A
ring generator or
ringing voltage generator is a device which outputs 20 cycle sinusoidal AC at up to 110 volts peak to power bells or annunciators in one or more telephone
extensions. The output stops if a handset is taken off the hook. In terminology devised by
phone phreaks, a ringing generator is a
magenta box. The device can be used to simulate an incoming call by applying the AC ringing signal voltage to a
POTS line to make the telephones on that line ring. A magenta box in conjunction with an
orange box (which emulates the
caller ID signal to create falsified data) is called a
vermilion box. The hardware also has multiple legitimate applications. While a
telephone exchange includes a central source of ringing voltage at the switchboard, a
private branch exchange or telephone-based
intercom must provide a local source of AC ringing voltage. Theatrical performances often deploy a ringing telephone on-stage as a
stage prop. An
analog telephone adapter for
voice over IP applications has to provide its own ringing voltage generator and other
line signaling services for standard telephone extensions. The hardware may also be useful to technicians for test purposes. Stand-alone ringing voltage generators are commercially manufactured; ring generators are also pre-built for inclusion in other telecommunications equipment and various circuits published by hobbyists to generate or detect ringing voltage for analogue telephony. A closed system, such as an intercom or
private branch exchange, need not comply with standards for ringing if it does not use standards-compliant telephone extensions. Some office telephones replace the bells with separately-wired low-voltage DC buzzers or use entirely custom-designed extensions which only work with one manufacturer's switchboard. These avoid the need to generate 20 Hz 90V sinusoidal AC, but are not compatible with standard telephone ringers. ==Ring forward and ringback==