Dear all,
I am in many amateur dramatics societies and in one of them we would like to make two telephones ring onstage. This involves sending a signal down a line to the phones. I was hoping to find an old telephone exchange system, but no luck yet.
I have found a few ideas for circuits, but would ideally like to make a ringer output that is realistic. This would be about 70-80v at 25Hz. I cannot find any way to make a basic analogue frequency divider, so wonder whether my best bet is as follows:
I use a 3:1 transformer to take mains UK voltage from 240v to 80v.
I then full-wave rectify that to make 80v DC.
I use an oscillator circuit to create 25Hz and put it through a relay (power transistor?) to pulse the 80v into a square-wave AC signal.
Would this work, or can anybody think of a better/simpler way of doing it, please?
Also, as it's a long time since I did any real electronics (GCSEs in 1997!) could somebody please remind me of the basics of creating the 25Hz please?
Many many thanks!
Thomas
I am in many amateur dramatics societies and in one of them we would like to make two telephones ring onstage. This involves sending a signal down a line to the phones. I was hoping to find an old telephone exchange system, but no luck yet.
I have found a few ideas for circuits, but would ideally like to make a ringer output that is realistic. This would be about 70-80v at 25Hz. I cannot find any way to make a basic analogue frequency divider, so wonder whether my best bet is as follows:
I use a 3:1 transformer to take mains UK voltage from 240v to 80v.
I then full-wave rectify that to make 80v DC.
I use an oscillator circuit to create 25Hz and put it through a relay (power transistor?) to pulse the 80v into a square-wave AC signal.
Would this work, or can anybody think of a better/simpler way of doing it, please?
Also, as it's a long time since I did any real electronics (GCSEs in 1997!) could somebody please remind me of the basics of creating the 25Hz please?
Many many thanks!
Thomas