From: Manu Abraham <manu@kromtek.com>
To: Brad Campbell <brad@wasp.net.au>
Cc: David Lawyer <dave@lafn.org>, Pavel Machek <pavel@suse.cz>,
Park Lee <parklee_sel@yahoo.com>,
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: Issue on connect 2 modems with a single phone line
Date: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 11:45:59 +0400 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <200412181145.59211.manu@kromtek.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <41C3D5AD.7090507@wasp.net.au>
On Sat December 18 2004 11:01 am, Brad Campbell wrote:
> David Lawyer wrote:
> > On Thu, Dec 16, 2004 at 02:01:38AM +0100, Pavel Machek wrote:
> >>Hi!
> >>
> >>> I want to try serial console in order to see the
> >>>complete Linux kernel oops.
> >>> I have 2 computers, one is a PC, and the other is a
> >>>Laptop. Unfortunately,my Laptop doesn't have a serial
> >>>port on it. But then, the each machine has a internal
> >>>serial modem respectively.
> >>> Then, can I use a telephone line to directly connect
> >>>the two machines via their internal modems (i.e. One
> >>>end of the telephone line is plugged into The PC's
> >>>modem, and the other end is plugged into The Laptop's
> >>>modem directly), and let them do the same function as
> >>>two serial ports and a null modem can do? If it is,
> >>>How to achieve that?
> >>
> >>You'd need phone exchange to do this. Most modems will not talk using
> >>simple cable. With 12V power supply and resistor phone exchange is
> >>quite easy to emulate, but...
> >
> > Here's what I once wrote in Modem-HOWTO:
> >
> > Most modems are designed to be connected only to telephone lines and
> > will not work over just a pair of wires. This is because the
> > telephone company supplies the telephone line with a 40-50 volt DC
> > voltage which powers part of the modem. Recall that ordinary
> > conventional telephones are entirely powered by the voltage from the
> > telephone company. Without such a DC voltage, the modem lacks power
> > and can't send out data. Furthermore, the telephone company has
> > special signals indicating a ring, line busy, etc. Conventional
> > modems expect and respond to these signals.
>
> I have used analogue modems back to back for years and have *never* come
> across a modem that sourced anything other than it's ringing signal (via an
> opto) from the phone line. Every single modem I have here will talk to the
> others over a straight telephone cable.
What about power ? The opto-coupler will not work without power.
>
> Analogue modems use a line transformer to couple to the phone network
> usually with a decoupling capacitor on the phone end of the network to
> prevent large current flows through the transformer. They use a standard AC
The capacitor is used to prevent DC saturation of the transformer core rather
than doing current limiting, A capacitor cannot do current limiting. When the
lag changes by changing the capacitance value, general concept is that a
capacitor can limit current which is very much wrong.
Manu
> analogue signal. Nothing more than an audio transformer linkage.
>
> Now, sometimes a modem needs coaxing to ignore the lack of dial/call
> progress tones, but they should always talk to each other regardless of
> line voltage.
>
> ATA on one end and ATD on the other will normally get them talking.
> As a test I just looped my internal AMR winmodem to my Xircom Realport V90
> modem and got a solid 28.8k link. No problem.
>
> If the fluid is salty enough you could probably get analogue modems to talk
> over wet string (I have certainly passed RS485 over wet string before).
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2004-12-18 7:47 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2004-12-15 18:42 Issue on connect 2 modems with a single phone line Park Lee
2004-12-15 18:48 ` Lee Revell
2004-12-15 19:03 ` Park Lee
2004-12-16 1:01 ` Pavel Machek
2004-12-16 8:58 ` David Lawyer
2004-12-18 7:01 ` Brad Campbell
2004-12-18 7:45 ` Manu Abraham [this message]
2004-12-18 7:59 ` Brad Campbell
2004-12-18 15:26 ` Bill Davidsen
2004-12-16 11:25 ` Ondrej Zary
2004-12-16 13:59 ` Steve Bromwich
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