To dial, you first take the receiver off the hook and listen for the dial tone. You put your finger in the hole for the desired number, and rotate the dial around clockwise until your finger hits the stopper. Take your finger out, and wait for the dial to resume its normal starting position. Continue to do this until the number has been fully dialed.
Well if you remember the phones from the 80's that is what it is. There is no dialing the phone has holes in it and to make the call you have to do each number one by one and wait for each number to finish going around in the circle. Just Google rotary phone for a pic, I still use my rotary phone. There is no push dialing which stinks. These phones only have one phone line as well. Hope this helps
Same as any other phone-it's just an antique version.
It was a land line phone. To call someone you had to dial the numbers. See the link below for an image.
see link below
A rotary system can be used to calibrate flowmeters. Unless you are refering to a rotary telephone system, in which that works differently.
I think it was the rotary phone
It is possible, whether digital or whether analogic.
Yes, but most analog telephone adapters (ATA) do not support it. The (now discontinued) Digium "IAXy" s101i single port ATA is an example of one that supports pulse/rotary dialing.
A transmitter capsule on a telephone is a part of the headset. It is typically only a part of a telephone, however, on old rotary phones.
fibre optic cable !
One major piece of technology that was invented in 1919 was the rotary telephone.
When I was young, we has a telephone that was black, heavy, and had a rotary dial. We have a land line telephone. I let the telephone ring three times before I pick up the receiver.
australian
Australia
I dont know really
397.17 N-m