Touch-Tone Frequencies ---------------------- 1209 1336 1477 1633 697 1 2 3 A 770 4 5 6 B 852 7 8 9 C 941 * 0 # 0 Each touch tone is a combination of two tones. For instance, 3 is 697 hertz and 1477 hertz. This diagram also contains the four extra tones that every touch tone phone is capable of producing. These tones are used in the U.S. military phone network (AUTOVON) for establishing the importance of the call. We'd like to hear specifics of any further uses for them. Special Information Tones (S.I.T.) We've all heard these. They're the special tones you get right before you hear a recording telling you the number you've reached is out of service. They're also used for a multitude of other conditions. The purpose of these tones is to permit an automatic Call Disposition Analyzer (CDA) to differentiate between a human voice and a recorded announcement, and to categorize the type of recorded announcement. Special Information Tones are a series of three tones at the beginning of an intercepted call. SIT Tone type and usages Period Frequency Designation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SSL LLL IC - Intercept - Vacant # or AIS, etc. LLL LLL NC - No Circuit (Inter-LATA carrier) LSL HLL VC - Vacant Code SLL HLL RO - Reorder Announcement (Inter-LATA Carrier) LSS LHL #1 - Additional Reserved Code SLL LHL RO - Reorder Announcement SSL HHL #2 - Additional Reserved Code LLL LLL NC - No Circuit, Emergency, or Trunk Blockage Period duration: S = Short (274 msec) L = Long (380 msec) Frequency: L = Low (913.8 Hz, 1370.6 Hz, 1776.7 Hz) H = High (985.2 Hz, 1428.5 Hz) This information was taken from a central office recorder/announcer installation manual circa 1983.