Overview
The Link
telephone intercom is designed around two ICs. The first,
IC1, is an NE 556 dual timer chip, which is wired up to
provide dial tone, ring tone (busy tone too, which will be
explained along with a few add-ons to be mentioned later
on) and ring pulses for the ringer circuit attached to each
line circuit. The other chip, IC 2, is a CD 4017B decade
counter, which is wired to count each train of dial pulses
as they are received and buffered by the two opto-couplers,
OC1 and OC 2 and their associated R/C networks.
Line Circuits
Each phone
handset is connected by a four wire circuit from the ‘black
box’. Two wires (normally tagged ‘white’ and ‘blue’ here in
Oz) are for speech and dialing functions, whereas the other
two (tagged locally as ‘red’ and ‘black’) are for the ring
pulses supplied by the ringer circuit to each DC buzzer
inside the handsets. When a phone (eg: #1 for our
discussion) is picked up in its ‘off hook’ condition, a DC
loop is formed by the following components: DC circuitry
inside the phone, the 1K winding of transformer TX, and
back to 0V- earth. Taken from the +12 volts terminal,
through the Leds inside OC1 and OC2 and back to the phone
handset.
Making A Call
Dial tone is
provided to the calling party’s phone when the Link is in
its ‘reset’ condition (no calls in progress) via capacitor
C3 and the 8 ohm winding (8R) of TX to 0v- earth. This and
the other service tones are generated by IC1a, while ring
pulses are generated by IC1b. When a calling party’s phone
is ‘off hook’, the leds force the photo transistors to
switch on hard, pulling pins 13 and 14 of IC2 to 0 volts
ground. When the dial inside the phone handset is pulled
back and released, the collector lead of OC2’s transistor
is held low at 0 volts by the slow release charging of C5.
Pin 13 of IC2 is a CE (chip enable) input, and needs to
stay at a logic low (near 0 volts) to enable pin 14 to
count the dial pulses. So while ‘impulsing’ occurs, pin 13
stays low, and pin 14 alternates between logic high and low
as the led emulates each dial pulse train, until the last
pulse in the train is received.
Dialing Into
The Register
When caller
number #1 dials phone number # 4, those four pulses appear
across the leds inside OC1 and OC2. The decade counter,
acting as a Register (a storage device used in
communications equipment for storing dialed digits) counts
these pulses, turning its output pins on and off inn
unison, with the last dial pulse causing the counter to
rest on the last output pin that is turned on. The complete
sequence for a maximum of ten pulses in the one pulse
train, is (pin 3 is always at logic high at ‘reset’)
2,4,7,10, and then 1,5,6,9,11 and then finally pin 3. So
when the number ‘4’ is dialed, the counter would step
through pins 2,4,7, and then land on pin 10, which is
connected to phone #4’s ringer circuit via Q4’s base lead.
The Ringer
Circuit
Each line
circuit consists of the individual phone handset, the DC
buzzer mounted inside it, the common connections to TX and
the cathode of OC2’s led, as well as transistors Q1 to Q4
and common driver transistor Q5. With pin 3 of IC2 at logic
high on ‘reset’, diode D3 enables IC2a to provide a Dial
Tone from pin 5. When a number is dialed, pin 3 of IC2 goes
low on the first dial pulse, removing the logic high via D4
from pins 12 and 8 of IC1b, thus enabling it to charge up
C3, and produce ring pulses to IC1a via diode D5, (from pin
9 to pin 4). After about 2 seconds, ring pulses commence,
and the modulated dial tone (which then by default becomes
an interrupted Ring Tone to the caller) is produced at pin
5 of IC1a, indicating the progress of the call.
True Ring Trip
When the
called party answers the call, transistor QX with trimpot
R6, (adjusted to detect both phones being ‘off-hook’,)
triggers the led and phototransistor inside OC3. This halts
the ring pulses and ring tone supplied by IC1a and IC1b for
the duration of that call, by supplying a logic high
potential to pins 12 and 8 of IC1b via D6. When the call is
over, and both parties have hung up their phone handsets (eg:
back to the ‘on-hook’ status,) the DC loop formed by the
handsets, TX and OC1/OC2 is broken. Pin 13 of IC2 returns
to its reset potential of logic high, and extends this high
to pin 15 (Reset) of the 4017 decade counter chip, which
disables the output selected during the dialing operation,
and enables pin 3 to high, thus restoring Dial Tone to the
next caller via pin 4 of IC1a.
Resetting The
Link
Thus the Link
is fully reset and ready for another call. As you can see,
it may seem a little complicated to follow the progression
through a call, particularly if you haven’t been involved
with phones and logic chips much before. At the end of the
day, you have some simple counting, pulsing and interfacing
circuitry, which will perform all the necessary tasks of a
basic intercom, and all at a reasonable cost. I used some
formatted matrix board for the p.c.b and IC sockets for all
ICs and OC/OC2. I also found that a heat sink fin for the
7812 regulator chip was unnecessary. A box could be used
for housing the Link circuitry, and some kind of screw
terminal block or ID block (like a small 10 pair KRONE
junction box) could be used to terminate the wiring at the
box to make it look more professional. Remember these two
things. If you leave a phone ‘off-hook’ you will lock up
the Link and if you pick up a phone when someone else is
dialing, wrong numbers will result. Apart from that, have
fun! Austin Hellier 08-Oct-2003
Parts List as at 12-10-2003
R1 10k
R2 150k
R3 4k7
R4 47k
R5 2k2
R6 4k7 trimpot
R7 390R
R8 10k
R9 100k
R10 100k
R11 22k
R12-R15 2k2
R16 4k7
R17 4k7
C1 0.22uF
C2 47uF
C3 1uF |
 |
C4 2,200uF (power filter cap – not
shown, but wired across +12volts & 0v- ground points
Q1-Q5 BC547 n.p.n low gain
Q6 BC 549C high gain with a beta of at least 250+
D1-D7 1N4148 or 1N914 small signal diodes
IC1 NE 556 dual timer chip
IC2 CD 4017B decade counter chip
OC1-OC3 4N25 or 4N28 opto couplers
Tx 1k/8R transformer, with 1k centre tapped
B1-B4 9 volt DC buzzers mounted inside phone handsets
Miscellaneous – wire, cable, matrix or prototyping
board, solder, case, 15 volt DC 200ma plug pack
power supply, phone sockets, zip ties, 7812 regulator
and filter caps etc. |
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