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2007-09-09 04:33:26 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Land Phones

None of those are the answer I wanted!
I live in the UK and there is a web site that you can log on to and after putting in your Phone Number it will locate on a map exactly where your exchange is. Lost my link to it!!

2007-09-09 16:59:22 · update #1

6 answers

Do you already have a phone line or are you looking to get one? The group of three numbers located after your area code identify your telephone exchange. Generally you can go on the web site of one of the local exchange carriers in your area and look up this information- you can look it up using your telephone number or your zip code (or you may find this even in your local phone book). You can go on www.att.com, under residential, and you have a choice of several different things that can help you look up what is available in your area using either an existing land line number with area code and exchange or using zip code.
Hope this helps.

2007-09-09 07:16:50 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The further from the exchange you are the more noise or interference you receive compared to the signal, which also degrades with distance, when 2 M was the standard one of my clients had 6 M as their office was directly opposite the exchange. I have some clients far from exchanges who can only get 2 M now although the standard for the same service is 8 M.

2016-03-18 02:46:22 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

telcodata.us has a link on the left hand side about halfway down where you can do a look up by areacode/exchange and it will give you the address and type of switch of the central office the line was originally assigned (so long as it hasn't been ported)

there is also a look up by city/state and zip codes...

2007-09-09 06:53:12 · answer #3 · answered by joe r 7 · 0 0

The first 3 #'s indicate your exchange. Call ATT and have them check for the availability of DSL and they can give you in feet your approximate distance from the CO.

2007-09-09 04:41:17 · answer #4 · answered by Dusty 7 · 0 0

Give BT a call they should be able to tell you.

2007-09-09 04:37:30 · answer #5 · answered by richard_beckham2001 7 · 0 0

this website will show you were the phone-number originated, but beware because of number-porting has everything changed....!

http://www.nanpa.com/area_codes/index.html

2007-09-09 04:57:59 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

diffcult

2007-09-09 04:38:12 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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