jeffmoss26
Well-known member
National Telephone Supply (Nicopress) is alive and well here in Cleveland!
Jeff You should introduce yourself and see what they have for samples. Get them to send everyone on this thread some hardware. Who knows maybe you can tie them in with Epstein’s since you have pull there.National Telephone Supply (Nicopress) is alive and well here in Cleveland!


66 and 110 are still used every day here! Don’t see much Krone or BIX in the states.Here are a few terminating tools I dug out recently.
The ivory one is a Bixs Tool made by the now defunct Nortel formerly Northern Electric. This tool is probably still in use for voice cable. Me and a buddy were the first in our area to use The Bix system in our newly built University Engineering Building, around 1986 I believe . We installed miles of 25 pr, cable for the Automatic Electric 186 type sets, and the Northern Telecom Logic 10s. Bx was used in the tel closets as if we were to use the old 66 blocks the closets would have to be enlarged for the additional block space that would have been used. At the set end we terminated into Amphenols. For key systems we installed 3-4 550 units, 3 540 units and a couple of 530s. Some telcos called them A Packs, B Packs and so on. One 25 pr. Cable run per phone. We were there for months and did have additional help when available.
The Blue terminating tool is called a SAC (Subscriber Access Cabinet) Tool this was used for doing a cross connect between the cable from the telephone building to the cable that goes down the back lane to your home or office. These are likely still being used.
The bottom 2 are 66 block tools, which is the prerunner to the Bix system. The black one is much older than the Siemon punch. Prior to the 66 block was a multi washer with a nut to tighten the connection. I tore a few of these out and have a vast quantity of brass washers and nuts. Sometimes I even find a use for them.
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I have a box of nordx CDT jacks and faceplates in the basement. My dad’s work (telecom interconnect) was an installer in the mid 2000s and I got to help on jobs during breaks from school.Bixs is all that we have used since the later 80s. I imagine pretty well everything here now is minimum Cat 5. The twisted wire has been used for the last 20 years which offers a version of cable TV. All the telco delivered tv is on twisted wire, minimum Cat 5. In all our cities we have fibre to every subscriber. At the lake we have twisted pair delivering our television needs. But we are adjacent to a village that has the streaming capability. Otherwise we would be on Coax or Satellite in the urban areas or strictly satellite in the rural/lake areas. Mind you again since we are close to a village coax is also available.


I have a box of nordx CDT jacks and faceplates in the basement. My dad’s work (telecom interconnect) was an installer in the mid 2000s and I got to help on jobs during breaks from school.









When I was doing residential I&R we were instructed to replace that model and anything older with the new protector.So if you seen one on a repair or adding sets it was replaced.pulled this protector out of a friend's house last weekend. he has no phone service or internal jacks anymore.
the pliers I've had sitting around for a while.
They do! On the 2019 Garage Sale thread @454ragtop found a vintage Numberall set that came in a wooden box. It had an intact label under the lid and three punches inside. I am guessing one with 0-9, -, and X, like these, and two others covering the alphabet. I guess A-K, and L-Z less the X, which is already on the number figures punch.I wish they had lettered ones too.

PM me if you're interested. Generally, I'm not the kind of collector who sees the point in keeping more than one of the same exact thing, and this is a duplicate. When I found it at the flea market I was hoping the other one I had, which has its own vinyl case and has never been used (see Pic), was a different size, but it's not. I am sure we can work something out.I've never seen the "Numberall". Now I have to find one. LOL.

Mine are. I don't know about the wood box set. Probably not.not sure if the one you are showing is a Bell System or not
I saw that. Don't blame you. @Tarnished better break your piggy bank open! Kidding.just checked ebay and there's a few Numberall sets but they're bringing some $$$. Not looking to spend $200+ on these lol.




Yes mine are missing. My buddy who passed away gave me some items this was one. Don’t know why they are missing, I’ll check the box it came in maybe the carbons are there But I doubt it.Miss the Pontiacs: Here is one with the carbon blocks. Had BANKS of these fuse cartridges and carbon blocks on outside cable. Had to replace the fuse cartridges and take the carbon blocks out and clean the blocks by lightly sanding inside of blocks. Reinstall and good till the next lightning storm. LOL. All of this on paper insulated lead covered cable.![]()
@NYBODYMAN: Defiantly outside cable guy there. Those are lead working tools for sure. Hammers, chipping knife, lead dresser and scraper were all used before plastic coated cable. Old School cool!@NYBODYMAN Was your Dad a Cableman? Some of those tools might have been used in making lead sleeves. Ask him what the brush and woof shaper were used for? Those cable scissors are amazing. I have a couple here somewhere.
He worked underground in Manhattan from 1970-2004. He started with cables and then finished up as a fiber optic splicer. The brush was for cleaning the cable area in preparation for lead and the wood ******* was for dressing/shaping the lead (If I remember correctly).@NYBODYMAN Was your Dad a Cableman? Some of those tools might have been used in making lead sleeves. Ask him what the brush and woof shaper were used for? Those cable scissors are amazing. I have a couple here somewhere.

