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Dial tone
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==History== {{Listen |filename=US dial tone.ogg |title=Example of a North American dial tone |description=Listen to a dial tone from North America of 350 Hz + 440 Hz. |filename2=UK_dial_tone_example.ogg |title2=Example of a UK/British dial tone |description2=Listen to a dial tone from the United Kingdom of 350 Hz + 450 Hz. |filename3=1TR110-1 Kap8.1 Waehlton.ogg |title3=Example of a current European dial tone |description3=Listen to a European dial tone of 425 Hz |filename4 = Sine wave 440.ogg |title4 = Example of a French dial tone |description4=Listen to a French dial tone of 440 Hz |filename5=JA dial tone.ogg |title5=Example of a Japanese dial tone |description5=Listen to a Japanese dial tone of 400 Hz }} Early telephone exchanges signaled the [[switchboard operator]] when a subscriber picked up the telephone handset to make a call. The operator answered requesting the destination of the call. When manual exchanges were replaced with automated switching systems, the exchange generated a tone to the caller when the telephone set was picked up, indicating that the system was ready to accept dialed digits. Each digit was transmitted as it was dialed which caused the switching system to select the desired destination circuit. Modern electronic telephones may store the digits as they are entered, and only switch off-hook to complete the dialing when the subscriber presses a button. Invented by engineer August Kruckow, the dial tone was first used in 1908 in [[Hildesheim]], Germany.<ref>{{cite news|last=Engber|first=Daniel|title=Who Made That Dial Tone?|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/12/magazine/who-made-that-dial-tone.html|access-date=10 January 2014|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=12 January 2014}}</ref> The Bell Telephone Manufacturing Company (BTMC) in Antwerp, Belgium, [[Western Electric]]'s international subsidiary, first introduced dial tone as a standard facility with the cutover of the 7A Rotary Automatic Machine Switching System at Darlington, England, on 10 October 1914. Dial tone was an essential feature, because the 7A Rotary system was a common control switching system. It used the dial tone to indicate to the user that the switching system was ready to accept digits. In the United States, dial tone was introduced in the 1920s. By the time President [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]] retired in 1961 it was nearly universal, but the president himself had never encountered a dial tone. When he picked up his own household phone, his assistant had to explain what the strange noise was, as well as show Eisenhower how to use a [[rotary dial]] phone.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nps.gov/history/museum/exhibits/eise/PopCulture/gadgetsGizmos/EISE2728_grn_3421_red_9197_.html |title=Eisenhower National Historic Site |publisher=Nps.gov β U.S. National Park Service |access-date=2010-09-06 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090923011742/http://www.nps.gov/history/museum/exhibits/eise/PopCulture/gadgetsGizmos/EISE2728_grn_3421_red_9197_.html |archive-date=September 23, 2009 }}</ref> Before modern electronic telephone switching systems came into use, dial tones were usually generated by [[electromechanical]] devices such as [[motor-generator]]s or [[vibrator (electronic)|vibrators]]. In the United States, the standard "city" dial tone was a 600 [[hertz|Hz]] tone that was amplitude-modulated at 120 Hz.<ref name="ElmerCat">{{cite web |title=Dial Tone β Elmer Cat |url=http://elmercat.org/phone/dialtone/ |access-date=11 January 2021}}</ref> Some dial tones were simply adapted from 60 Hz AC line current. In the UK, the standard Post Office dialing tone was 33 Hz; it was generated by a motor-driven ringing machine in most exchanges and by a vibrating-reed generator in the smaller ones. Some later ringing machines also generated a 50 Hz dial tone. The modern dial tone varies between countries. The [[Precise Tone Plan]] for the [[North American Numbering Plan]] of the [[United States|US]], [[Canada]], and various [[Caribbean]] nations specifies a combination of two [[Pitch (music)|tone]]s (350 Hz and 440 Hz) which, when mixed, creates a [[Beat (acoustics)|beat frequency]] of 90 Hz. The UK dial tone is similar, but combines 350 Hz and 450 Hz tones instead, creating a 100 Hz beat frequency. Most of [[Europe]], as well as much of [[Latin America]] and [[Africa]], uses a constant single tone of 425 Hz. France currently uses a single 440 Hz tone and Japan uses a single 400 Hz tone. [[Cellular telephone]] services do not generate dial tones as no connection is made until the entire number has been specified and transmitted.
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