Hi Treg 
Barry!  good to see you in text coming through the Ether.  You said sorry, I 
was wrong but you have a definition Earth and Magneto.  This is the same as my 
Earth and Make to Battery!
I rest my case m'lord.

I do believe Ear and Mouth are the most commonly used words but maybe not the 
correct ones.

Bill Ellingford

----------
From:   Barry C. Quinlan[SMTP:bsi_little...@csi.com]
Sent:   16 June 1999 19:23
To:     treg@world.std.com
Subject:        Re: E & M terminology . . . . 

The definition in the 15th Edition of Newton's Telecom Dictionary is:

Ear & Mouth
Earth and Magneto
rEceive and transMit

So it appears everyone is right except Bill. Sorry Bill.


Best Regards

Barry C. Quinlan
Manager
BSI Product Services (USA)
Tel: 978 486 4666 x270
Fax: 978 486 8600
----- Original Message -----
From: Bill Ellingford <bill.ellingf...@motionmedia.co.uk>
To: <treg@world.std.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 16, 1999 1:32 PM
Subject: RE: E & M terminology . . . .


Hi Treg

In the back of my mind (probably where it should remain) something tells me
that E & M referred to the function i.e Earth Lead and Make Lead.  Make
being pulsed battery (positive or negative) and earth being the detector
circuit to ground.

I can confirm that it is used for PW CCT pulse signalling against
international signalling sytems SSDC5 and SSDC10.

Feasible?  Bill Ellingford
Motion Media Technology

----------
From: kkee...@host.igs.net[SMTP:kkee...@host.igs.net]
Sent: 16 June 1999 11:57
To: treg@world.std.com
Subject: RE: E & M terminology . . . .


Your Wrong!

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