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Signing UpStep 1: Materials
9 volt connector (radio shack, or cut it out of some old piece of junk)
wire-nippers
milk (helps keep you hydrated and keeps bones strong)
Dremel
Soldering iron
solder
300 ohm resistor or close to it
black electrical tape
two telephones
two telephone cords. (CAT 1 cable)








































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Or you may be getting electromagnetic interference from the house power lines which run at 60Hz (US). You can verify this is the case by wiring you're phones along a different path away from power cords and make sure you don't bundle the phone wires with electrical wires.
I hope one of these solutions works for you.
Any ideas ??
Here is the website: http://www.sparkfun.com/commerce/present.php?p=High%20Voltage%20Ringer
http://www.epanorama.net/documents/telecom/telephone_intercom.html
Go here and scroll down to "theatrical intercom"
http://www.radioshack.com/sm-recoton-modular-triplex-phone-jack--pi-2459860.html
The purpose of the resistor is to limit the amount of current (20-30 mA) through the talking circuit. Too much current will be too much for the coils inside the speakers and microphones.
No, this project cannot ring. If you want it to ring, you need a very high voltage (50-90 Volts AC) at about 20 Hz. That's enough to give you a dangerous zap and 20 Hz is very unusual.