by ericmark »
Thu Oct 11, 2018 10:22 pm
You have a master socket there, the master socket has extra components one to make bell ring and two a spark gap to reduce damage in the case of electric storms.
Today with cordless telephones it will actually ring without having a master socket, in the old days you had 4 REN or telephone with a bell, if the telephones REN count is over 4 than adding a second master socket can some times get it to work in spite of the over load.
So to nitty gritty if you don't use telephones which use power from the 48 volt phone cables to ring bells, then simply removing the socket would work, however if you use a telephone which has no external power if that in the real master socket the bell will stop working. Phone however will still work as will any other items not using a bell, fax, modem, router etc will still work.
Since the split BT and Open reach the master socket is supplied by open reach, and their socket splits into two, you can remove the bottom half and connect internal extra sockets at that point, so if there is a fault, you can simply remove bottom half and plug in a phone direct, so easy to work out if fault internal or external.
This means you can be sure any fault is external before your supplier calls in open reach, as if fault internal they charge around £100.