Re: Private Line History |
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![]() Sat, 07 Jul 2007 03:10:28 GMT
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In the late 70's until the 1984 break up I worked at the NY7P AT&T Private Line office located at 811 Tenth Avenue, Manhattan. N7 PL was a conventional private line office that provided both switched and non- switched voice, as well as voiceband data. Digital Data (DDS) was offered by the NY7D DDS office on the eighth floor. I was slated to work at the CCSA#5 office in 1979, but at the last minute I was swapped with a guy that was a former WECo installer that had been laid off in 1974. CCSA#5 at the time was only a few lines drawn on the CO floor that signified where the equipment frames were to have been placed. The feeling was that the former WECo employee would give added benefit to the new office since he had worked on some 1ESS installations in the past. In the long run that swap did me a great favour, because I may have never ended up at NYT, and survive to see thirty years of service. Compared to my former AT&T coleages who saw many lay offs at AT&T beginning in the 1990's. There were two CCSA offices operating at the time CCSA#4 & CCSA#5. Both CCSA offices were equipped with four wire #1A ESS switches that carried private switched voice services under what was know as Feature pacgake 14 (FP14) services. As compared to FP12 which was limited to PBX/Centrex to PBX/Centrex inter-tandem tie trunk groups. CCSA #6 was also a #1A ESS that went in on the third floor over the mobile telephone garage area of the building, adjacent to where 5450T, a #4ESS , was later installed to replace the NY7 #4XB (Card reader), and latter NY6, a #4XB ETS. Both NY6 & NY7 were retired and were ripped out by late 1983.
The #1A ESS machines were predated by #5XB's that had been already been
One story from an old friend of mine, who works as a carrier
Many of AT&T's CCSA customers in the mid 1980's used non-AT&T LD
I recall from speaking to a few folks who I knew, and who were still
To clarify a point about CCSA & the 1960's. the first #4ESS that went
Bill
hancock4@bbs.cpcn.com wrote in news:telecom26.42.8@telecom-digest.org:
> Charles Gray wrote:
>> In retrospect, the CCSA was a predecessor to the "software defined
> Once again, thanks for your excellent and accurate description.
>> I don't know for sure, but I expect the switches were the Western
> Here's an extract from the Bell System history:
> CCSA -- Common Control Switching Arrangement
> "Growth in public switching was paralleled by expansion of private
> "In many cases, CCSA networks include not only PBXs but also Centrex |
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