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Thread ID: 64516 2005-12-17 20:42:00 Walkie Talkie Phones lazydog (148) PC World Chat
Post ID Timestamp Content User
413545 2005-12-17 20:42:00 When i was a kid at primary school me and my best mate swapped 100 marbles (including 10 bonkers and 5 spitfires) for two phone handsets that had been joined together with about 100 yrds of wire and a battery.

We used them to talk to each other like wired walkie talkies.

I want to make another set for my grandkids but cant remember how they were wired up together.

Anyone know how its done?
lazydog (148)
413546 2005-12-17 20:53:00 When i was a kid at primary school me and my best mate swapped 100 marbles (including 10 bonkers and 5 spitfires) for two phone handsets that had been joined together with about 100 yrds of wire and a battery.

We used them to talk to each other like wired walkie talkies.

I want to make another set for my grandkids but cant remember how they were wired up together.

Anyone know how its done?Its pretty easy, everything is in series.

Battery "+"-mic-speacker-other handset-mic-speaker-back to battery "-".
personthingy (1670)
413547 2005-12-17 21:09:00 Cool.
I thought it was as basic as someting like that cause there was bugger all to them. Just wanted to make sure.

Thanks.
lazydog (148)
413548 2005-12-17 21:36:00 You might've had sound-powered phones too . . they were a US Navy communications setup that was ship-wide . There are no batteries or power supply . . . just headset and mouthpiece . . . they can be tied in to others of the same design and there doesn't seem to be much deterioration even with 20 or more sets on the same line .

I was a 1-JV an JL phone talker in the Navy during my watches on the bridge . . . I had two different circuits to monitor at the same time, one in each ear . . the lookouts on all levels and areas of the ship, and Tac-Plot, the radar and navigation department .

There were ringers . . . (but we never used them as all circuits were manned 24/7 anyway) that could make bells ring at the bulkhead connections in various compartments if we had to get the attention of some other talkers . . . but that is just an old crank energizer device that rang their bells and had nothing to do with the communications though .

I bet you can still find surplus equiptment from the US Navy in NZ .

I'd check that out for a very foolproof system .
Here's a link ( . dynalec . com/Dynalec-Sound-Powered-Telephones-How . htm" target="_blank">www . dynalec . com) to what I used and am talking about .
SurferJoe46 (51)
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