To provide
cathodic protection against corrosion of line wires, the operating potential of telephone lines is typically negative with respect to ground, and the tip side is generally close to the ground potential. Thus, all power supplies for telecommunication equipment are designated to supply a negative voltage. In the era of the telephone industry when
rotary dial instruments were in use, the polarity when connecting a telephone set to the tip and ring wires was usually important only for properly ringing a telephone, especially in party line service with
selective ringing, and for correctly identifying the calling customer on certain party lines for toll calls. When Touch-Tone service was introduced in the 1960s, the tone generator for
DTMF required correct polarity as it depended on the line D.C. voltage for operation. Later Touch-Tone telephones included a
diode bridge that eliminated the polarity sensitivity so that consumer telephone service is essentially immune to reversal today. However, some special circuits, such as some
direct inward dialing (DID) trunks,
T-1 lines, and
ground start lines connected to field-side (
terminal) equipment, e.g., a corporate
private branch exchange (PBX) switch, correctly operate only with proper tip and ring polarity. ==Color code==