Privateline.com's Telephone History Page 10 -- 1965 to 1983
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In June 1968 the FCC allowed non Bell equipment to be legally
attached to Bell System lines. Despite restrictions the Bell
System would impose on such equipment, many companies started
producing products to compete with Western Electric. In 1969
Microwave Communications International began transmitting business
calls over their own private network between Saint Louis and
Chicago. Bypassing Bell System lines, MCI offered cheaper prices.
AT&T bitterly opposed this specialized common carrier service,
protesting that Bell System's long distance rates were higher
since they subsidized local phone service around the country.
Still, MCI was a minor threat, economically. The real problem
started a few years later when MCI tried to connect to the Bell
System network.
At the end of the 1960s AT&T began experiencing severe
customer service problems, especially in New York City. The reasons
were many but most had to do with unforeseen demand, coupled
with reduced maintenance. The Bell System fixed the problems
but not without an attitude that embittered people by the millions.
In Boettinger's
pro-Bell System history, he recounts the troubles this way:
"In 1969, unprecedented jumps in usage and demand caused
service deterioration in several large cities. Huge and rapid
injections of equipment and personnel trained in accelerated
programs were required before quality levels were restored. The
experience showed how vital telephones had become to modern life
(when even persons on welfare were felt to need a phone) and
how frustrations with breakdown led to aggressive behavior."
That the Bell System didn't understand how vital telephones were
to modern life is beyond understanding; that welfare recipients
weren't thought to deserve a phone is beyond acceptance, however,
Ma Bell was not alone in dealing with dissatisfied customers.
GTE also had problems.
GTE and Automatic Electric went through tremendous growth
in the 1960s, with A.E. expanding to four different facilities.
In 1969 their California facility in San Carlos made transmission
equipment. Switchgear and related equipment came from Northlake
and Genoa, Illinois, and telephones and other customer apparatus
came from Huntsville, Alabama. Automatic Electric Limited in
Canada also produced equipment. A.E.'s research in the 1960s
resulted in their first computerized switch being cut into service
into Saint Petersburg, Florida in September 1972. It was called
the No. 1 EAX (Electronic Automatic Exchange). Growth wasn't
handled well, though, by their parent company, General Telephone
and Electronics.
GTE was then a poorly managed conglomerate of 23 regional
phone companies and a maker of, among other things, televisions
and light bulbs. They had their successes and failures. One notable
achievement is below.
"Introducing a crimestopper
so advanced Dick Tracy doesn't have it yet."
In1971 General Telephone and Electronics (GTE Sylvania) introduced
a data system called Digicom. It let dispatchers identifying
patrol car locations on a screen, and allowed officers to run
license plate checks. When a patrolman touched a spot on the
digicom screen it lit up the same spot on the dispatcher's map.
Produced by their Sociosystems Products Organization, I do not
know how many units were actually installed by GTE, but it certainly
foreshadowed later developments. Today many police departments
use cellular digital packet data (CDPD) to run plates and communicate
in text with their dispatchers. CDPD runs on existing cellular
networks, with data rates no more that 9.6 or 19.2 Kbs, adequate
for most purposes but slow when you consider that in the year
2000, 29 years after this system was introduced, we are still
laboring with creeping data rates. Click on the image above or here to get the full picture
and story. (It's a huge graphic file so be careful: 364K)
GTE had their problems as well, especially with customer service,
getting worse and worse through the late sixties, with the company
admitting their problems by conducting a highly unusual national
magazine ad campaign in November, 1971. The ad in the National
Geographic read:
"A lot of people have been shooting at the telephone
companies these days. And, in truth, we've had our hands full
keeping up with the zooming demand for increased phone service.
But General Telephone and, in all fairness, the other phone companies
haven't been sitting around counting dimes. For some time now,
we've been paying a healthy 'phone bill' ourselves trying to
make our service do everything you expect of it . . . During
the next five years we'll be spending over $6 billion upgrading
and expanding every phase of our phone operation . . . Ladies
and gentlemen, we're working as fast as brains, manpower and
money can combine to make our service as efficient as possible."
And although GTE might not have
"sat around counting dimes," GTE's poor service record
continued, a reputation that haunts it to this day. Rightly or
wrongly, the phone companies, particularly those in the Bell
System, watched agog as customer relations got worse. Hacking
and toll fraud increased dramatically, as the phone company became
fair game, a soulless and uncaring monster to war against. Attacking
Ma Bell became common and almost fashionable.
1972 Mad Magazine cartoon.
The caption reads: "Stockholders Grow FAT As
Telephone Users Go Mad As Rates Rise And Service Flops."
In 1974 the Justice Department began investigating AT&T
again for violating antitrust laws. They recommended Western
Electric and Long Lines be divested from AT&T. Many people
in Justice as well as throughout the country were concerned with
the size of AT&T and their monopoly status. Although everyone
knew the Bell System provided the best telephone service in the
world, it had done so with little or no competition. AT&T's
assets stood at 75 billion dollars. Big was not good in the early
1970s, with anti-establishment (particularly the military industrial
establishment) feeling running high during the Vietnam and Watergate
era. Contributing to the Bell System's woes, in July, 1977 the
FCC instituted a certification program, whereby any telephone
equipment meeting standards could be connected to Bell System's
lines. Dozens and then hundreds of manufacturers started competing
with Western Electric, making everything from answering machines,
modems, fax machines, speakerphones, to differently styled telephones.
During the 1950s, 1960s, and
1970s, Stromberg-Carlson of Rochester, New York and then Lake
Mary, Florida, produced a marvelously simple switch known as
the X-Y. While an independent phone maker at the turn
of the century, Stromberg-Carlson had by the early 70s been
acquired by General Dyanmics. They were later bought by Rolm
and then by Siemens of Germany, who still owns it today. It's
new name is Siemens-Stromberg. But back to their switch.
Little known outside the industry, the Stromberg-Carlson X-Y
step by step switch solidly competed for business against Strowger
technology (manufactured by Automatic Electric and others) in
thousands of installations throughout rural America. Some may
remain in Mexico and South America. Although the Bell System
and many independents preferred the Strowger design for small
communities, many telephone companies did not. Strowger equipment
often worked reliably for decades but it was more complicated
than X-Ys and it required a great deal of preventative maintenance
performed by skilled craft workers. Ray Strackbein, who used
to work for Stromberg-Carlson, says that X-Ys, by comparison,
needed few repairs and fixes were simple. He writes, "I
once met a husband-and-wife team that traveled throughout the
Great Plains in their Winnebago motor home on a yearly cycle
and routined hundreds of X-Y offices each year. They would work
Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas in the winter, and Montana, Wyoming,
and North Dakota in the summer. Even a Switchman who could not
figure out how to wire a doorbell for a central office could
maintain a C.O. full of X-Y switches."
Ray then goes on to describe the Stromberg-Carlson X-Y step
by step switch, which could be configured or enlarged in blocks
of 100 lines:
"Describing it is rough, but it was a modular switch
that was horizontally slid into a vertical bay of shelves. An
array of 400 (10X10X4) bare copper wires ran vertically behind
the switch for the whole length of the bay. Four circuits were
needed to make a connection: Tip, Ring, Sleeve, and Helper Sleeve.
Each switch sat on shelf about 12"X9"X2" (2"
high). When someone dialed a number, the retracted switch moved
horizontally -- the X direction -- (left-to-right as you faced
it from the front), one step for each dial-pulse. Then when the
dialed digit stopped pulsing, the switch rapidly extended horizontally
away from you as you faced it, with four contacts, one for each
circuit -- T, R, S, and HS -- sampling the 10 possible phone
trunks for an idle trunk to the next selector.
The design of the X-Y switch was brilliant. Unlike the Strowger
that lifted the armature for each dial pulse then rotating through
a half-circle to find an idle line, the X-Y switch lifted no
weight. The moving switch rested on the plate and moved only
horizontally. This made for a switch of a much more simple design
than the Strowger." [Strackbein]
-
- Please visit Ray Strackbien's site (external
link)
Stromberg-Carlson introduced their first digital switch around
1978, the Stromberg Carlson System Century digital switch.
As switches were going digital, so, too, were nearly all electronics in the telecommunication field. Still, a few technological holdouts remained, as the Bell System replaced their last local cord switchboard in 1978, on Santa Catalina Island near the coast of Los Angeles, California. That's right, operators still placing calls by hand in the Age of Disco. "[T]he smallest version of Western's 160 toll switchboard" was replaced by a 3ESS, the first Bell switch, incidentally, to be shipped by barge. The city served would have been Avalon. This according according to the June, 1978 Bell Laboratories Record and personal correspondence
with P. Egly of Santa Rosa, California.
Egly relates the following about Avalon:
"Tom, Avalon had its own inward operator and I even remember
the route, 213 + 012 +... Calls off the island were handled by
the same operator using She surely dialed all calls in the same
way that any of the operators in the LA toll centers did. I am
not sure if the trunks to the mainland were by microwave or by
cable. "
"[Since this was a manual exchange] There were no dial
phones on Avalon, all were manual magneto service with even the
payphones having cranks. Most of the private subscribers had
300 or 500 type sets with dial blanks connected to magneto boxes.
The operator rang the subscriber from her board using her ring
key to supply ringing current from a standard WECO ring generator."
He goes on to say that the Bell System had a like system in
Nevada:
"There was a similar situation in Virginia City, Nevada
with the subscribers having the old walnut and oak magneto phones
with local battery. In this case, most subscribers resisted the
cutover to dial service, since the magneto phones were quite
elegant. . . all polished wood and gleaming brass bells. They
were part of the period atmosphere of the town."
This simple switching technology came within six years of outliving the most advanced telephone company on earth. But one manual local toll board remained in the public switched telephone network even longer. --->
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