[GreenKeys] Open lines?
Sam Hallas
s.hallas at ntlworld.com
Mon Jan 12 20:00:10 EST 2009
amourdutigre wrote:
> I have been perusing my copies of the greenbooks, (I have the last
> two, and am shopping for the first two), and was fascinated by the
> fact that the longlines engineers would phantom a third call upon two
> pairs of open lines. I have several questions about this.
> First, are there anymore open line circuits still in operation?
I can't speak for the US but there are open line circuits on rural
railways in the UK.
> Second, if there are say four pairs of wires, ("sides"), could you at
> least theoretically phantom up to six other calls on those four
> wires? One phantom circuit between each possible pairing of pairs so
> to speak.
If you think about it Joe, the answer must be no. It would be like
saying you could make six circuits with four wires - 1&2, 1&3, 1&4, 2&3,
2&4, 3&4. The circuits that share a wire interfere with each other,
which ends up being all of them.
However, it was practice to generate a phantom on a pair of phantom
circuits. So your four pairs could generate two straight phantoms and
single double phantom. So your four pairs could generate seven circuits.
I recall that making phantom circuits work properly over long distance
required great attention to wire transpositions along the pole route.
Cheers,
Sam
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