[SML] Tele-Q & Practical Phones

Dave Tosti-Lane davetostilane at gmail.com
Tue Nov 18 18:25:34 UTC 2014


Or, maybe just use a couple of cordless phones set to the same number, with
the tele-q ringing the pair (but the booth ringer turned off). Obviously,
not hooked up to the real telephone line, but they can talk to each other
over their wireless connection. You can always glue a fake cord on the one
on stage if you need it to look like a corded phone.

Dave Tosti-Lane

On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 9:10 AM, Dorian Kelly via Stagecraft <
stagecraft at theatrical.net> wrote:

> The onstage phone will be connected presumably by an RJ11 or 45  jack in
> full view of the audience. .  All you have to do is run telephone cable
> from the secondary  connectors inside of the jack socket  behind the set
> into the booth to another RJ11 / 45. Into this you plug a double adaptor.
> Plug the ringer into one leg and the booth phone into the other. Both
> phones will ring unless the booth on is off the hook.  Speech both ways. NO
> cutting or soldering required
> Hope that helps
>
> DK
>
>
>
> On 18 Nov 2014, at 16:23, mburris via Stagecraft <
> stagecraft at theatrical.net> wrote:
>
> > If you only need to get audio from booth to earpiece, (not both ways),
> it should be possible to use the outer two wires of a four wire telephone
> cable to carry an audio output from the booth.  The telecue only uses the
> middle two wires.  They are very thin wires so you might be better served
> from a signal loss perspective by using regular cable for the audio until
> you get to someplace offstage, closer to the phone to splice in the audio
> line.
> >
> >
> > Then it is just a case of tracing the earpiece wires from the handset
> and splicing them with the outer two wires.
> >
> >
> > Hope this helps.
> >
> >
> > Michael Jon Burris
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Jamie Lindemann via Stagecraft
> > Sent: Nov 18, 2014 10:32 AM
> > To: stagecraft at theatrical.net
> > Subject: [SML] Tele-Q & Practical Phones
> >
> > Good morning, list. Long time listener, first time caller.
> >
> > I'm working on a production that features a phone activated remotely via
> > Tele-Q. That part works great.
> >
> > However, it has come up recently that they want to have the option of
> using
> > a phone in the booth to actually speak with the performer on stage.
> >
> > I need a hand with the wiring that needs to take place to allow two
> phones
> > to communicate without either being actually attached to a proper phone
> > line. I know they need to get powered somehow, which would normally be
> from
> > the phone company.
> >
> > And for that matter, can the Tele-Q still be involved to ring the onstage
> > phone? Is there a way to wire the Tele-Q essentially in parallel so that
> it
> > rings the phone (or phones, I can turn off the ringer on the one in the
> > booth) but still allows the audio signal from the booth phone to be
> > transmitted to the onstage phone?
> >
> > --
> > Jamie Lindemann
> > Unicorn Theatre, Kansas City, MO
> > ____________________________________________________________
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> > Stagecraft at theatrical.net
> > http://theatrical.net/mailman/listinfo/stagecraft_theatrical.net
>
>
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