
Specifications: - Those caller ID house phones are of chic appearances but of low price
- The appealing designing style of the corded telephone set is the conception of comfort
- Portability is the nuclear designing intention of the corded wire telephone set
- These corded telephones are produced by fine craftsmanship and technologies
- With modern conceptions, these corded telephones are worth your owning them
- It can make your life more convenient, helping you connect with your friends easier
- Size: 13.0 x 21.0cm/5.1 x 8.3in(L x W)
- Material: Hard Plastic & Electronic Components
Details:
- The house decoration corded telephone set is excellent for desk, coffee table, kitchen counter etc
- The corded telephone set look relatively attractive with its appealing design
- It is very convenient and durable for you to use these caller ID corded telephones
- The back of the corded telephone looks relatively chic with its appealing design
- Its special color and individual shaped design make it popular with people
How to Install Telephone Wires: Multi-line jacks and multi-colored wires make telephone wiring look complex, but the basic principle is very simple. Each telephone line needs two wires--a positive, traditionally called the tip, and a negative, called the ring. These two wires connect the telephone service module from the phone company to the phone jack in the house. Most telephone cables contain more than one pair of color-coded wires, and remembering which color wires to connect to your jack is the main difficulty to overcome. Fortunately, there is a standard color code to follow to help avoid confusion.Locate the telephone company service box on the side of your house. This is called the network interface device (NID) and you can find it by following the overhead wires to the point where they connect to your roof, then down to the NID. Open the customer side of the box with a screwdriver. You won't be able to open the phone company side because it requires a special screwdriverOpen the covers of the modules inside that are live. These will be identified with a phone number. If there is more than one line, mark them Line 1, Line 2, and so on in order of importance Instructions: - Feed telephone cable through the bottom of the NID and pull out enough slack so you can make connections on all the live modules. Remove 8 to 10 inches of sheathing from the end of the cable and separate the wires inside. Note that these are color coded in pairs. In a 6-wire Cat5 cable, which is the current standard, there will be a blue wire with white stripes (blue/white) and a white wire with blue stripes (white/blue). There will also be wires colored orange and white (orange/white, white/orange) and green and white (green/white, white/green). In an 8-wire cable, the extra pair is brown and white (brown/white, white/brown)
- Connect the blue-white pair to the terminals on Line 1. Strip off an inch of insulation from the ends of the wires and connect blue/white to the green positive terminal, or tip, then tighten the terminal nut with a screwdriver. In the same way, connect the white/blue wire to the red negative terminal, or ring
- Connect the other lines in the same way, using the orange/white pair for Line 2, the green/white pair for Line 3 and the brown/white pair for Line 4. When you are finished, twist all unused wires together, push them into the NID and screw on the cover
How to Use a House Phone in Bad Weather: Obtain or retrieve a wired or corded telephone. Such a phone will have a wire or cord connecting the handset to the base and a wire from the base to a wall jack. Cordless phones will not work during power outages Prepare for Bad Weather:
- Subscribe to a service that delivers severe weather advisories to your telephone. WeatherCall provides telephone alerts based upon matching a subscriber's physical address with the location of an area under a warning issued by the National Weather Service. Go to WeatherCall's website or contact your local television station to learn if it participates with WeatherCall. Contact your local government to determine if it offers free weather alerts
- Write or print a list of contact numbers for your local utility companies, law enforcement or emergency management agencies, family, friends, employers and hospital and others you might want to contact. Place the list next to your house phone
Using the Phone During Bad Weather: - Install one or more house phones, especially in the bedroom and living rooms, when a severe weather watch is issued for your area. Insert the male ends of the telephone jack into the wall outlet and base of the phone
- Take immediate action based upon the type of warning issued. Go to a basement or interior area of your home for tornado warnings. Evacuate your home if your local authorities so advise
- Limit your use of the house phone. Call 911 if you or someone in your family needs immediate medical attention. Report outages to your power company. leaks or the smell of gas immediately to your natural gas company and severe weather or damage reports to law enforcement. Inform your family, friends and employers or business associates of your condition and location. Otherwise, avoid non-emergency or social calls since family, friends or employers may attempt to call you
Tips & Warnings:
- Purchase a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration "all-hazards" weather radio as an additional or alternate method to obtain severe weather advisories, particularly during overnight periods
- Keep your wireless or cellular phone fully charged. Turn on your cell phone if you lose land-line telephone service
- Do not use your land-line or house phone during a thunderstorm or electrical storm
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