- Dual-tone multi-frequency
Dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) signaling is used for
telephone signaling over the line in the voice-frequency band to the call switching center. The version of DTMF used for telephone tone dialing is known by the trademarked term Touch-Tone (canceled March 13, 1984), and is standardized byITU-T RecommendationQ.23 . Othermulti-frequency systems are used for signaling internal to the telephone network.As a method of
in-band signaling , DTMF tones were also used bycable television broadcasters to indicate the start and stop times of local commercial insertion points during station breaks for the benefit of cable companies. Until betterout-of-band signaling equipment was developed in the 1990s, fast, unacknowledged, and loud DTMF tone sequences could be heard during the commercial breaks of cable channels in the United States and elsewhere.Fact|date=March 2008History
In the time preceding the development of DTMF, telephone systems employed a system commonly referred to as pulse ("Dial Pulse" or DP in the U.S.) or loop disconnect (LD) signaling to dial numbers, which functions by rapidly disconnecting and connecting the
calling party 's telephone line, similar to flicking a light switch on and off. The repeated connection and disconnection, as thedial spins, sounds like a series of clicks. The exchange equipment counts those clicks or dial pulses to determine the called number. Loop disconnect range was restricted by telegraphic distortion and other technical problems, and placing calls over longer distances required either operator assistance (operators used an earlier kind ofmulti-frequency dial) or the provision ofsubscriber trunk dialing equipment.Dual Tone Multi-Frequency, or DTMF, is a method for instructing a telephone switching system of the telephone number to be dialed, or to issue commands to switching systems or related telephony equipment.
The DTMF dialing system traces its roots to a technique developed by
Bell Labs in the 1950s called MF (Multi-Frequency) which was deployed within the AT&T telephone network to direct calls between switching facilities using in-band signaling. In the early 1960s, a derivative technique was offered by AT&T through itsBell System telephone companies as a "modern" way for network customers to place calls. In AT&Ts Compatibility Bulletin No. 105, AT&T described the product as "a method for pushbutton signaling from customer stations using the voice transmission path."The consumer product was marketed by AT&T under the registered trade name Touch-Tone. Other vendors of compatible telephone equipment called this same system "Tone" dialing or "DTMF," or used their own registered trade names such as the "Digitone" of Northern Electric (now known as
Nortel Networks ).The DTMF system uses eight different frequency signals transmitted in pairs to represent sixteen different numbers, symbols and letters - as detailed below.
#, *, A, B, C, and D
The engineers had envisioned phones being used to access computers, and surveyed a number of companies to see what they would need for this role. This led to the addition of the octothorpe
number sign (#) and star (*) keys as well as a group of keys for menu selection: A, B, C and D. In the end, the lettered keys were dropped from most phones, and it was many years before these keys became widely used forvertical service code s such as *67 in the United States and Canada to suppresscaller ID .Public
payphone s that accept credit cards use these additional codes to send the information from themagnetic strip .The
U.S. military also used the letters, relabeled, in their now defunctAutovon phone system. Here they were used before dialing the phone in order to give some calls priority, cutting in over existing calls if need be. The idea was to allow important traffic to get through every time. The levels of priority available were Flash Override (A), Flash (B), Immediate (C), and Priority (D), with Flash Override being the highest priority. Pressing one of these keys gave your call priority, overriding other conversations on the network. Pressing C, Immediate, before dialing would make the switch first look for any free lines, and if all lines were in use, it would disconnect any non-priority calls, and then any priority calls. Flash Override will kick every other call off the trunks between the origin and destination. Consequently, it is limited to theWhite House Communications Agency . Precedence dialing is still done on the military phone networks, but using number combinations (Example:Entering 93 before a number is a priority call) rather than the separate tones and theGovernment Emergency Telecommunications Service has supersededAutovon for any civilian priority telco access.Listen
filename=DTMF trucking push to talk ID example.ogg
title=DTMF Push-To-Talk ID
description=Example of DTMF used as push-to-talk ID on a two-way radio system.
format=Ogg Present-day uses of the A, B, C and D keys on telephone networks are few, and exclusive to network control. For example, the A key is used on some networks to cycle through different carriers at will (thereby listening in on calls). Their use is probably prohibited by most carriers. The A, B, C and D tones are used in
amateur radio phone patch and repeater operations to allow, among other uses, control of the repeater while connected to an active phone line.DTMF tones are also used by some cable television networks and radio networks to signal the local cable company/network station to insert a local advertisement or station identification. These tones were often heard during a station ID preceding a local ad insert. Previously, terrestrial television stations also used DTMF tones to shut off and turn on remote transmitters.
DTMF tones are also sometimes used in
caller ID systems to transfer the caller ID information, however in the USA onlyBell 202 modulated FSK signaling is used to transfer the data.Keypad
The DTMF keypad is laid out in a 4×4 matrix, with each row representing a "low" frequency, and each column representing a "high" frequency. Pressing a single key (such as '1' ) will send a
sinusoidal tone of the two frequencies (697 and 1209hertz (Hz)). The original keypads had levers inside, so each button activated two contacts. The multiple tones are the reason for calling the system multifrequency. These tones are then decoded by the switching center to determine which key was pressed.DTMF event frequencies
The tone frequencies, as defined by the
Precise Tone Plan , are selected such that harmonics andintermodulation products will not cause an unreliable signal. No frequency is a multiple of another, the difference between any two frequencies does not equal any of the frequencies, and the sum of any two frequencies does not equal any of the frequencies. The frequencies were initially designed with aratio of 21/19, which is slightly less than awhole tone . The frequencies may not vary more than ±1.8% from their nominal frequency, or the switching center will ignore the signal. The high frequencies may be the same volume or louder as the low frequencies when sent across the line. The loudness difference between the high and low frequencies can be as large as 3decibel s (dB) and is referred to as "twist." The minimum duration of the tone should be at least 70 msec, although in some countries and applications DTMF receivers must be able to reliably detect DTMF tones as short as 45ms.DTMF can be decoded using the
Goertzel algorithm .Synonyms include multifrequency pulsing and multifrequency signaling.
ee also
*
Selective calling (use of DTMF in two-way radio)
*Pulse dialing
*Rotary dial
*Telephone keypad
*Goertzel algorithm (used for DTMF detection/decoding)
*Multi-frequency References
* Citation
last=Schenker
first=L
title=Pushbutton Calling with a Two-Group Voice-Frequency Code
journal=The Bell system technical journal
volume=39
issue=1
year=1960
pages=235-255
issn=0005-8580
url=http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=accnfh3pfb3_205hfvzk5rs .External links
* [http://www.itu.int/rec/dologin_pub.asp?lang=e&id=T-REC-Q.23-198811-I!!PDF-E&type=items ITU-T Recommendation Q.23 - Technical features of push-button telephone sets (PDF)]
* [http://www.itu.int/rec/dologin_pub.asp?lang=e&id=T-REC-F.902-199502-I!!PDF-E&type=items ITU's recommendations for implementing DTMF services (PDF)]
* [http://docs.google.com/Doc?docid=accnfh3pfb3_205hfvzk5rs Pushbutton Calling with a Two-Group Voice-Frequency Code - The Bell system technical journal (ISSN 0005-8580) Schenker yr:1960 vol:39 iss:1 pg:235-255]
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