Tag Archives: relay logic

Telco X-Bar Switch (part 2)

In the first part of this series I touched on the evolution of (landline) telephone switching — which began with operators handling calls manually and which ultimately became the job of computers.

One of the last stages along the way was an electro-mechanical relay-logic marvel of unsurpassed engineering complexity, the #5 Crossbar Switch.

The last post introduced the switch fabric through which calls are routed. This post explores how that fabric is controlled and what happens when we pick up the phone, dial it, and are connected to the remote end.

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Telco X-Bar Switch (part 1)

My fascination with relay-controlled systems begins in the mid-1970s when I stumble on two sets of bound documents for the PBX in an office that went out of business. The ledger-sized one (17″×11″) had circuit and logic diagrams; the page-sized one (8½”×11″) had descriptions of the diagrams and PBX operation (see SB #61: Tock for more).

I spent many hours studying those books but only ever figured out the basics. These telephone switches are among the most complex electro-mechanical machines we’ve designed.

This series of posts explores this last species of telephone switch controlled entirely by relay logic: the #5 Crossbar Switch.

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Sideband #61: Tock

relaysYou’ve been waiting for the other shoe to drop, right? The tick to finally tock? (My clock is — as usual — running a bit behind; this should be #62, but that’s another story.) Today’s tale involves electro-mechanical logic! Computing with relays rather than solid-state gates.

Rather than the tick-tock of a mechanical clock, the tock-tick of lots and lots of relays! Aisle after aisle of racks of relays, many thousands of them all clicking away like chattering insects. That’s what is (or was) inside some of those windowless buildings found in every neighborhood with local phone service.

However, today the focus is quite a bit smaller…

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