Call-progress tone
In telephony, call progress tones are audible tones that provide an indication of the status of a telephone call to the user. The tones are generated by a central office or a private branch exchange to the calling party.
Equipment such as fax machines and modems are designed to recognize dial tones and busy tones.
The ITU-T E.180 and E.182 recommendations define the technical characteristics and intended usage of some of these tones. ToneScript is a tone description format that may be used to specify the tone.
Common tones
- Busy tone or busy signal
- Call waiting tone
- Comfort tone
- Conference call tone
- Confirmation tone
- Congestion tone
- Dial tone
- Disconnect tone
- End of three-party service tone
- Executive override tone
- Holding tone
- Preemption tone
- Queue tone
- Recall dial tone
- Record tone
- Recorder warning tone
- Reorder tone
- Audible ringing
- Power ringing
- Second dial tone
- Special dial tone
- Special information tone
- Stutter dial tone
- Waiting tone
National tone plans
North American Tones
The tone frequencies, as defined by the Precise Tone Plan, are selected such that harmonics and intermodulation products will not cause an unreliable signal. No frequency is a multiple of another, the difference between any two frequencies does not equal any of the frequencies, and the sum of any two frequencies does not equal any of the frequencies. The frequencies were initially designed with a ratio of 21/19, which is slightly less than a whole tone. The frequencies may not vary more than ±1.8% from their nominal frequency, or the switching center will ignore the signal. The high frequencies may be the same volume as – or louder than – the low frequencies when sent across the line. The loudness difference between the high and low frequencies can be as large as 3 decibels and is referred to as "twist." The duration of the tone should be at least 537 ms.European tones
Australian Tones
Supervisory tones in the Australian PSTN are defined in , published by the Communications Alliance.Pre-answer tones | Frequency definition | Tone Cadence |
Dial Tone A | 425 Hz | continuous |
Dial Tone B | 425 Hz, amplitude modulated by 25 Hz | continuous |
Dial Tone C | 400 Hz + 425 Hz + 450 Hz | continuous |
Dial Tone D | 400 Hz + 425 Hz | continuous |
Ring Tone A | 425 Hz, amplitude modulated by 25 Hz | 0.4 s on, 0.2 s off, 0.4 s on, 2 s off |
Ring Tone B | 400 Hz + 450 Hz | 0.4 s on, 0.2 s off, 0.4 s on, 2 s off |
Ring Tone C | 400 Hz + 425 Hz + 450 Hz | 0.4 s on, 0.2 s off, 0.4 s on, 2 s off |
Busy Tone | 425 Hz | 0.375 s on, 0.375 s off |
Number Unobtainable Tone | 425 Hz | 2.5 s on, 0.5 s off |