RJ31X

RJ38X

artwork by Jay Meeker

Electrical Network Connection:

Four tip and ring circuits (lines). Series tip and ring connections and some times auxiliary leads such as A and A1 provide seizure or exclusion service delivering dial tone to a particular device while excluding, or electrically disconnecting other devices.

Mechanical Arrangement:

An 8 position, non keyed miniature jack assembly equipped with shorting bars returns circuits to bridged service when the mating 8 position modular plus is removed.

Typical Usage:

Commonly used with burglar and fire alarm equipment that uses tip and ring to send emergency signals to a central monitoring point that dispatches emergency authorities.

To assure seiqure when required, the line is wired in series through the RJ38X. From there, tip and ring pass into the alarm equipment where a relay decides wheter the dial tone will go back out to the other jacks (on T1 and R1), or seized for use by the alarm.

Any network interface jack that can allow a connected device to disrupt basic telephone service to other devices because of its wiring configuration (for example, by running tip and ring through a relay) must have a provision to automatically return service to the other locations if the seized device (the alarm unit) malfunctions.

This is accomplished with shorting bars. Gold plated metal tabs inside the RJ38X device will provide direct connection of tip and ringback to the other locations (bypassing the alarm device) when the miniature 8 postion plug is remove from the jack. Inserting the plug lifts the gold plated contact wires away from the shorting bars. and extends the tip and ring circuit to the series leads going into the alarm device.

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