by Peter Walker
Peter Walker gave a talk on Crossbar switching at the THG’s AGM
in 2000. He has now converted the talk into print. In this article,
Peter describes the principles of Crossbar switching and the history of
the system.
Crossbar switching is a very old technique. The term arises from
early manual switchboards that used a set of overlapping brass bars at
right angles to each other forming a set of rows and columns. By placing
a brass plug through a hole at an intersection of the bars, a
connection could be made from any inlet to any outlet. This crosspoint
switching principle is used not only in crossbar switching systems, but
all matrix switching systems, including the reed-electronic systems,
such as TXE2 and TXE4.
Except for the very smallest PAX systems, matrix switches on their
own are not large enough to provide a complete telephone exchange and it
is neither economic nor practical to keep increasing the size of the
matrix, so crossbar switches are usually connected together in a form
known as Link Trunking. The outlets of the first stage of switching are
connected to the inlets of a second stage. By careful design of the
links, it is possible to provide an overall switching matrix that
provides degrees of concentration or expansion and different blocking
probabilities. By blocking, we mean the possibility of their being no
available path between a given inlet and a required outlet, i.e. the
Grade of Service.
One way to create a matrix switch would be to employ a relay at every
crosspoint, but this would be expensive and the number of relays goes
up as a square law. Nevertheless, as we shall see, all-relay systems
were built. Indeed, the reed-electronic systems TXE2 and TXE4 used one
reed relay per crosspoint, though the switch matrices were kept fairly
small. A crossbar switch is an electromechanical switch that aims to
create a matrix switch without needing a relay at each crosspoint.
Instead, while having a set of relay contacts at each crosspoint, they
are operated by an electromagnetic coil associated with each column and
each row.
The first principle to understand is how to make a set of contacts
operate conditionally; that is, they will operate when the right
combination of coils are energised. The principle is best understood by
considering how this principle might work with a single relay.
In figure 4(a) we see a relay where the lifting comb is not in
contact with the armature as would normally be the case. If the armature
operates, the contacts will not move. In (b) we see how a stiff wire
(known as a ‘finger’) is inserted in the gap between the armature and
the lifting comb. In (c) we see that if the finger is in place, then
operation of the coil will result in the lifting comb moving and the
contacts are closed.
In a real crossbar switch, the coil, associated
with the ‘vertical’, would have an extended armature, known as the
operating bar, which can potentially operate a number of spring-sets in
the column. By introducing a finger into one or more of these
spring-sets, it is possible to select which contacts will be operated.
The fingers are introduced by swinging them into position by a
horizontal bar operated by an electromagnetic coil associated with the
‘row’. In fact, to gain even greater economies, each horizontal bar can
be swung up or down, so only one bar is needed for every two rows. Fig 5
shows the detail of how a real crossbar switch crosspoint is operated.
In Figure 5 we can identify several important components. The
vertical assembly (or ‘bridge’) is associated with the switch inlets and
these are commoned across all the contact sets. The vertical is
operated by the bridge magnet (not shown) which has the effect of
driving the operating bar into a slot in the contact sets. Only if a
finger is swung between the operating bar and the spring-set, will the
latter be operated. The fingers are connected to the horizontal or
‘select’ bar and these can be swung up or down according to which select
magnet is operated. So a particular spring-set is actuated by first
operating the appropriate select magnet to introduce the fingers into
the upper or lower position in front of the spring-sets in that ‘row’
and then operating the bridge magnet for the ‘column’. This traps the
finger between the operating bar of the bridge and the spring-set such
that when the select magnet subsequently releases and the horizontal bar
returns to normal, the finger is held. In order for this to work, the
fingers are made of flexible spring steel. A consequence of the
spring-like nature of the fingers is that when the horizontal bar is
operated or released, the fingers oscillate and incorrect selection
might result, so a damper is fitted to control this. It is the noise of
these dampers rattling on the fingers that gives crossbar switches their
characteristic tinkling noise when operating.
Crossbar exchanges come in many different shapes and sizes, but
Figure 6 shows a typical layout of a crossbar local exchange. The line
unit is a two-stage link-trunked sets of crossbar switches designed to
concentrate the subscriber lines (about 500 on each) onto a smaller
number of trunks with control relay-sets, from which the registers are
accessed and dial tone returned. For an originating call, the line unit
plays a similar role to line-finders in a Strowger system. Calls are set
up across the group unit (two or more crossbar stages) to an
appropriate outgoing junction or the line unit associated with the
called party’s line. Unlike Strowger which has separate final selectors
and line-finders, the line units perform both roles and are
bi-directional. The control relay-sets between the line and group units
perform all the line supervision functions, i.e. transmission bridge,
current feeding and ringing. Each line and group unit will have a common
control marker, which has the job of setting up calls one at a time,
identifying an appropriate free path through the link-trunked switches.
The precise arrangements of markers and other items varies between
systems as does the terminology for the line & group units and the
control relay-sets.
The history of crossbar
The first crossbar switch was designed in 1913 by J. N. Reynolds, an
engineer with Western Electric in the USA. Although it was patented in
1915, it was never exploited. It used a system of cams and rollers to
operate the crosspoints, see Fig 7.
Around this time, two engineers at the Swedish PTT (Televerket),
Betulander and Palmgren, were experimenting with the idea of producing
exchanges using relay crosspoint technology. They found that using
relays at each crosspoint was too expensive for large exchanges but did
develop a small-sized all-relay exchange. But their most important
innovation was the use, for the very first time, of both link trunking
and common-control markers for call set-up.
Televerket
were interested in deploying automatic exchanges and, like the British
GPO in the 1920s, decided to order some pilot switches. However, the
Great War intervened and trial exchanges were not in place until 1921.
This delay had great significance, since by this time, Betulander had
realised the need to reduce the relay count in his system and had come
across Reynold’s patented crossbar switch. By abandoning the cams and
rollers for the simpler finger system described above, Betulander
designed a new crossbar switch in 1919 which became the model for all
subsequent types.
So, by 1921, the Televerket competition was between four systems:
Siemens & Halske of Germany offered a step-by-step
system;
Western Electric offered the Rotary system from their Antwerp
factory;
L.M. Ericsson offered two systems: Hultman & Kảell’s 500
point system and a crossbar system based on Betulander’s new switch.
It was no surprise that Televerket reflected the national interest
and chose an Ericsson system, but the course of history was changed
because they chose the rotary-style 500 point system, rather than the
new and unproven crossbar system. Jacobaeus, a Swedish switching expert,
later said:
“The technicians of that time considered the link-connection
technique strange and complicated. And that prejudice was natural enough
because there was no scientific and reliable method of calculating the
traffic handling capacity of link-connected systems. They also feared
that occasional relay faults in the common markers would cause total
stoppage of operations, a condition that was all the more critical
because it was a matter of choosing a system for exchanges with a large
number of lines.”
Later, Jacobaeus himself produced the definitive mathematical
approach to the design of link-trunked systems. It should be no surprise
that modern crossbar systems have always used duplicated markers to
avoid the security problem.
At this point it is worth mentioning that Betulander’s all-relay
system was deployed for a number of installations. The first 100 line
subscriber demonstration exchange was exhibited at Marconi House in
London in 1913. Televerket kept the rights to the system in Sweden but
sold the overseas rights to an English firm, The Relay Automatic
Telephone Co Ltd. Public exchanges were installed in London (1916),
Fleetwood, Lancs (1922 and worked for around 30 years), India and
France. But on the whole, the system was restricted to PABX use.
After the Televerket trials, history might have consigned crossbar to
the dustbin, along with its link-trunking and marker control. In fact,
the crossbar switch was given a consolation prize by being used by
Televerket in a rural switching system, initially at Sundsvall in 1926.
However, due to the concerns about link-trunking and common control,
these rural exchanges worked in step-by-step mode, each switch playing
the role that a Strowger selector would normally do. Later on,
manufacturing constraints meant that Ericsson were asked to supply the
switches. By 1944, some 1100 such exchanges had been installed in rural
Sweden. This meant that Ericsson gradually refined the design of the
switch and it was even deployed as a register within the 500 point
system when long distance dialling was implemented.
Crossbar in the USA
However, the next part of the history is on the other side of the
Atlantic. In 1930, while Bell Labs engineers were trying to produce
their own design of matrix or ‘coordinate’ switch, they sent a study
mission to Sweden to see the rural crossbar system and ordered a few
switches for analysis. Working secretly over many years, they gradually
developed what became known as “Xbar #1” and this was first introduced
in 1938 in Brooklyn (Troy Avenue), closely followed by Manhattan (East
30 Street). But Bell Labs had published nothing about their new system
until as late as 1937 and these articles caused a considerable stir.
Analysis of the system showed that not only was the crossbar switch
remarkably similar to the Swedish design, but of even more importance
was the fact that Bell Labs had used Betulander and Palmgren’s
link-connection principle with register and marker control, ideas that
had been largely forgotten elsewhere. The Crossbar No 1 system was
designed for large city exchanges, where AT&T was looking to
Crossbar to provide a better big city switch than the expensive and
flawed Panel system. It proved a major success and by 1978 some 6M lines
were in use.
In 1943, the Crossbar #4 system was introduced for toll (tandem) use
and 177 had been deployed by 1976. The general purpose Crossbar #5 was
introduced in 1948 for local exchange and small tandem applications. By
1978, 28M lines had been deployed in the Bell system with another 17M
lines in Canada and the US independents.
All this activity did not go unnoticed by the Swedes. L.M. Ericsson
quickly went ahead developing a series of systems with link trunking and
marker control to exploit their now well-refined crossbar switch. But
as so often, the initial deployments were abroad, as Televerket was
initially quite content with its 500 point system. Key dates were:
1950 ARF50 at Helsinki (small local, for the 1952 Olympic Games)
1952
ARM10 at Rotterdam (tandem)
1953 ARF10s in Jutland and Copenhagen
(large local)
1953 ARM20 Aarhus (large trunk)
In 1954, deployments started in Sweden. The rest as they say is
history… Ericsson went on to export and licence the system widely across
the world and crossbar became one of the world’s major switching
systems in the 1950s-1970s.
Other crossbar systems
Many smaller manufacturers jumped on the bandwagon that Bell Labs and
Ericsson had started and several minor systems appeared, produced by
Kellogg in the USA, Bell Telephone Manufacturing of Antwerp and Standard
Electric Lorenz in Germany. Behind the iron curtain, cut off from
western exports, a crossbar system was designed in Russia and widely
deployed in Eastern Europe. The Japanese were granted a licence for the
Bell switch but quickly designed their own ‘copy-cat’ version. In
Britain, only one system was designed – the 5005 from AT&E, which
will be described in Part 2 of this series of articles.
The only other system of worldwide significance was the Pentaconta
system produced by ITT, which used a massive crossbar switch with 22
vertical bars and 14 horizontals. First delivered in 1955, it was
exported and licensed in many parts of the world. The Pentaconta system
used a novel form of link trunking which featured ‘entr’aide’ or
Inter-Aid. Should there be no free path available through the two-stage
crossbar unit, extra Inter-Aid links were provided between adjacent
switches in the first stage, thereby providing alternative pathways,
albeit needing a three switch connection. Pentaconta was used for the PO
TXK3 and TXK4 systems, which will be described in Part 3 of this
series.
In concluding this review of crossbar systems, it is worth mentioning
that some manufacturers, including those in Japan, developed the basic
switch to be more compact, see Figure 13. On the whole, however, the
main crossbar suppliers kept to the traditional large sized switches.
Crossbar in the UK
As is well known, the GPO had chosen the Strowger system in the
1920s. It had been refined and standardised and by the 1950s there were 5
firms producing all the kit that the GPO needed: GEC, AT&E,
Ericsson Telephones, ST&C and Siemens Brothers. The GPO was
convinced that a fully electronic exchange system was just around the
corner and felt that it would be a distraction to introduce a system
like crossbar into the UK network, even though the advantages of
precious metal contacts over the sliding base metal used in the Strowger
system were well established. So confident were they of this that when
Subscriber Trunk Dialling was planned in the 1950s, it used all Strowger
technology. But the utter failure of the Highgate Wood all electronic
Pulse Amplitude Modulation exchange created a major set back.
Development largely switched to exploiting reed relay exchanges with
electronic control, finally producing TXE2 and TXE4 many years later.
Some work continued on electronic switching and this led to the Empress
PCM digital tandem exchange, along with STC’s private venture PCM tandem
at Moorgate.
But there was a problem. AT&E, at least, felt that being tied to
the GPO’s Strowger programme meant that it could never compete in the
world export market, so started designing its own crossbar system, the
5005 system. It wanted to use the UK network as its showcase and lobbied
the GPO to accept it. On the GPO side, it was becoming obvious that a
fully electronic exchange was some way off. TXE2 was limited to smaller
local exchanges and TXE4 was only really going to be economic for large
local exchanges. In any event, TXE4 was years behind schedule, after
initial trials of TXE1 and TXE3 showed their various inadequacies. This
left nothing other than Strowger to meet the demands for medium sized
locals and the trunk network. The 2-wire Strowger GSCs were not fit to
complete the STD programme for which an overlay 4-wire transit network
was urgently needed. The London trunk network was reaching saturation
and a radical decentralisation programme was needed. In hindsight, many
have concluded that the GPO should have adopted crossbar for the whole
STD programme, but that would have been heresy at the time.
In the end, the Post Office relented and allowed UK manufacturers to
offer their proprietary crossbar designs. Since they would need
adaptation to the UK network, it was agreed that procurement would be
against a set of functional requirements, known as Post Office
Requirements (PORs). In practice, the production of PORs was a farce.
With headquarters staff too imbued in Strowger precedent to think
‘outside the box’, many PORs were written alongside the development of
the systems and some were actually completed after they had entered
service.
The next section of this article describes a little about each of the
UK crossbar systems. The systems were all given codes beginning TXK,
because the more logical TXC sounded too much like TXE.
The AT&E/Plessey 5005 crossbar system TXK1
As mentioned above, AT&E started developing their crossbar system
for the export market. They were a late entrant into the crossbar
market. Their switch was almost identical to the Ericsson crossbar
switch, for which I believe they had a licence to exploit, but their
chosen control mechanisms were quite unlike any other previous crossbar
system. These features were ‘Self-Steering’ and ‘Mass marking’. With a
normal crossbar marker, a free path is chosen by analysing which links
are busy. This requires a lot of control wires between the switching
units and the Markers. With ‘Self-Steering’, a free outlet is chosen and
all possible paths back through the switching stages are marked using
relays associated with each switch. At each switch, one mark from all
competing marks is chosen and horizontal bars are operated. When a mark
finally arrives at the required inlet, the successful path is
established by operating the bridge magnets and releasing all the
horizontal bars. ‘Mass Marking’ is a further refinement of this
technique in that on outgoing junction calls, marking is started from
all free junctions on the route. The impact of these features is that
markers in TXK1 are very compact, compared to, say, an Ericsson marker
which might be a whole rack of relays. Other novel features were the
adoption of high capacity 501-type comb relays and wire-wrapping of
joints.
In the 5005 system, the line units were known as Distributors, the
group units were called Routers and the control relay sets were called
Transmission Relay Groups (TRGs).
The first 5005 deployment was in the Plessey factory at Edge Lane,
Liverpool in 1963; AT&E having by this time combined with Ericsson
Telephones and Plessey into one company. The same year saw the first
overseas deployment of a 100 line international exchange in Sydney, the
4-wire 5005T system. Having persuaded the Post Office to accept a pilot
5005A local exchange, this was brought into service in 1964 at
Broughton, Lancs. 1965 saw another international exchange in Hong Kong,
while in 1966, the Post Office approved the TXK1 for deployment as an
‘interim’ system. The first production TXK1 entered service at Bacup in
1968.
GEC had no crossbar system of their own, so licensed the 5005 system
and joined Plessey in rolling out some 1300 TXK1s. The first TXK1 in the
London Region was at Upminster in 1970 and was notable for replacing
London’s last manual local exchange.
GEC were not just a licensee of the system. They further developed
the TXK1 for use as a GSC and for the 7 London Sector Switching Centres
(SSCs), for which stored program control was introduced via the GEC Mark
1c processor. This processor took over the functions of the register,
coder, MF2 sender/receivers and part of the Router Control. SSCs were
deployed first at Ilford in 1972 followed by the other units at Wood
Green, Colindale, Ealing, Kingston, Croydon and Eltham. Each site
actually had three exchanges: an incoming trunk unit, an outgoing trunk
unit and a local tandem. CSS1 Manual Boards were also fitted. The
trunking of the SSCs, being a large trunk exchange, was different from
the TXK1 locals. The switchblock comprised a 2-stage Router, a 1-stage
Office Router and a 1-stage Junction Router. Routes were terminated on
the Router, Office Router or Junction Router according to size.
In contrast, the GSC was more conventional, being entirely
electro-mechanical. The main development work was the introduction of
the all the specialist GSC signalling functions, including ISD, transit
access etc. The first was installed at Brentwood in 1972. Like Strowger
GSCs, there was almost always a local component to act as the local
exchange for the locality, so the trunking was similar to the local
TXK1, a 2-stage Router and a 2-stage Distributor for the local
subscribers. Many TXK1 GSCs replaced the very last manual GSCs, such as
at Dover and Hastings. One interesting early TXK1 GSC was at Mid-Yell,
in Shetland, which comprised just one Router and one Distributor – one
of the smallest ever TXK1s, though another later TXK1 GSC at Strontian
had only 65 subscribers as against Mid Yell’s 89. It similarly had the
minimum complement of transit and ISD equipment.
Some TXK1 GSCs were installed as extensions to an existing Strowger
GSC. They would share outgoing routes and special 3-wire TRGs were
developed for the TXK1 for this purpose. They were designed so that if a
junction was seized simultaneously by the Strowger and crossbar units,
the Strowger would be allowed the call and the TXK1 forced to do a
repeat attempt. Well, it wouldn’t be feasible the other way round, would
it?
The TXK2 system
Following the introduction of international subscriber dialling in
1962, international traffic increased dramatically. The sole Strowger
era International Exchange at Faraday was based on the use of
back-to-back Motor Uniselectors and its capacity was limited (about
1500e, I recall). Plessey, having delivered two small international
exchanges in Sydney and Hong Kong were invited to supply a massive ISC
which would ultimately have 5000 incoming and 5000 outgoing circuits.
Ericsson of Sweden tried to bid for the job as well, but were told that
they were still not eligible to re-enter the UK market under the deal
whereby they relinquished all connection with Ericsson Telephones of
Beeston after the war.
However, the design of a 4-wire switch to carry so many circuits
required something quite different from that deployed in Sydney and Hong
Kong. The trunking comprised a 3-stage Great Router and 2-stage
Outgoing Office – 5 switches in all across the switchblock. But the
International Telephone Services Centre (ITSC), as the whole complex was
known, comprised more than just the switch. There was a cord manual
board (International Control Centre, ICC), a computer called the
International Accounting and Traffic Analysis Equipment (IATAE), an
International Maintenance Centre with some pretty fancy kit, including
such items as the Call Progress Indicator which used CCTV to pipe
displays to each maintenance position. On the ground floor was a large
International Repeater Station. The whole project went disastrously late
and the first part of Wood Street didn’t enter service until April
1971, though most histories say 1970. I’m sure we all appreciate the
difference between RFS and BIS dates!
By this time, it was all too late. Faraday was creaking at the seams
and congestion was rife. Occupancies on circuits to the USA often
exceeded 98% and stayed that way all day. In a desperate bid to plug the
gap, Plessey air-freighted the Sydney ISC they had installed in 1963
back to the UK and re-installed it in Wood Street, where it re-entered
service in June 1970 as the Wood Street Relief Unit. The TRGs were
quickly modified for UK 4-wire loop disconnect signalling and put to
work on London’s IDD traffic. All that just to gain another 100
international circuits! Sydney didn’t need the unit anymore, as they had
the joys of a brand new Ericsson ARM20 international crossbar exchange.
As well as having a unique trunking arrangement, the original TXK2
had a bizarre signalling configuration. The registers didn’t have
separate sender/receivers to cope with all the signalling permutations
found at an ISC. Instead, they all had in-built senders for signalling
continental AC4 (CCITT4) and intercontinental MF1 (CCITT5). So on
incoming calls, the registers signalled MF1 across the switchblock,
where the outgoing national Line Relay Groups (LRGs) had access to
outgoing registers that converted the MF1 to the requisite LD4, AC9 or
MF2. For AC9 and LD4 working via Faraday Trunk Non-Director, outgoing
coders were needed to provide the Strowger translation digits.
Another odd feature was that each incoming LRG only had access to a
maximum of three registers from the total pool of registers. When the
unit was busy (which was most of the time), if all three registers were
busy, the affected incoming loop disconnect circuits from London were
back busied to prevent calls arriving. Now these junctions were already
very busy, but the London traffic recorders at the Strowger trunk units
measured the traffic by looking for an earth on the P-wire. Unbeknown to
the traffic planners in London, the back-busied condition, which caused
an earthed P wire, was measured as occupied traffic, which made the
high occupancy circuits appear even higher. So more circuits kept being
added. This made matters worse, as there were no corresponding
international circuits on the other side to take the extra traffic and
this made the exchange registers even busier.
Another side effect of this odd arrangement was that the back busy
was given as a full line reversal. When the registers became free again,
the A relay was once again presented to line the normal way round and
it met the capacitor on the line across the 2-wire/4-wire terminating
transformer at the London trunk unit. (It should be remembered that the
pulsing took place over the phantom of these 4-wire junctions.) This
caused the A relay to ‘flick’ causing the IATAE computer to register a
short call of about ¼ second. All these ‘ineffective’ calls made the
unit’s performance appear even worse. The solution to this problem was
much simpler: make the back busy merely a disconnection of the battery,
not a full reversal.
The next ITSC was to have been at Mondial House, also in the City of
London, but the novel design of building ran late and, in another famous
panic, an old aircraft factory at Stag Lane, Edgware was quickly
acquired for the installation of no less than two new ISCs, the
DeHavilland TXK2 and Mollison TXK5 (of which more in Part 3). The former
was very similar to Wood Street, except that it didn’t have an
associated Manual Board (ICC), all operator controlled calls coming in
over AC11FT/MF3 junctions from London, Leicester and Glasgow. Once
DeHavilland came into service – again late – in 1975, the run-down of
Faraday ISC could begin.
A third TXK2 was ordered for Mondial House and involved considerable
redevelopment. With a third signalling system, R2, being needed, the
whole register system was redeveloped, with separate groups of
sender/receivers, which obviated the need for the outgoing registers and
coders. The limited availability of registers was also designed out.
Some of the national LRGs were redesigned as plug-in modules so they
could be rebuilt with different signalling as the mix changed from
operator controlled AC11FT/MF3 and AC9 to AC11/MF2. As far as I recall,
however, this feature was never actually exploited. Mondial had no loop
disconnect circuits, so even calls from London trunk units came in on
MF2. During its relatively short life, Mondial ISC was redeveloped by my
own staff with electronic microprocessor coders, to replace the 8
massive electromechanical coders that were constantly being rejumpered.
The STC BXB system: TXK3
STC also took advantage of being able to supply proprietary Crossbar
systems to the Post Office. As part of the ITT group, they had ready
access to the Pentaconta system and set up a manufacturing plant in East
Kilbride to make it. To avoid it being seen as a ‘foreign’ system, it
was branded as the BXB system (British X-Bar). The BXB 1112 system was a
2 wire local exchange system and coded as TXK3 by the PO. It was used
for Director exchanges and the very largest Non-Director areas, such as
at Newcastle. However, the PO ‘powers that be’ in Northern Ireland
decided that there would only be one Crossbar system in the province; so
if TXK3 was needed for Belfast City, it would be used everywhere! This
led to some bizarre exchanges where TXK3s replaced UAXs. It is said that
the standing current load of the TXK3 exceeded the busy hour load of
the UAX it replaced.
The TXK3 was a fairly conventional Crossbar system, with a 2-stage
line unit and 2-stage group unit. However, one novel feature of BXB was
that all communication between registers and markers took place over a
common bus circuit called the ‘Information Path’, something we now take
for granted in the computer era, but quite unusual in relay technology.
All junction and control relay sets were known as junctors, a word
clearly derived from the French juncteur. The circuit diagrams departed
from normal PO practice and looked odd. Of note was that relays were
coded with lower case letters, which of course soon became known as
‘French letters’. U-links were known as ‘cavaliers’, which means ‘rider’
in French.
The first TXK3s came into service, again much later than intended, at
North Cheam in Surrey and Liberton in Edinburgh in 1971. I can’t recall
how many in all were installed, it might have been around 300.
The TXK3s had their teething troubles too and of note were problems
at Marylebone, where the design hadn’t taken sufficient account of the
traffic in the summer to the cricket score line!
The Pentaconta system was not well designed at the circuitry level.
Unlike Strowger and the 5005 Crossbar systems, STC didn’t seem to
believe in any spark-quenching of relay contacts and a lot of
operational problems were caused by this. At worst, the Information Path
could get seized up and the whole exchange stopped working. It was
reported that if you took all the relay set covers off and turned out
the lights, a Pentaconta exchange provided some spectacular fireworks.
For a time, my home telephone line was on a TXK3 (Winchmore Hill) and I
found it quite a reliable system. Like several other common control
exchanges, TXK3s used a burst of immediate ringing before breaking into
the ringing cycle, so this distinguished them from Strowger.
The TXK4 system
The plan to complete the STD programme required the installation of a
4-wire overlay transit network, since the 2-wire GSC connections could
not provide the requisite transmission performance. The PO had designed a
transit switching system based on the same concept as Faraday ISC,
namely back-to-back Motor Uniselectors (MUs). During the hard
negotiations between the PO and STC over the supply of Crossbar – well,
over a few glasses of sherry I believe – STC senior management
confidently told the PO that STC could supply a much better transit
exchange using their marvellous BXB stuff, don’t you know old boy?
Only after the contract was signed did STC realise that a 4-wire
switch was wanted and it must use the transit signalling systems, MF2
with either AC11, AC12 or DC3 line signalling. They had no idea how to
develop these complex systems using the quirky Pentaconta relays. So the
PO came to the rescue and handed over all the AT series relay set
diagrams that were intended for the MU transit system and that is why
many of the TXK4 junctors came to be built with 3000-type relay
technology.
The project ran late (where have we heard that before?) and the first
transit exchange entered service in Birmingham in 1972. The BXB 1121
system, as STC called it, featured a 2-stage Group Unit on which high
traffic routes were terminated, while a second Group Unit was used for
lower traffic routes. In order to cater for the various control
functions, 8 wires were switched across the switchblock.
37 units were installed in all. 27 were at District Switching Centres
(DSCs), 8 at Main Switching Centres (MSCs) and 2 at the London MSC/SPU.
The latter unit, at Southbank, comprised 2 units, one for incoming
traffic and another for outgoing. Unlike all the other MSCs, there was
no transit traffic, in line with the policy to keep transit traffic out
of Central London. Crawley and Cambridge MSCs provided transit services
in the South East instead. The job of the Special Purpose Unit (SPU) was
to aggregate traffic to and from provincial GSCs that justified a
direct route to London, but not to each of the 7 SSCs. The junctions
between the SSCs and the SPU were specially set up to provide the same
transmission loss as if a direct route had been provided.
Once the transit network was fully installed, the STD programme was
completed in the sense that anyone could dial automatically to everyone
else. We take this for granted now, but it took until 1976 to achieve
it!
The TXK5 system
By the time the Wood Street TXK2 ISC was in service, it was already
severely congested. Wood Street, its Relief Unit and Faraday were all
working flat out. Busy hour occupancies on the USA route frequently
topped 99%. A crash programme was needed and the next TXK2 already being
ordered looked as if it was going to be, once again, too little too
late. On top of that, with the construction of the Mondial building
running late, everything would have to be installed at Stag Lane,
Edgware, in an old aircraft factory. To get the thousands of circuits up
to Edgware and often back again, lots of 24 channel PCM systems were
deployed. (This led, bizarrely, to PCM cards for DC3 signalling to be
produced!!). Plessey were already working flat out, so the Post Office
finally turned to Ericsson of Sweden, whose long period of purdah in the
UK had finally come to an end. A contract was placed in 1972 for two
massive ARM20 Crossbar ISCs. Both would be of simple design, one
incoming, one outgoing, with no transit traffic, and no operator
controlled traffic either. Mollison ISC, as it was called, had a total
capacity of 8000e; at the time the largest international exchange in the
world. The system was designated TXK5 by the PO.
In order to ensure that Ericsson’s designs would be compatible with
the UK network, a ‘Test Model’ exchange (without any switches) was
installed in Armour House in 1973. I arranged for circuits to be brought
in from every conceivable kind of UK exchange type to prove
interworking. During these tests, I even found some flaws in the design
of Strowger GSC equipment which would have made them vulnerable to the
‘phone phreaks’. Just before the exchange entered service, I worked
night shifts carrying out further System Appraisal tests and more
problems were ironed out. But there was one interworking problem we
couldn’t solve. We couldn’t place any calls to the UAX at Sissinghurst.
The problem was that Mollison could only signal to the provinces using
AC11/MF2 signalling - it had no AC9 - which meant that calls entered the
parent GSC using the Type 10 incoming MF2 register translators. But at
this GSC, Sissinghurst was trunked on a level which needed 3 routing
digits, and the Type 10s could only provide 2. Sissinghurst did
eventually get regraded.
A peculiarity of the international signalling systems at Mollison was
that the CCITT4 and 5 line signalling receivers didn’t use the guard
band circuitry that the PO had always used. Such circuitry is intended
to prevent speech signals from misoperating the line receivers. Instead,
the CCITT4 receivers would often be heard chattering away during calls
carrying the old Group 2 fax and I often wondered if any false signals
or line splits were thus generated.
The two Mollison units were not
identical. The incoming unit switched 5 wires, while the outgoing unit,
requiring more control of the outgoing international relay-sets,
switched 10 wires. The trunking was a pair of 2-stage group units. At
4000 erlangs each, both units were actually over the maximum size that
an ARM20 could be built. So each unit was actually two identical units,
called predictably ‘twins’. Full availability between all incoming to
all outgoing circuits was provided by link circuits out of the first
group unit of Twin A into the front end of Twin B. Markers in the two
units could communicate with each other to set up these complex 6 switch
calls.
The Stag Lane complex was single storey, so you got a much better
appreciation of the awesome size of the exchange than if it had been
spread over several floors as most other large exchanges would have
been.
Mollison finally got on top of the endemic congestion once it was
introduced in 1974, for once an international exchange that arrived on
time. In the second phase, the first R2 circuits were delivered. This
allowed the rundown of Faraday ISC including its last complement of AC7
(CCITT3) circuits to France.
TXK5 had a quite different personality compared to TXK2. Like all
5005 exchanges, DeHavilland TXK2 was fairly quiet, as the equipment was
mounted behind plastic covers and the common equipments, such as Router
Controls, were spread out with the router switches they controlled. TXK5
was quite different. The relay sets were in metal cans, similar in a
way to Strowger technology, while the switches had glass at the front of
their covers. The Route Markers and Markers were all centralised in
suites, so this area of the exchange was very noisy in the busy hour.
You could tell from the sound that a Route Marker made whether the call
had been successfully switched across the exchange.
Because of the hurry to install Mollison, the PO accepted a lot of
basic auxiliary equipment which had lower functionality than the TXK2
ITSCs. The accounting equipment, called the AVR, (using an Ericsson
UAC1610 computer) was fairly basic and didn’t do any traffic recording.
For that, a very simple device called the MET2 was used, although this
was later replaced by the OMT system.
Soon after Mollison entered service, another pair of TXK5s was
ordered for the Thames ISC, to be installed in Mondial House alongside
the third TXK2. However, Thames was a more complex exchange, as we will
see in the next section. The Thames TXK5s differed from Mollison in that
they were single units, not the twin system described above. A better
computer system was provided for the international accounting and it
used the familiar title of the International Accounting and Traffic
Analysis Equipment (IATAE). The TXK5s were also modified to provide some
specialised tie routes to and from the bothway TXK6 unit, described
below.
The TXK6 system
In the mid-1970s, the IDD annual growth rate hit 35%. Thames ISC was
not only going to provide yet more IDD capacity, but would also provide
the first service use of the new CCITT6 common channel signalling
system, a forerunner of the now near-ubiquitous CCITT7. CCITT6
signalling had been subject of an international field trial as far back
as 1972 on the Wood Street TXK2, but it was a long time before it was
introduced for live service in 1979. By its nature, a common channel
signalling system requires a computer controlled exchange, so alongside
the pair of 2500e TXK5s, the PO ordered a 5000e Stored Program
Controlled AKE132 switch from Ericsson. This used code switches, rather
than traditional Crossbar switches and all switching and control
functions were handled by an APZ150 processor. It was therefore more
‘electronic’ than a TXE4 and I argued that it should be coded in the TXE
series. But the TXE4 people were horrified and it ended up being called
TXK6.
The trunking of the code switches was a pair of 2-stage Group Units,
called ‘600 groups’, as they had capacity for 600 trunk circuits. Code
Switches are rather like miniature Crossbar switches, but they had the
unusual feature that they were mechanically latching, so the vertical
magnet had to be pulsed at the end of the call to release the call. The
TXK5 units were usually called Thames 1, while the TXK6 was Thames 2,
but some PO forms required units to use letters rather than numbers, so
for traffic planning they were called Thames A and Thames B.
Like all SPC systems, sometimes the exchange software would crash and
this meant that the exchange lost memory of what calls were set up.
Since the code switches were latching switches, this meant that every
vertical unit in every code switch needed to be pulsed to clear down all
the calls in the exchange. If this was done all at the same time, then
the exchange fuse would have blown, so the processor went round the
switches in a rapid sequence, which sounded just like machine gun fire.
There was to have been a second TXK6 installed in Keybridge House,
but the order was switched to the newer digital AXE system, which
happened also to save BT around £6M. Thames 2 was the last analogue ISC
in the BT network and was withdrawn in 1992. The march of digital
technology meant that all the Crossbar ISCs had short lives. Faraday,
the Strowger era switch, had lasted from c1955 to 1975. Wood Street
thrashed itself to bits and was withdrawn in 1984; 12 years of mass
marking had started to cause fatigue failures in the Outgoing Office
switches. Stag Lane followed in 1988, where Mollison ISC had paid for
its £14M cost hundreds of times over. Mondial TXK2 was replaced by an
AT&T 5ESS exchange a few years later.
The last Crossbar unit I saw working was the TXK1 at Lea Valley when
it was changed over to System X in 1993. The very last Crossbar exchange
was at Droitwich and was withdrawn in 1994.
Crossbar came late to the UK and was never loved like Strowger was,
except for those of us whose careers were closely associated with it.
Late delivery and teething troubles added to the woes. But at its peak,
Crossbar was carrying a significant proportion of all the UK traffic and
allowed the manufacturers to start the rundown of Strowger production.
Exchanges like the processor controlled SSCs showed what Crossbar could
have been, had it been deployed in a more rational way. Crossbar, when
bedded in, delivered a higher quality of service than Strowger ever
could and without it, the growth of IDD in the 1970s could never have
happened. Sadly, very little Crossbar has been preserved in the UK.