I was wondering if it is possible if I could use a cordless telephone as a way to connect a modem from a wireless location. Any insight into making this work will be helpful.
Block Diagram:
Telephone Jack >> Cordless Phone Base <<>> Cordless Phone handset >> US Robotics 56k v90 dialup modem.
This 'project' is so I can connect wirelessly to the internet using my laptop.
Hi Harrison,
I have been looking for the very same thing. The telephone manufacturers are missing a good selling point by not including a jack on their headsets.
Have been looking at telephone schematics and they use a duplex (send/receive at the same time) system whereas a regular phone jack uses two wires (serial).
All the conversion is done by their send and receive circuitry in the handset and base. Maybe someone can help us. Al whitmire
Hi Harrison,
I have been looking for the very same thing. The telephone manufacturers are missing a good selling point by not including a jack on their headsets.
Have been looking at telephone schematics and they use a duplex (send/receive at the same time) system whereas a regular phone jack uses two wires (serial).
All the conversion is done by their send and receive circuitry in the handset and base. Maybe someone can help us. Al whitmire
You could use an acoustic coupler to couple your modem to your phone handset. I haven't tried it yet but I am going to. Probably not good for much but it should work.
Thanks a lot cybOrg777
I am going to try this device on an old computer (running Win 95) that resides in our kitchen without a phone connection.
Have all the stuff needed and it should be fun to build.
Again, Thanks
Al Whitmire
If you have Cellphones working, Laptop can accommodate using bluetooth- if i am right . you can have data from cellphones by arrangement with the provider. Land line phones can also be managed if the distance between the phone and Laptop. -- not cases where you try to retransmit by RF and send it a mile across formland.
As Nigel put it, one could go for ADSL with wireless routers.
You'd be lucky to get 9600 baud using an acoustically coupled cordless phone. I'm not even sure if most cordless phones are capable of truly full duplex operation.
You'd be lucky to get 9600 baud using an acoustically coupled cordless phone. I'm not even sure if most cordless phones are capable of truly full duplex operation.
o phone basis and with direct modem dialing a call (no Phone instrument or acoustic), we are able to reach 19.6Kbpsway back in 1999-- so if tranformer coupling is adopted at the handset cable( instead of hand set, it would go to a jack where 2 matching transformers are wires to simulate mic and speaker) or a single hybrid formation (electronice 4wire to 2 wire conversion) this could be connected to the laptip interface.
The other parameters restricting the thro put would be network clock synchronisation of digital swithes maintained by the service providers from where your connection is taken.
perhaps you could achieve 9.6Kbps if not 19.6KBPS. It is a process for training only.
if your using a phone modem; then why not leave the model attached to the port, and just get a wireless printer port/serialle port transmitter and receiver.
Much easier and simpler to do
I was wondering if it is possible if I could use a cordless telephone as a way to connect a modem from a wireless location. Any insight into making this work will be helpful.