Hi there,
recently, I decided I would buy an orchid pbx for my mums house. (Her house is quite large) and she has 3 pstn lines. All with the same number. I linked everything up and everything is fine. I wired up the pbx using old BT sockets that I had lying around. (Most being mastersockets that I has seeing as it doesn’t seem to have any difference or any effect on the performance weather it be a master or slave.
I just wanted to ask, any previous members of bt staff, do they know what the attached sticker is called. I found it on an old mastersocket for the old line that used to be for the internet. It says circuit no (bt line no) and has the BT piper on it.
I would like to label a lot of the extension sockets in the house. But I thought this BT One was quite cool and inferred I’f anyone knew their correct name, so I could possible ask bt I’f they have any lying around somewhere. Alternatively, if any ex bt employees/engineers may still have some kicking around in an old toolbox somewhere who would be willing to sell them/give them away. That would be greatly appreciated. I know it’s a novelty but I’m a sucker for anything with the piper on it and these stickers would be very nice and useful.
many thanks
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Suggest you ask on the Business Line forum.
I do remember these but they had no specific name.
This is just a BT Retail Customer Forum. Openreach do any phone line installations, so you would be best asking on one of the public phone and broadband forums to see if you can get in contact with an Openreach Field Technician.
Try https://forums.thinkbroadband.com/ forums.
Suggest you ask on that business forum.
If it says Cct No it was probably from an old Private Wire circuit.
These were not part of the switched network but were point to point circuits.
They could have been used for external extensions, alarm circuits or for data networks.
Hi there,
Thank you for your reply. I know what it is, don't worry. I was wanting to know its proper name to see if I could get some more off BT.
Circut refers to your telephone line. If you dial 17070 from your landline it will say "this circuit is defined as ..." then start to read out your number. Also, on the back of an LJU4 Master Socket, which allows you to connect 2 lines, where the lines are connected on the back, each terminal will be labeled circut 1 or circut 2 respectively. Circut just refers to your phone line, your circuit at the exchange.
This label was put on by a BT engineer in July 2001, onto our new NTE5A master socket, when we got a fax line put in. This was probably standard practice if you got a new line in those days so that you knew your phone number, the date the line was installed, and the number to ring if you had any faults.