Tele No. 38
Automatic candlestick phone Type 38AT. The first auto candlesticks were
introduced around 1902, generally fitted with the Solid Back transmitter as
shown . The style was similar in construction to the Type 36, but a raised
mounting at the front held the dial. With the later bakelite housing and Siemens
inset transmitter, it was reclassified as the 138AT. As usual it was associated
with a wooden bellbox that held the coil and bells, connected to the candlestick
by a 3-conductor cord.
It was installed in larger numbers after the first World War, fitted with the
No. 10 dial with the small centre. It was not terribly popular with many customers
due to its weight and the clumsiness of the two-piece receiver and transmitter.
People had become used to Ericsson handsets, and the two-piece arrangement was
regarded by many as a step backwards. In the mid-1920s the PMG offered a reduction
in rental to encourage subscribers to accept the candlestick. When bakelite
phones with a handset were introduced in the mid-1930s, this discount had to
be continued to keep the large stocks of candlesticks in service. In some cases
it was not described as a discount for a candlestick, but as a premium price
for a handset phone. The phones were still being recovered in large numbers
into the 1950s.
If the receiver was left off-hook, the telephone exchange staff could connect
a "howler" across the line to signal the subscriber to hang up the
phone. A notch was moulded into the earpiece to allow the howler sound to escape
if the receiver was placed on a desktop with the earpiece down.
The Type 38 was made by a number of British manufacturers and there is little
to distinguish between their models. They are known from British Ericsson, Peel
Conner, GEC and Siemens. As for the 36MT candlestick, different makers used
bases with a variety of contours. Although the standard finish was a black baked
enamel, some were introduced with nickel-plated highlights (such as the switchhook
and the cap at the top of the pillar). They were never finished in brass or
all-nickel - this is due to later renovations and lowers the value of the phone.
A black gunmetal lacquer finish is occasionally seen on some phones.
The British-based auto candlesticks differ from their U.S. equivalents in the
location of the pillar. On U.S.phones the pillar was mostly displaced to the
rear to make room for the dial . On British-origin phones, the dial was simply
added on to the front of the base.

This Automatic Electric candlestick (at left) was bought in from the US for
Australia's first automatic exchange at Geelong. Although only brought in in
small numbers, survivors would be included in the Type 38 group. It is identical
to its U.S. equivalent.

An emergency purchase or evaluation phone from Stromberg Carlson. It is known
with PMG branding stamped into the receiver arm or on a small metal plate attached
to the top of the column, but its exact history is uncertain. It is shorter
than the British candlestick phones.

The Type 38 was also produced in a CB version with the dial mounting blanked
off. This illustration shows the earlier wooden bell box , on the CB model.
A steel and bakelite bellbox was later introduced with the arrival of the bakelite
telephones.
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