I have noticed phones with a handset (like the one in the image) have a little cover that resembles something like a cold camera shoe under the bottom of the handset’s top speaker holder. Is there a use for it? It has a line bump in the middle, but it doesn’t go all the way from both sides, it leaves a gap. I have also seem some of them have extra space on the top of the cover, and some don’t.

  • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If you’re talking about this thing, it serves two purposes. It is the hook that opens and closes the line (hangs up and picks up the phone), and it is used by this thing

    to keep the handset from falling off the base when it’s mounted on a wall.

    • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Or maybe you meant this thing. Yeah, it keeps the handset in when the base is mounted vertical. You can see that it’s slanted in the back.

      That’s so it slides in and out on this other slanted lip on the handset instead of getting caught on it. You can take the handset off just by pulling it directly away from the wall.

      • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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        601 year ago

        Btw, on Trimline phones it is reversible for if you’re not hanging it on a wall. It looks like this when you pull it out.

      • Em Adespoton
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        341 year ago

        Exactly this. It’s called a “hook” and when the phone is “off the hook” that’s the thing it is off of. Being off the hook means the phone is powered up and connected to the local loop. When the phone is “on hook” that means it is disconnected from the loop and awaiting the pulsed ring signal.

        Desk phones have a reversible hook so that it keeps the button depressed when the phone is in the cradle but doesn’t catch when you attempt to pick it up.

        On modem signals in the old days, the + was equivalent to “flashing” the hook, or quickly disconnecting and reconnecting to the loop, and the AT command H1 told the modem to go “on hook” while H0 told it to go “off hook”.

        Back before the DTMF network, when everyone used pulse modulated phones, the “pulses” were caused by going in and off hook in a specific pattern. You could actually make a phone call from a rotary payphone by flashing the hook in the pattern that mimicked the rotary dial pulsing the line as it rotated back to home position.

        In the really old days, the hand crank served much the same purpose, but actually supplied electricity to the local loop; when the phone was on hook (which was a big metal thing the earpiece sat in) someone else turning the crank would make all the phones on the loop ring; you picked up if the ring matched the number of rings for your extension.

        • Mwalimu
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          61 year ago

          Me, deep in the night, reading about modem signals and off the hook. I love forum threads. They have taught me more than I can imagine.

        • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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          61 year ago

          Yes! Another phone nerd!

          One small clarification. There’s not really anything special to the pulses for pulse dialing. One pulse for the number 1, all the way to nine pulses for number 9, and then ten pulses for a number 0.

          • @froh42@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            In the 80s there was a way to cheat phone booths in Germany: With a small tool that had an adjustment screw you could position the hook switch to an exact position where the phone booth had already connected the line but did not yet power up the rest of the machinery (including coin counters)

            You could then call arbitrary nunbers by pulse dialing using the hook switch (the rotary dial was still powered down)

            Basically a EU pulse dial version of phreaking.

            My father, who died this year, used this a lot too make “free” calls in the 80s.

        • @SgtAStrawberry@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          So that’s how you used the old hand crank phones, I never know. I thought you turned the crank to get power into the phone and then told the person working the switch bord who you want is to talk to. And that when you were telling you sometimes needed to re turn the crank to get more power.

        • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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          181 year ago

          And the even older design that didn’t even have a bell integrated in the base. The bell was in a separate bell box.

          • @hperrin@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Or one of these real old designs that didn’t even have a bell. It has a buzzer that’s barely audible (it might even just be the phone’s speaker, idk). Also, the microphone and the earpiece aren’t in a convenient handset.

            This one is a replica made in probably the 1970s or 1980s. It’s funny, when it was made it was a replica of something vintage, but now it actually is vintage.

        • RBG
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          171 year ago

          Well, cannot be wall-mounted like the one in your picture but those phones did get wall-mounted in slightly different shape. 1000038469

      • @AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world
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        61 year ago

        Like and follow for more astonishing technologies from bygone eras!

        (Do people really no longer have phones on their desks or what?)