A domestic single British telephone line installation will have a single master socket or line box in the premises, which is provided by BT or another service provider: this socket is the
demarcation point between the customer-owned and maintained
on-premises wiring, and the telephone network. For installations using the NTE5 line box (NTE for
network termination equipment), the demarcation point is actually
within the socket: the lower half of the front plate and associated wiring is the customer's, while the permanent wiring on the non-removable section behind this, remains the responsibility of the service provider. Customers are not permitted to access the wiring in a master socket without a removable lower section. Plug-in extension kits are available for customers with this type of installation. The two wires from the exchange are denoted the
B leg at −50V relative to ground when the line is not in use and the
A leg which is near ground potential when the line is not in use. The
A leg goes to pin 5 and the
B leg to pin 2 in the master socket. (Although all equipment will work with a reversed line, so a reverse wired socket is not strictly a fault.) When current is flowing on the line, the
B leg voltage collapses to nearer ground and the
A leg voltage moves nearer to the
B leg voltage. The exact voltage drop is a function of the distance to the exchange, and the network wiring type. According to SIN 352 the average DC current in the loop and voltage across the phone will be up to 42 mA at 12.5 V (short line), up to 33.5 mA at 10 V, and will be not less than 25 mA at 9 V. (long line limit) Line polarity reverses during calls if caller ID is in use. Once in a call the audio and tone levels superimposed on the DC voltage are expressed as dBm in 600 ohms, although the line impedances are permitted to be some way off 600 ohms (as per SIN351) -9 dBm (275 mV RMS) [0 dBm = 1 mW ( 0.775V RMS) in 600 ohms. Until recently, this socket contained an enclosed spark gap, SP1, that could safely flash over internally to provide high voltage surge protection. This component is no longer used due to negative effects on
VDSL speeds. The socket includes a 1.8 μF capacitor (bell circuit) to feed the AC ringing and a 470 kΩ resistor (R1, out-of-service resistor) to permit remote testing when no telephones are plugged into any sockets. Additional internal extension (secondary) sockets are wired off the master socket (connected in
parallel using the
IDC system) but not containing the surge protector, bell circuit capacitor, and the out-of-service resistor. The 'old style' fixed master socket had only one set of terminals on the back and customers were supposed to use extension kits plugged into the front socket; however, many customers hard-wired their own extensions anyway for neatness and robustness reasons, which was a poor arrangement since it provided no way to isolate the customer's internal extension wiring from BT's wiring. NTE5 Linebox sockets have for many years been fitted in place of master sockets. The lower part of the front plate can be removed after unscrewing two screws, allowing users access to the terminals required for connecting internal extension sockets. The removable panel also allows the external telephone line to be easily disconnected from the internal wiring, provided the wiring of the premises has been correctly carried out. This leaves a single working master telephone connector; if a telephone connected to this connector works while there had been problems with telephones connected to extensions, faults must be due to the customer's wiring in the building. The terminals on the back part were originally large screw terminals, later replaced in all BT NTE5 sockets by
insulation-displacement connectors (IDCs). As BT no longer has a monopoly of internal wiring, they make a substantial charge if a fault reported to them is found to be in the customer's internal/domestic wiring. It is therefore important for the customer to have the facility to check whether a fault is in their internal wiring/equipment or externally in BT's cabling or systems. Since the NTE5 socket represents the official
demarcation point between the internal/domestic wiring (at the removable front of the socket which is the customer's responsibility) and the external telephone line/cabling fixed at the rear (which is BT's responsibility) the physical disconnection of the two sets of wires (made possible by the NTE5's removable front plate) is crucial in identifying faults and allocating responsibility for their rectification. In 2009 BT Introduced a
vDSL service to the UK known as
BT Infinity, and at the same time introduced the BT vDSL Interstitial Faceplate, which performs two functions:
DSL filter and Bell Wire noise suppression. The vDSL modem now plugs directly into the 6P6C modular socket on the faceplate. The faceplate can be easily fitted by removing the two bottom screws on a NTE5, sliding the bottom section out and fitting this in between. The result is that the entire extension circuit is filtered by the vDSL plate, so that DSL filters are no longer needed on a telephone socket used for DSL. The vDSL Interstitial Faceplate can also be fitted to lines used for
ADSL, for which it has been shown to improve connection speeds. There are several versions of the NTE5 (e.g., NTE5, NTE5a, NTE5c) and of the vDSL Interstitial Faceplate (Mk2, Mk3). == Plugs ==