- RJ11
- Cable holes
Traditionally, the 5th plastic pin disconnects 1 μF capacitor that shorts telephone line while plug is not inserted into socket. In modern makes it does nothing electrical, and capacitor compartment was reused for additional RJ11 socket.
Legacy
- 600 series connector, Australia
- Protea, South Africa
- SS 455 15 50, Sweden and Iceland
- Telebrás plug, Brazil
- Tripolar plug, Italy
- BTicino 2021 (with or without line interruption), Italy (rare)
List of telephone connectors used in various countries and territories
- This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
This list covers only single line telephone plugs commonly used in homes and other small installations; there are 44 different variations of plugs, including an Israeli version of BS6312 with different internal wiring of the pins, plus hard wiring to a junction box with no adapter. Special telephone sets use a variety of special plugs, for example micro ribbon for key telephone systems.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 Used in older installations
- ↑ Used for ADSL
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Used in newer installations
- ↑ Currently the dominant plug
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Often, although incorrectly referred to as "RJ45"
- 1 2 Used for ISDN
- ↑ Although other types can also be found
- ↑ Used for ISDN, Digital PBX, and office systems
- ↑ Official standard
- ↑ The old standard deprecated officially after 2002 but still used generally.
- ↑ Same plug used for POTS, ISDN and LAN
- ↑ For local battery telephones, not used since approximately 1980
- ↑ Also known as R.I.T.A.
- ↑ Rarely used today
- ↑ Same as the Polish WT-4
- ↑ Used for ADSL modem lines in British telephone sockets
See also
References
- ↑ Semenov, Andrey B.; Strizhakov, Stanislav K.; Suncheley, Igor R. (October 3, 2002). "Electrical Cable Connectors". Structured cable systems (1st ed.). Springer. p. 129. ISBN 3-540-43000-8.
The abbreviation for registered jack, RJ defines a particular wiring scheme of individual wires into outlet contacts. For example, a 6-position outlet may be wired to RJ-11C scheme (one pair), RJ-14C (two pairs), or RJ-25C (three pairs).
- ↑ BICSI (October 7, 2002). "Background Information". Telecommunications Cabling Installation (2nd ed.). McGraw-Hill Professional. p. 88. ISBN 0-07-140979-3.
4-position and 4-contact connectors are used primarily for telephone handset cords.
- ↑ Trulove, James (December 19, 2005). "User Cords and Connectors". LAN wiring (3rd ed.). McGraw-Hill Professional. p. 219. ISBN 0-07-145975-8.
This 8-pin modular plug is probably the most subject to name abuse, because it resembles the specialized RJ-45 connector. However, the RJ-45 wiring pattern (which includes an interface programming resistor) is so radically different from that of T568A and B that it really should not be called by that name at all.
- ↑ Oliviero, Andrew; Woodward, Bill (July 20, 2009). "Connectors". Cabling: The Complete Guide to Copper and Fiber-Optic Networking (4th ed.). Sybex. p. 294. ISBN 0-470-47707-5.
The RJ (registered jack) prefix is one of the most widely (and incorrectly) used prefixes in the computer industry; nearly everyone, including people working for cabling companies, is guilty of referring to an eight-position modular jack (sometimes called an 8P8C) as an RJ-45.
- ↑ "Columbia/Venezuela phone plug". Archived from the original on April 13, 2008.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Telephone adaptor. |
- Telephone plug list — at Steve Kropla's World Wide Phone Guide
- How to install telephone wiring