Whereupon snipped-for-privacy@aol.com responded:
My guess: the GTE Carbondale office used type "AR" (absorb repeatedly) selectors on the 4th and 5th levels. Local (within Carbondale) calls were dialable with only five digits, but if a local caller dialed all seven digits, the prepended digits (4 and/or 5) were absorbed and ignored. Nearby communities (7-digit dialable) were segregated on separate levels (6th and 8th).
Which means that you could have dialed any combination of 4s and 5s before dialing anything else, with no effect on the end result. For example, you could have dialed 444554444555544443-XXXX to reach SIU.
With this in mind, the Carbondale dialing plan would have been:
----- ---------- ------------ ---------------------- LEVEL LOCAL INBOUND DDD RESULT ----- ---------- ------------ ---------------------- 1 11X Vertical service codes 2 Blank level ? 3 3-XXXX 618-453-XXXX SIU., Carbondale. IL 4 absorbed 5 absorbed 6 68X-XXXX 618-68X-XXXX Murphysboro, IL 7 7-XXXX 618-457-XXXX Carbondale, IL 8 867-XXXX 618-867-XXXX De Soto, IL 9 9-XXXX 618-549-XXXX Carbondale, IL 0 0 0 Operator ----- ---------- ------------ ----------------------
If my guess is correct, the 2nd level would have been blank (perhaps an error tone). Did you ever dial it to see what happened?
snipped-for-privacy@aol.com continued:
I suspect it's now: Within the 618 NPA: 1+618+7-digits Outside the 618 NPA: 1+NPA+7-digits
Unless the ICC has adopted the New York/California plan in 618, in which case it's now: Within the 618 NPA: 7-digits Outside the 618 NPA: 1+NPA+7-digits
In this same thread, snipped-for-privacy@bbs.cpcn.com noted:
True. But it would have been enormously complicated, if not impossible, to add more NNX prefixes as the community grew. A case in point: the Carbondale office described above. (Note that I use NNX here, rather than NXX, because most of the crossbar/ESS conversions occurred long before 01/01/95.)
I realize that Illinois isn't one of the "low-volume states" that you mentioned in your posting. But the problems associated with five-digit dialing are universal, and occur in all states.
In 1971, there was only one unused level in Carbondale (2nd), so only one new NNX would have been possible: NN2. The obvious choices would have been 442, 452, 542, or 552 (to maintain the look and feel of the existing NNXs); however, it appears that all four were already in use NPA 618. So GTE would have had to find something on the 6th or 8th levels (as it happens, 618-862 is still available today).
In any case, NN2 would have been the last non-conflicting NNX available in Carbondale.
Now imagine yourself trying to play this game in every small community across southern Illinois (or any other area code). In every case, you'd have to pick a new NNX that:
- Wasn't already in use elsewhere in the area code. - Didn't conflict with the local dialing plan. - Didn't conflict with the dialing plan in any nearby community.
And you probably wouldn't even have Lotus 1-2-3 to help you do it!
Footnote: new prefixes in Carbondale today include 319, 351, 503, and
529. SIU's centrex has added 536.Neal McLain