Old Stockholm Telephone Tower

(en.wikipedia.org)

135 points | by ZeljkoS 3 days ago ago

34 comments

  • jcrawfordor 4 hours ago

    When the tower was constructed in 1887, multiplexing technology was probably not available (I'm not so sure of the timeline in Europe). By 1913 it likely would have come into use. However, multiplexing really isn't a factor here, as the tower seems to have been built to serve local loops. Since these loops go to subscriber telephone sets, there's no option for multiplexing without expensive and maintenance-intensive equipment at customer premises. Multiplexing of local loops is called "pair gain" and wouldn't be developed until later, and it was never really that popular in most phone systems. Outside of suburban areas, it's typical that each copper pair runs directly to the exchange. Historically, and today, there is rarely any active equipment (or since the 1950s or so even passive conditioning) on local loops, they're just wires from the exchange to the phone.

    As for why you didn't see similar constructions in other cities, this was definitely an unusually large telephone office for the time. In the US, a city exchange of the late 20th century would usually have just hundreds of lines, many of them multi-party. Telephone companies scaled up by building more exchanges, rather than a single very large one. When they got into these kinds of subscriber numbers at an exchange, the F1/F2 cable scheme was in use to avoid this kind of wiring. It does seem to be the case that telephone adoption was unusually rapid in Sweden, I find one (poorly sourced) claim that there were some 4,800 telephone subscribers in Stockholm in 1886 which would very likely make it the most telephone-rich city in the world. The situation of the tower seems to have developed in part because its builder, Allmänna, was consolidating the Stockholm telephone market through acquisitions and made a decision to centralize the many acquired customers onto on exchange.

    What I'm a little confused about here is the lack of cables. The other big reason you didn't see constructions like this in the US, even in places like New York City, is because subscriber loops were quickly moved into lead-sheathed, paper-insulated multi-pair cables. These could contain hundreds of pairs. Cables were pretty much reaching maturity when this tower was built. I am curious as to the reason that multi-pair cables were not adopted more quickly in Stockholm, but it may be as simple as the considerable investment in this tower making open wire the preferred option for its short lifespan. In any case, the common claim that underground cables obsoleted the tower rings hollow to me, or at least misses an important detail, as aboveground cables were already in use in the 1880s. I suspect that modernization to cables was just deferred in Stockholm until it happened to also make sense to move to duct or pipe systems. In the US, it was more common that telephone exchanges switched to overhead (aerial) cable to manage exactly the wire sprawl issue that this tower exemplifies, and then only later (if ever) started to bury cables.

    This article has more photos of the tower, but unfortunately not much more technical history: https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/the-stockholm-telephone-tow...

    And this includes some photos of other parts of the Stockholm telephone network. The tower was not the only impressive construction required to manage this many open-wire pairs: https://thehistoryinsider.com/when-the-sky-over-stockholm-wa...

    • finaard 4 hours ago

      > As for why you didn't see similar constructions in other cities, this was definitely an unusually large telephone office for the time

      For some perspective here - it took until the mid-80s for most of Germany to be connected to a phone line. That is, the 1980s.

      I recently talked about that with my father after I found a postcard from one of my uncles from the early 80s confirming meeting and dinner plans. While I remember them always having a phone they were one of the households only connected in the mid 80s - which in retrospect explains some of the things I've found odd about them when talking to them by phone. It was a new thing for them.

      (My parents got connected early on - my mother used to work for the post office in the phone exchange, and one of the perks of the job was priority for getting a phone line. Which also explained why we had an old grey phone, while pretty much all my friends had a relatively modern - for the time - one: they all only somewhat recently got phones)

    • speerer 4 hours ago

      I just wanted to say that after the first paragraph, I wondered who this comment was written by, and then I realised I knew the answer already. There was no need for me to even check.

  • Isamu 5 hours ago

    Comments mention multiplexing and that’s not wrong but the real reason for the vast number of wires is amplifiers, or rather the lack of practical ones at the time. You had to transmit at high enough power to overcome losses and still be able to hear at the destination.

    Each wire carries just one signal at a power that would easily interfere with others, they needed relatively thick wires separated from each other. You see pictures of poles with lots of cross bars carrying lots of wires in this period.

    Once amplification was practical they could use the thin telephone wires bundled together in a cable, each wire carrying a much fainter signal that can be easily amplified as needed.

    Amplification existed but it took the vacuum tube to get it affordable and reliable for each circuit to have its own amplification.

    • Waraqa 4 hours ago

      Does that mean the quality of the voice calls in that era was better than later systems? Since it's logical to have loss of quality when a weak signal is amplified.

  • designerarvid 14 hours ago

    Not only was the tower demolished, some 700 buildings in that central area were in efforts to modernise the city.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redevelopment_of_Norrmalm?wpro...

  • bombcar 15 hours ago

    That is exactly how I envision the clacks based on Pratchett's descriptions. Maybe without exactly that many wires ...

    • shantara 10 hours ago

      For me, this picture is more of China Miéville than Pratchett.

    • dmd 8 hours ago

      Wouldn’t the number of wires be…. zero? The clacks are optical. They’re semaphore.

    • atombender 11 hours ago

      But clacks are optical telegraphs [1]; they communicate by semaphores, not wires.

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_telegraph

  • ZeljkoS 3 days ago

    It is speculated that this was an inspiration for the Citadel in Half-Life: Alyx VR game:

    https://www.reddit.com/r/HalfLife/comments/e809fn/cant_help_...

  • iberator 14 hours ago

    And that's why we invented multiplexing and even better: store and forward packets.

    • dredmorbius 7 hours ago

      More specifically, packet-based rather than switched telecoms.

      Using a switch, each connection is a literal physical circuit. Multiplexing allows multiple circuits per phone line (through frequency separation at the carrier-frequency level), and much early telephony research involved increasing the multiplexing capacity and consequent issues.

      With packet-switched networks, the only circuits are the interconnects between routers, and each individual data packet can take a different route. Subject to quality of service / service level agreements (QoS / SLA), it's possible to support far more distinct individual connections over packet-switched networks, though there still remains a maximum total bandwidth. For time-sensitive modalities (e.g., realtime voice or video), excess traffic leads to congestion and buffering, distortion, or interference, so limits remain. But they're far more generous than with circuit-based networks.

      Put another way, packets give a greater assurance of establishing a link between any two nodes, whilst circuits give a greater assurance of a minimum bandwidth floor between those nodes. If you can get a connection, circuit-based line quality is often (though not always) superior, in terms of consistency, clarity, and low latency.

      • ssl-3 2 hours ago

        That doesn't necessarily line up with my understanding of reality.

        In the US, a PRI can handle up to exactly 23 concurrent, native g.711u phone calls. That's it's capacity: No more, and no less. It's always 23, with each concurrent call using exactly 64kbps of symmetric bandwidth....just because that's the number of B channels provided.

        But if we take that same PRI and make it do IP packets instead using MLPPP, then our capacity is actually reduced. By adding the magic of packet switching, we also add overhead. And with that added overhead, we can only get only get ~19 g.711u calls through that same circuit.

        (Now, sure: In a bigger picture, that PRI may be better utilized as an IP pipeline than as a dedicated telephony circuit. It's certainly more flexible that way.

        But packetization is not something that automatically improves capacity. It often does the opposite.)

  • cpach 11 hours ago

    What kind of solutions were employed in other cities? Does anyone know? Cities like London and New York etc must have had much more telephone lines.

    • tazjin 10 hours ago

      At this early time (this is not long after the invention of the phone itself) - none, really. Stockholm had a much higher number of telephones per home, but not very long after this operators put the cables underground and that was that.

  • greenbit 8 hours ago

    Does this mean that probably somewhere below that tower, there were operator stations that would have allowed any of the 5500 lines to connect to any of the other lines? How many simultaneous calls would that even be? Correct me if I borked this, but 5500!/(2^(5500/2)), perhaps?

    It seems plausible that if the phone had only just been invented, you'd initially set up small systems that would in fact allow any line to connect to any line. That'd be fine for maybe even a few dozen lines. But as the image shows, that doesn't scale too well.

    • dredmorbius 7 hours ago

      The total number of connections would all but certainly be far greater than the maximum number of simultaneous calls which could be supported.

      Under PSTN, public-switched telephone networks, a not-infrequent occurrence, especially when calling long-distance, was to get a message "all circuits are busy". When each call was literally a circuit, and the "switch" (the central telephone exchange) made and broke those circuits as calls began and ended, my understanding (not my area of expertise, but one of some interest) is that this meant that all available interchange connections were occupied. For long-distance, this was typically far lower than for local calls (most phone traffic is local), and for international calls, lower still. The first transatlantic telephone cable could support only 36 simultaneous calls, in 1956. Calls were short, expensive, and all but exclusively for business and government subscribers.

      <https://hamhistory.org/first-transatlantic-telephone-cable/>

      I'd expect that the Stockholm exchange probably supported a few hundred simultaneous calls, probably a few (a dozen or so perhaps) per operator, who had to physically connect each call.

      • analog31 6 hours ago

        Indeed, I'm old enough to remember "all circuits are busy."

    • lanna 6 hours ago

      If you have n nodes, each one needs to connect to n-1 other nodes. But the connection from A to B is the same as the one from B to A. Therefore, there are n(n-1)/2 total connections.

  • thakoppno 17 hours ago

    There are more telecommunication lines now than ever. We’ve just gotten really good at organizing them?

    • kibwen 16 hours ago

      We've gotten really good at multiplexing lots of connections over a single line.

    • kikokikokiko 15 hours ago

      I believe the concept of multiplexing made the tower obsolete, orher than the subterranean cables of course.

      • ntoskrnl_exe 13 hours ago

        I’m not sure that plain old telephone service allowed multiplexing, so it was probably just the latter

        • solid_fuel 11 hours ago

          It did to an extent, they built the old copper network in tiers. I don't know the exact numbers and I'm sure they varied by area, but the general idea was - your home phone would connect to a local exchange, which served just dozens of local homes, and that exchange would connect to a bigger exchange somewhere higher up the network over a bundle of circuits. And that architecture repeated for a few layers.

          But it wasn't 1:1, so you would have lets say 100 homes connected to a local exchange, and that local exchange would have say 20 lines to the next exchange in the network. That placed limits on the amount of concurrent connections you could have from one area - if 21 homes all tried to call people in the next city over, at least one of them would get a signal that all circuits are full and they would have to try again later. It drastically reduced the amount of lines you need between local exchanges though.

          • cpach 10 hours ago

            Interesting!

            I guess it helped that phone calls were quite expensive, so people generally made very short calls. I haven’t really thought about this before but one of the main reasons for the pricing system could have been the facts that you mentioned.

            In Sweden, the pricing system was tiered. Same area code (roughly: same municipality) = lowest rate. Neighbouring area codes = higher rate. Outside of that = highest rate. The rate was halved after 6pm. A reason for lowering the rates in the evening might have been that there were far less business users calling after 6pm.

            One of the reasons I remember the pricing system is that my parents would not be happy if I dialed in to a modem pool before 6pm :)

            Before I was born, the telephone company in Sweden (Televerket, later Telia) started to upgrade their system to use digital telephone exchanges (AXE). But there were of course still some kind of hard limit for how many concurrent calls they could handle, so I guess that’s why they kept the pricing system for a while.

            This is partly speculation on my part, so feel free to correct me if I’m wrong.

            • solid_fuel 8 minutes ago

              Yep, that's right. The long distance trunks were a more limited resource so the telcos charged more per minute to use them. After digital exchanges came around it was less of a factor, but I think the pricing structure stuck around for a while.

          • greenbit 8 hours ago

            You'd think that at least initially, individual towns would stand up fully connected (albeit small) but isolated networks. That before very long, the idea of connecting one town to the next would occur, and it would be realized that you only need a relatively small number of "long distance" lines, connected between the existing switchboards. At which point, if you were wiring up a city, you'd follow that pattern; tiered layers, as you say. It stands to reason then, that Stockholm's system must have started very early, and had absolutely explosive growth, to get to a situation like that tower.

        • varjag 10 hours ago

          It absolutely did, in 3kHz bands. That's how you could also sometimes hear someone else talking.

  • cgio 16 hours ago

    Single point of failure?

    • viraptor 14 hours ago

      A lot of old telephony systems were full of SPoFs.

      • oofbey 5 hours ago

        A core design principle of the Internet was the ability to automatically route around damage. The requirement came from a desire to be robust against nuclear attack. Very few 20th century networking systems could do this. Star topology or ring topology all had intrinsic SPoF.

  • sans_souse 3 days ago

    This is actually amazing

  • ValtteriL 15 hours ago

    NK logo and all