Re: Issue on connect 2 modems with a single phone line

From: Brad Campbell
Date: Sat Dec 18 2004 - 02:02:25 EST


David Lawyer wrote:
On Thu, Dec 16, 2004 at 02:01:38AM +0100, Pavel Machek wrote:

Hi!


I want to try serial console in order to see the
complete Linux kernel oops. I have 2 computers, one is a PC, and the other is a
Laptop. Unfortunately,my Laptop doesn't have a serial
port on it. But then, the each machine has a internal
serial modem respectively.
Then, can I use a telephone line to directly connect
the two machines via their internal modems (i.e. One
end of the telephone line is plugged into The PC's
modem, and the other end is plugged into The Laptop's
modem directly), and let them do the same function as
two serial ports and a null modem can do? If it is,
How to achieve that?

You'd need phone exchange to do this. Most modems will not talk using
simple cable. With 12V power supply and resistor phone exchange is
quite easy to emulate, but...


Here's what I once wrote in Modem-HOWTO:

Most modems are designed to be connected only to telephone lines and
will not work over just a pair of wires. This is because the
telephone company supplies the telephone line with a 40-50 volt DC
voltage which powers part of the modem. Recall that ordinary
conventional telephones are entirely powered by the voltage from the
telephone company. Without such a DC voltage, the modem lacks power
and can't send out data. Furthermore, the telephone company has
special signals indicating a ring, line busy, etc. Conventional
modems expect and respond to these signals.

I have used analogue modems back to back for years and have *never* come across a modem that sourced anything other than it's ringing signal (via an opto) from the phone line. Every single modem I have here will talk to the others over a straight telephone cable.

Analogue modems use a line transformer to couple to the phone network usually with a decoupling capacitor on the phone end of the network to prevent large current flows through the transformer. They use a standard AC analogue signal. Nothing more than an audio transformer linkage.

Now, sometimes a modem needs coaxing to ignore the lack of dial/call progress tones, but they should always talk to each other regardless of line voltage.

ATA on one end and ATD on the other will normally get them talking.
As a test I just looped my internal AMR winmodem to my Xircom Realport V90 modem and got a solid 28.8k link. No problem.

If the fluid is salty enough you could probably get analogue modems to talk over wet string (I have certainly passed RS485 over wet string before).

--
Brad
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