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GET
IT RIGHT!
or
PEDANT'S CORNER
As
with most professional disciplines,
telecommunications has a vocabulary all of its own.
Some collectors and enthusiasts coming from a
different background may accidentally misuse the
terminology, which is unfortunate.
Ringer Ringer is an alternative word for
bell or sounder. The magneto generator used for
ringing bells is not a ringer.
Lineman
or linesman? A lineman repairs telephone (or
electricity) wires (remember the song Wichita
Lineman?). A linesman (with an S) is someone who
runs around a football field.
Bulldog
transmitters These are Bakelite-cased
replacements for the original solid back transmitters
used on American telephones. Although we had similar
kinds of replacement transmitters in Britain, they
were never called Bulldogs.
Crank
telephones These are what some Americans call
magneto phones. We may have crank telephone calls in
Britain but we don't have crank telephones. It's as
bad as calling a steam locomotive's chimney its
'funnel' - it's just not done!
Inset
or insert? Transmitter, that is. The correct
name for a transmitter or microphone capsule is inset
although the other term is also used.
Handset Handset is a shortened from of
'hand combination set' and refers to the combined
microphone and receiver that you hold to your head.
To use the word handset to mean a complete telephone
is not the done thing.
Block
terminal Not the nicest of expressions! The
proper name is Terminal Block but because it was
listed in the PO Rate Book as a 'Block, Terminal' the
about-face name has stuck.
Telephone To most people the word telephone
means a complete telephone instrument. Old radio
books and pedantic people use the term to mean the
receiver device only, which is how we get (by
analogy) 'headphone' and 'earphone'.
Jacks
and plugs Some people are unclear which is
which. The jack (originally springjack or
jack-knife switch) is the socket into which the
plug
is inserted. There's no need to call the plug a
jackplug
unless the meaning is really unclear.
Cross-arms These are used when an overhead
telephone line makes a 90-degree turn, to cross a
road, river or railway line. In this situation two
sets of arms are used, set as right angles. On normal
pole routes you have arms and it is wrong to
call these cross-arms because they are not! By
the way, we call all poles telegraph poles,
regardless of whether they carry telephone or
telegraph circuits. They correctly call them
telephone poles in America but things are different
there, as everyone knows!
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