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The Traveling Telephone Switching Machine - AT&T Archives 

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The #5A Crossbar switcher, built by Western Electric at the Columbus Works, was a telephone switching machine that could handle either around 1000 lines, or up to 2000 with an extension upgrade. This made it ideal for smaller towns and communities, new large subdivisions, and larger companies. The crossbar switch itself took up 10 by 42 feet, and weighed 25 tons. The machine was pre-assembled in Ohio, and then trucked to its final installation site. This film shows the assembly and transportation, and further details about the crossbar switch's "plug and play" type of capabilities.
The Columbus Works were one of the Bell System's later plants, built specifically for switching equipment manufacture, and opened in the late 1950s. It eventually manufactured not just the crossbar switch but also the 4ESS digital switch. The last major manufacturing effort AT&T ran at the plant was its Airloop, which was a wireless system announced in 1995 that was a potential replacement for crossbar-type switching systems in hard-to-reach areas. It could bring quantities of new lines to the network wirelessly, without having to build in new trunk lines to a site.
At its peak, the Columbus Works employed around 12,000 workers, including 1,000 Bell Labs employees alone. In 1996 it became part of Lucent Technologies, which sold the plant in 2003. Today, the office building on the site is still occupied, but much of the manufacturing plant is empty.
Writer/director: Dick Martin
Music: Steve Covello
Footage Courtesy of AT&T Archives and History Center, Warren, NJ

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8 июл 2012

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Комментарии : 81   
@bryansnyder9218
@bryansnyder9218 2 года назад
70's are awesome, I was a kid back then, better times
@billyboi57
@billyboi57 11 лет назад
At it's peak, AT&T employed more than 1,000,000 people worldwide.
@minimalizman
@minimalizman 11 лет назад
Watching these videos give me a lot of pride, as an AT&T engineer. Maybe in 50 years, someone will see me in an "old" video and think the same thing! This is just some really awesome stuff...please release more if you have it!
@kjclark1963
@kjclark1963 11 лет назад
The flood at 4:20 was hurricane Agnes in 1972. The CDO was Portville, NY (716-933). I saw the Michigan Bell PBX trailer myself. You can hear an operator on the tape, "Portville, number please...."
@asylumlover
@asylumlover Год назад
LONG LIVE THE MEMORIES OF WESTERN ELECTRIC AND THE GLORIES OF REAL TELEPHONES AND SWITCHING EQUIPMENT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@mogwopjr
@mogwopjr 7 лет назад
We have remnants of the old crossbar, the SMAS, in our office. I still maintain it as it's in use for remote testability of DS0 circuits. Every so often I get to spend a day cleaning the stage 1 relays and checking the electromagnets/paddles for correct functionality. Our neighbor occupying the rest of our building, I'll call it the old telegraph company, is finally turning down their #4ESS this year.
@brig.4398
@brig.4398 9 лет назад
The old days at MaBell, it was a very strict work place but I liked working there, we had excellent training and everyone took pride in their work.
@thewhitefalcon8539
@thewhitefalcon8539 Год назад
These days you'd never have a workplace like this. It's all focused on making you as miserable as possible
@MFXdump
@MFXdump 9 лет назад
When you hear that "Groovy" Music, that's when you know your truckin'!
@NewAgeServerAlarm
@NewAgeServerAlarm 8 лет назад
I once got to check out a 3A Crossbar Switching System, developed after the 5A using even smaller components and taking up half as much space as one of these but with the same capabilities. I have been told they only manufactured 17 of them and that there's only one operational one still in existence. It's currently at The Telephone Museum in Ellsworth, ME and used to serve the town of Bradford, ME.
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd 2 года назад
I've actually dialed into it their 3A crossbar's before. it sounds like i'm in the 1970s again when i hear those nice clicks and clunks on the line. lol
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd 2 года назад
Who gave my comment a like? Please let me know thanks!
@maxdutiel
@maxdutiel 2 года назад
Sxsphil has one, and i think it is working.
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd Год назад
@@maxdutiel yes, he has much more equipment in that 3XB
@kirbyyasha
@kirbyyasha 5 лет назад
Love this video, I really admire the craftsmanship and ingenuity that went into a portable CO. What a shame it is what happened to Western Electric.
@MrWolfTickets
@MrWolfTickets 9 лет назад
3:09- 'yeah I'm driving the phone company drunk, shho what?'
@rybaluc
@rybaluc 11 лет назад
I wonder how many patents were stealed from AT&T during cold war. You can see many similarities in old analog "national" phone exchanges in postcommunistic countries. This solution was made for massive public phone network deployment. Something unbelievably in country where only every 10th citizen had landline and wait time was around 5 years or more. Look on this. What a wonderful piece of engineering!
@AlexBesogonov
@AlexBesogonov 4 года назад
You would be surprised, but the USSR actually had automatic switching systems widely deployed before the Ma Bell in the US. The first rotary system switches ("machine-based automatic telephone stations") were widely installed in Moscow in 1920-s. The USSR was also a bit ahead in deployment of crossbar-style switches ("coordinate switching systems"), while the US standardized and perfected Strowger-based switching.
@AlexBesogonov
@AlexBesogonov 3 года назад
Soviet countries were actually ahead of the US in many regards. The phone systems there were designed to be fully automatic almost from the very beginning, there were no manual phone exchanges. While in the US a lot of areas had operator-only service up until 60-s.
@agoogleabuser1233
@agoogleabuser1233 3 года назад
BRAH! THE DUDES EYES AT 0:26! BRAH!😱
@kennyadvocat
@kennyadvocat 11 лет назад
Funny how all of this equipment is now done be one or two computers today. Heck 1000 of these telephone lines isn't much more then just one Fios connection!
@James_Knott
@James_Knott Год назад
Back in 1975, I had occasion to work in a small town, in the middle of nowhere, called Armstrong, Ontario. Shortly before I arrived there, they had switched from 2 digit dialing to 5! The new phone exchange was installed in a trailer and apparently they just rolled it in and hooked it up. They didn't even bother moving it out of the trailer. BTW, the road to Armstrong would have given it a good shakedown.
@SallySallySallySally
@SallySallySallySally 12 лет назад
Mason Adams does the narration at the beginning: "We call it the 5A crossbar...." No credit, though. I didn't recognize any of the other voices so maybe they were actual employees.
@agy234
@agy234 Год назад
It’s the Columbus Works, now mostly gone except for the offices at the front
@roachtoasties
@roachtoasties 5 лет назад
Now one can build their own "telephone switching machine" with a laptop and a bunch of VOIP adapters. No giant truck with tons of stuff needed.
@AgentOffice
@AgentOffice 3 года назад
Not exactly true, you're still using dsl or cable lines
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd Год назад
Not true, Landline communications is still the biggest infrastructure in the world! cause it's been around longer than anything else has, So you can only imagine how big these machines are today! they still take a lot space to build and big buildings to put them in, I've called into a 5XB office before and it sure does sound really cool listening to you're call going through that machine is amazing!
@thewhitefalcon8539
@thewhitefalcon8539 Год назад
You still need 300000 VOIP adapters but basically yes. Telephone switching is no big deal for decades old hardware now
@EvertG8086
@EvertG8086 8 месяцев назад
@@MichaelWallace-oq3wd Most of that infrastructure is dead now, replaced by fiber and coax mostly.
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd 8 месяцев назад
@@EvertG8086 not true I’m still served off a old switching equipment and I use a traditional landline phone going over copper wires.
@Tangobaldy
@Tangobaldy 4 года назад
All this can be done with a raspberry pi now
@AddableStone13
@AddableStone13 3 года назад
A network was once the size of a office floor, now it’s the size of a credit card
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd Год назад
Not exactly, Those machines are very complex and if the Bell labs want to make a machine like that again they could, it'll just take a lot time and a lot money to rebuild the infrastructure! i've called into a Big 5XB machine before and those machines are MASSIVE size and they take a bunch of space outta the buildings,
@Zoomer30
@Zoomer30 5 лет назад
Mr Smuckers doing the narration. (Actor who played Charlie Hume on Liu Grant)
@docchocobo
@docchocobo 11 лет назад
Just as a second thought, with all this talk of EMP and such, I wonder how well this electromechanical stuff would hold up, compared to the frail microelectronics inherent in EVERYTHING these days.
@davidjames666
@davidjames666 3 года назад
it would survive 100%. i worked for 30 years as an engineer in Bell Labs
@landonbrown5295
@landonbrown5295 2 года назад
@@davidjames666 That would be the dream for me. Having access to things like the old designs and maybe even hardware for systems like step by step, panel, and all the different crossbar switching systems is my dream and eventual goal.
@thewhitefalcon8539
@thewhitefalcon8539 Год назад
Probably better, but you're forgetting that emp damage is proportional to loop area. Small electronics will be fine or just need a reboot
@danfarley1317
@danfarley1317 4 года назад
Speed and efficiency are the key items along Theodore Vail and Enos Barton’s universal service made the Bell System into one great organization. Justice Department antitrust lawyers thought that Western Electric gave Ma Bell an unfair advantage over other companies. The Department of Justice was clueless about keeping service and equipment similar! Every Bell System exchange office was equipped with Western Electric equipment which made easy for Bell System workers to go state to state to repair the equipment! One brand of equipment,Western Electric, one research team,Bell Laboratories, was the key that made the Bell System very successful and Justice Department antitrust lawyers with their lack of understanding the phone industry and their inflated egos destroyed the best phone company in the world!
@ericj06831
@ericj06831 4 года назад
One Policy, One System, Universal Service.
@seanseanseanseansean
@seanseanseanseansean 4 года назад
I know that voice: "When the name says Smucker's, it's got to be good."
@SilvaD702
@SilvaD702 11 лет назад
And then the government broke up the Bell System and the layoff's came
@jgrysiak6566
@jgrysiak6566 5 лет назад
Many left AT&T & came back to Bell@
@jamminwrenches860
@jamminwrenches860 5 лет назад
And sadly much of the reasearch and development into seemingly unrelated technology dried up afterwards. Bell systems gave us the transistor, solar cell, maser (later called lazer), coaxial cable, satellites and their ground tracking stations, cellular phones, on and on....
@Nighthawke70
@Nighthawke70 4 года назад
@@jamminwrenches860 Bit of difference between MASER and LASER. MASER was using a microwave exciter. LASER uses a similar process, save it generates energy at higher amplitudes and frequencies. Hydrogen MASERs are still in use at locations where RF interference even at milliwatts can ruin a science project, like the VLA and other deep space radio telescopes. They are used to amplify whispers from the deep space probes, enabling studies to be accomplished.
@kjclark1963
@kjclark1963 10 лет назад
Steve: It sounds like Mason Adams to me.
@docchocobo
@docchocobo 11 лет назад
I wish I had access to this kind of stuff. Almost all the technical stuff is gone. Do you know how hard it is to build things like this from scratch with little insight into hardware. I'm trying to build a TINY exchange, but all you find online is "the phone uses 48 volts dc and rings when an ac signal is placed on the line. I'd kill for old junk equipment or at least some kind of schematic. It's sad to see all that information just thrown away... Always wanted to know how it all worked.
@dickJohnsonpeter
@dickJohnsonpeter 5 лет назад
There's plenty of books of this information. Hardly any information prior to the advent of the internet has been uploaded, you have to go seek out the old books and manuals that have the info your looking for.
@haroldsmith45302
@haroldsmith45302 3 года назад
Have you considered getting in touch with the Connections Museum in Seattle? Their collection includes numerous functional electromechanical central office switches. RU-vidrs SXSPhil and Hicken65 might be other sources of information.
@TomStorey96
@TomStorey96 2 года назад
Hicken65 videos are thoroughly verbose. Maybe a little too verbose, but you can't exactly say that something wasn't explained. Learned a lot from watching his videos. But how it all fits together is still a big mystery. Connections Museum has helped reveal a lot of detail about the fascinating inner workings. But there is an entire career worth of knowledge to learn, and that's only if you're immersed in it every day.
@irvinklugh8858
@irvinklugh8858 4 года назад
VRY GOOD
@ob_gyn_inc
@ob_gyn_inc 12 лет назад
Holy crap! People actually employed! I haven't seen that in a while..
@am74343
@am74343 2 года назад
Is this the guy who narrated the Smuckers TV commercials?
@HelloKittyFanMan.
@HelloKittyFanMan. 10 лет назад
silvad702, "and then the layoff's..." *what*... came? (What thing belonging to a layoff did you mean to be referring to but missed?)
@Richardpasquinucci
@Richardpasquinucci 3 месяца назад
why didn't they send a 1 ESS instead of a crossbar
@seceber
@seceber 5 лет назад
Cool, which year though?
@heyandy889
@heyandy889 4 года назад
0:18 1973
@HelloKittyFanMan.
@HelloKittyFanMan. 10 лет назад
billyboi57, "at it's (it is) peak"? What's that supposed to mean (according to you)?
@billyboi57
@billyboi57 9 лет назад
Poor punctuation has nothing to do with the content of my statement. Once again, AT&T aka Ma Bell employed more than one million people at any given time. What's the problem with your reading comprehension? Did one misplaced apostrophe throw you off that much? BTW, I am referring to the old AT&T, the one that was broken up by the government in 1984.
@HelloKittyFanMan.
@HelloKittyFanMan. 9 лет назад
Yeah, billyboi57, I figured you were referring to AT&T rather than at&t because this video is about an old system. (I was 10 when that happened, by the way.) But what's the problem with *your* probably so-called "writing skills"? If you think you're so "smart," then why did you put that apostrophe in there, anyway? (But don't give me the old "Oh, it was just a 'typo' " routine. If it was a typo, you'd likely have to have typed something pretty near the three letters from "its," like "iys," etc.) And what are you even asking me that for? Whether you think I "shoul'dve understood you" or not, what's so "wrong" with asking you that you have to get all butt-hurt about it? You know grammar- and punctuation rules weren't devised for nothing, don't you? Why don't we just eliminate the apostrophe completely?
@cityofabscissae
@cityofabscissae 5 лет назад
@@HelloKittyFanMan., I was surpised that in your rebuttal you used a hyphen (-) where you should have used a dash (--). It should have read: "You know grammar--and punctuation rules. . . ."
@jamesb8305
@jamesb8305 6 лет назад
Imagine a millenial wiring the switch. It would take years.
@ZacharyRodriguezVlogs
@ZacharyRodriguezVlogs 5 лет назад
Or a millennia.
@dylancruz3705
@dylancruz3705 5 лет назад
I am doing it right now, And I am 16. So.....
@dylancruz3705
@dylancruz3705 5 лет назад
@@ZacharyRodriguezVlogs Also hey zach!
@Solocat1
@Solocat1 4 года назад
@@dylancruz3705 Hahahaha ya ok.
@ojsilva1975
@ojsilva1975 3 года назад
It’s easy! Lmaooo. Not as bad tbh.
@Bigdogg598
@Bigdogg598 10 лет назад
What a crock of crap. That's the old days when ma bell worked with good workers. You couldn't get anybody to work like that today. Everyone's taking too long for brakes. Hahaha
@cityofabscissae
@cityofabscissae 5 лет назад
Replacing their brakes on the job, eh?
@davidpeterson1521
@davidpeterson1521 4 года назад
There's still some hard workers in the company. I know because I work with them every day. We take pride in a job well done for Ma Bell. We even climb poles the old fashion way, straight up, no ladders.
@QuadMochaMatti
@QuadMochaMatti 4 года назад
@@davidpeterson1521 but Ma Bell died on the dissection table. SBC by any other name ain't no Ma Bell.
@davidpeterson1521
@davidpeterson1521 4 года назад
@@QuadMochaMatti I still work for Ma Bell, and my pay check proves it, my pay check says Michigan Bell.
@AddableStone13
@AddableStone13 3 года назад
@@QuadMochaMatti I faintly remember the SBC trucks in the early 2000s
@thekaiser4333
@thekaiser4333 7 лет назад
Why bother? America is doomed.
@varikvalefor
@varikvalefor 5 лет назад
The Kaiser: With that attitude, yes.
@QuadMochaMatti
@QuadMochaMatti 4 года назад
We put that into motion over a hundred years ago, sticking our nose into European kerfuffles; no thanks to Wilson.
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd
@MichaelWallace-oq3wd Год назад
@The Kaiser The sounds of jealousness, The Bell System was bigger than apple Google and Microsoft You better think again! :) The USA has one of the best communication system in the world sense 1876! Thanks to Ma Bell! And Western Electric inventing problems that nobody ever thought of before and fixing them!
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