zbang
Senior Member
- Location
- Roughly 5346 miles from Earls Court
Doing some back of the envelope math (check this, I may have dropped a decimal)
48v / 30ma = 1600 ohms (total loop resistance)
The "average" telephone set is 200 ohm, so the wire must be less than 1400 ohm for the loop or 700 ohm to figure the distance and keep the current.
19g copper is 8.2 ohm/1k ft so (700 / 8.2) gives about 85k ft or about 16 miles for the loop.
24g copper is more like 26.2 ohm/1k and that sucks the length in by call it a third, so 5-ish miles.
(Is it going to perform well? really depends on the set and how much current that really needs)
Lots of older cable plant was 19g, or larger if open-wire on insulators. OTOH, telco's really don't like loops longer than maybe 30-35k ft and would rather install remotes (like the "SLC 96") if there are clusters of subscribers.
(I used to live and breath this stuff, but that was over 30 years ago.)
48v / 30ma = 1600 ohms (total loop resistance)
The "average" telephone set is 200 ohm, so the wire must be less than 1400 ohm for the loop or 700 ohm to figure the distance and keep the current.
19g copper is 8.2 ohm/1k ft so (700 / 8.2) gives about 85k ft or about 16 miles for the loop.
24g copper is more like 26.2 ohm/1k and that sucks the length in by call it a third, so 5-ish miles.
(Is it going to perform well? really depends on the set and how much current that really needs)
Lots of older cable plant was 19g, or larger if open-wire on insulators. OTOH, telco's really don't like loops longer than maybe 30-35k ft and would rather install remotes (like the "SLC 96") if there are clusters of subscribers.
(I used to live and breath this stuff, but that was over 30 years ago.)