Goto Section: 68.304 | 68.308 | Table of Contents
FCC 68.306
Revised as of
Goto Year:1996 |
1998
Sec. 68.306 Hazardous voltage limitations.
(a) General. Under no condition of failure of registered terminal
equipment or registered protective circuitry, or of equipment connected
thereto, which can be conceived to occur in the handling, operation or
repair of such equipment or circuitry, shall the open circuit voltage on
telephone connections exceed 70 volts peak for more than one second,
except for voltages for network control signaling and supervision,
which, in any case, should be consistent with standards employed by the
telephone companies.
(1) Registered terminal equipment shall assure that at the MR
channel interface, no continuous ac or dc voltages appear across the tip
(MR) and ring (MR) leads, from the tip (MR) lead to PBX ground, or from
the ring (MR) lead to PBX ground.
(2) Registered terminal equipment shall assure that during normal
operation, at an AIOD data channel interface, (i) no significant ac
voltage to ground other than for data transmission appears on the tip
(AI) and ring (AI) leads; (ii) no open circuit dc voltage to ground
appears on the tip (AI) and ring (AI) leads other than in the range from
0 to -56.5 volts.
(3) Registered terminal equipment shall also assure that at either
the MR channel interface or an AIOD data channel interface, voltage
transients appearing on either the tip (AI or MR) or ring (AI or MR) to
ground as a result of inductive components in the registered terminal
equipment shall not be capable of delivering more than 2 joules to a 500
ohm resistive termination.
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* The ac component should not exceed 5 volts peak or the
dc component 5 volts, where not otherwise controlled by Sec. 68.308.
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(4) Type I E&M leads. Conditions for ``A'' side of interface with
conditions for ``B'' side in parentheses. Registered terminal equipment
shall assure that the dc current in the E lead does not
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exceed 100 milliamperes, no significant ac voltage to ground appears on
the E&M leads,* no significant ac or dc voltage to ground appear on the
(E) & (M) leads,* and the open circuit dc voltage to ground on the E&M
leads does not exceed 56.5 volts and is not positive. M lead protection
shall be provided to assure that voltages to ground do not exceed 80
volts. For relay contact implementation a power dissipation capability
of 0.5 watt shall be provided in the shunt path. If the registered
terminal equipment contains an inductive component in the E lead, it
must assure that the transient voltage across the contact as a result of
a relay contact opening, does not exceed the following voltage and
duration limitations:
(i) 300 volts peak,
(ii) A rate of change of one volt per microsecond, and
(iii) An 80 volt level for more than 10 milliseconds.
(5) Type II E&M leads. Conditions for ``A'' side of interface with
conditions for ``B'' side in parentheses. Registered terminal equipment
shall assure that the dc current in the E and (SB) leads does not exceed
100 milliamperes and no significant ac voltage to ground appears on the
E and (SB) leads,* no significant ac or dc voltages to ground appear on
the M, SG, SB (E), (SG), and (M) leads from sources in the registered
terminal equipment,* and the open circuit dc voltage to ground on the E
and (SB) leads does not exceed 56.5 volts and is not positive. If the
registered terminal equipment contains an inductive component in the E
or (M) lead, it must assure that the transient voltage across the
contact, as a result of a relay contact opening, does not exceed the
following voltage and duration limitations;
(i) 300 volts peak,
(ii) A rate of change of one volt per microsecond, and
(iii) An 80 volt level for more than 10 milliseconds.
(6) Off-premises station voltages. (i) Talking battery or voltages
applied by the PBX (or similar systems) to OPS interface leads for
supervisory purposes must be negative with respect to ground, shall not
exceed 56.5V dc for Classes A, B, and C, and shall not have a
significant ac component.*
(ii) Ringing signals applied by the PBX (or similar systems)
to OPS interface leads shall be applied for the purpose of station
alerting only, and shall comply with requirements in paragraph (d) of
this section. Ringing voltages shall be applied between the ring
conductor and ground.
(7) For Local Area Data Channel interfaces, during normal operating
modes including terminal equipment initiated maintenance signals,
registered terminal equipment shall assure, except during the
application of ringing (limitations specified in paragraph (d) of this
section), with respect to telephone connections (tip, ring, tip 1, ring
1) that:
(i) Under normal operating conditions, the rms current per conductor
between short-circuited conductors, including dc and ac components, does
not exceed 350 milliamperes. For other than normal operating conditions,
the rms current between any conductor and ground or between short-
circuited conductors, including dc and ac components, may exceed 350
milliamperes for no more than 1.5 minutes.
(ii) The dc voltage between any conductor and ground does not exceed
80 volts. Under normal operating conditions it shall not be positive
with respect to ground (though positive voltages up to 80 volts may be
allowed during brief maintenance states);
(iii) Ac voltages are less than 42.4 volts peak between any
conductor and ground, (Terminal equipment shall comply while other
interface leads are both (A) unterminated and (B) individually
terminated to ground); and,
(iv) Combined ac and dc voltages between any conductor and ground
are less than 42.4 volts peak when the absolute value of the dc
component is less than 21.2 volts, and less than (28.8 + 64 x Vdc)
when the absolute value of the dc component is between 21.2 and 80
volts.
(8) During normal operation, registered terminal equipment for
connection to ringdown voiceband private line interfaces or voiceband
metallic channel interfaces shall assure that:
(i) Ringing voltage is used for alerting only, does not exceed the
voltage
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and current limits specified in paragraph (d), and is:
(A) Applied to the ring conductor with the tip conductor grounded
for 2-wire interfaces, or
(B) Simplexed on the tip and ring conductors with ground simplexed
on the tip (1) and ring (1) conductors for 4-wire interfaces.
(ii) Except during the signaling mode or for monitoring voltage,
there is no significant positive dc voltage with respect to ground (not
over +5 volts):
(A) For 2-wire ports between the tip lead and ground and the ring
lead and ground, and
(B) For 4-wire ports between the tip lead and ground, the ring lead
and ground, the tip 1 lead and ground, and the ring 1 lead and ground.
(iii) The dc current per lead, under short circuit conditions shall
not exceed 140 milliamperes.
(b) Connection of nonregistered equipment to registered terminal
equipment or registered protective circuitry--(1) General. Leads to, or
any elements having a conducting path to telephone connections,
auxiliary leads or E&M leads shall:
(i) Be reasonably physically separated and restrained from and be
neither routed in the same cable as nor use the same connector as leads
or metallic paths connecting power connections;
(ii) Be reasonably physically separated and restrained from and be
neither routed in the same cable as nor use adjacent pins on the same
connector as metallic paths to leads to nonregistered equipment, when
specification details provided to the Commission pursuant to
Sec. 68.200(g) do not show that interface voltages are less than non-
hazardous voltage source limits in Sec. 68.306(b)(4).
(2) Connections to registered terminal equipment. The voltage
measurable between auxiliary leads, auxiliary leads to ground, E&M leads
and ground, tip and ring, tip to ground, ring to ground, tip 1 and ring
1, tip 1 to ground, and ring 1 to ground shall not exceed 70 volts peak
for more than 1 second, with tip to ring, tip 1 to ring 1, and auxiliary
lead to auxiliary lead each terminated with 1500 ohms center-tapped
through 1000 ohms to ground and each E&M lead terminated in 1500 ohms to
ground, if 120 volts rms 60 Hz, ac is applied between all connections to
other equipment tied together (except connections to non-hazardous
voltage sources) and ground. The source shall not be limited to less
than 20 amperes continuously, not to less than 50 amperes for 1 minute,
and shall not be interrupted by an overcurrent device permitting less
total energy flow than a 20 ampere time delay fuse or breaker.
(3) Connections to registered protective circuitry. The voltage
measurable between auxiliary leads, auxiliary leads to ground, E&M leads
and ground, tip and ring, tip to ground, ring to ground, tip 1 and ring
1, tip 1 to ground, and ring 1 to ground shall not exceed 70 volts peak
for more than 1 second, with tip to ring, tip 1 to ring 1 and auxiliary
lead to auxiliary lead each terminated with 1500 ohms, center-tapped
through 1000 ohms to ground, and each E&M lead terminated in 1500 ohms
to ground if either 120 or 300 volts rms to 60 Hz. ac is applied:
(i) Between all protective circuitry connections other than
telephone connections (and connection to non-hazardous voltage sources),
tied together and ground; and
(ii) Across all protective circuitry connections, other than
telephone connections (and connections to non-hazardous voltage sources)
which have a transmission path to the telephone connections, with
alternative leads grounded; under all reasonable applications of earth
ground to the protective circuitry. The source shall not be limited to
less than 20 amperes continuously, nor to less than 50 amperes for 1
minute, and shall not be interrupted by an overcurrent device permitting
less total energy flow than a 20 ampere time delay fuse or breaker.
(4) Non-hazardous voltage source. A voltage source is considered a
non-hazardous voltage source if it conforms with the requirements of
Secs. 68.302, 68.304, and 68.306(b)(1), with all connections to the
source other than primary power connections treated as ``telephone
connections,'' and if such source supplies voltages no greater than the
following under all modes of operation and of failure:
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(i) Ac voltages less than 42.4 volts peak;
(ii) Dc voltages less than 80 volts; and
(iii) Combined ac and dc voltages less than 42.4 volts peak when the
absolute value of the dc component is less than 21.2 volts and less than
(28.8 + 0.64 x V dc) when the absolute value of the dc component is
between 21.2 and 80 volts.
(c) Hazards from exposed surfaces (to be applied for intentional
conductive paths to ground as required by Sec. 68.304). The voltage
measurable between auxiliary leads, auxiliary leads to ground, E&M leads
and ground, tip and ring, tip and ground, ring and ground, tip 1 and
ring 1, tip 1 and ground, ring 1 and ground, shall not exceed 70 volts
peak for more than 1 second, with tip to ring, tip 1 and ring 1, and
auxiliary lead to auxiliary lead each terminated with 1500 ohms, center-
tapped through 1000 ohms to ground, and each E&M lead terminated in 1500
ohms to ground, if 120 volts rms 60 Hz. ac is applied between conductive
exposed surfaces and ground. The source shall not be limited to less
than 20 amperes continuously, nor to less than 50 amperes for 1 minute,
and shall not be interrupted by an overcurrent device permitting less
total energy flow than a 20 ampere time delay fuse or breaker.
(d) Ringing sources. Ringing sources, except for class A OPS
interfaces, shall meet all of the following restrictions:
(1) The ringing signal shall use only frequencies whose fundamental
component is equal to or below 70 Hz.2
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2 33 Hz may be the highest frequency necessary for OPS
service.
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(2) The ringing voltage shall be less than 300 V peak-to-peak and
less than 200 V peak-to-ground across a resistive termination of at
least 1 megohm.
(3) The ringing voltage shall be interrupted to create quiet
intervals of at least one second (continuous) duration each separated by
no more than 5 seconds. During the quiet intervals, the voltage to
ground shall not exceed the voltage limits given in paragraph (a)(6)(i)
of this section.
(4) As specified below, ringing sources shall be required to (a)
include a series current-sensitive tripping device in the ring lead
which will trip ringing as specified in Figure 68.306(d), and/or (b)
provide a voltage to ground (monitoring voltage) on the tip or ring
conductor with a magnitude of at least 19 volts peak (but may not exceed
the voltage limits given in paragraph (a)(6)(i) of this section)
whenever the ringing voltage is not present (idle state). Tripping
devices and/or monitoring voltages are required dependent upon the
current flow through a specified resistance connected between the
ringing source (R(OPS)) and ground as follows:
(i) If the current through a 500 ohms (and greater) resistor does
not exceed 100 mA peak-to-peak, neither a tripping device nor a
monitoring voltage are required, or
(ii) If the current through a 1500 ohms (and greater) resistor
exceeds 100 mA peak-to-peak, the ringing source shall include a tripping
device. If the tripping device meets the operating characteristics as
specified in Figure 68.306(d) with R=500 ohms (and greater), then no
monitoring voltage is required. If, however, the tripping device only
meets the given operating characteristics with R=1500 ohms (and
greater), then the ringing source must also include a monitoring voltage
as described above, or
(iii) If the current through a 500 ohms (and greater) resistor
exceeds 100 mA peak-to-peak but does not exceed this value of current
with a 1500 ohms (and greater) termination, the ringing source shall
include either a tripping device which meets the operating
characteristics as specified in Figure 68.306(d) with R=500 ohms (and
greater), or a monitoring voltage.
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[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TCJN91.014
[45 02 FR 20854 , Mar. 31, 1980, as amended at 45 FR 54342 , Aug. 15, 1980;
45 FR 61632 , Sept. 17, 1980; 47 FR 39686 , Sept. 9, 1982; 51 FR 945 , Jan.
9, 1986; 51 FR 16689 , May 6, 1986; 60 FR 54814 , 54815, Oct. 26, 1995]
[[Page 282]]
Goto Section: 68.304 | 68.308
Goto Year: 1996 |
1998
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