AnthonyRail
Established Member
- Joined
- 11 Jan 2015
- Messages
- 1,222
I don't know of a specific list anywhere, but a useful search term is "K6 telephone box" - K6 being the 'model'.
You also need to add K2. These are older but still around, especially in London. They look a bit chunkier than a K6, and you can tell the difference but looking at the window panels. In a k2 all the windows are the same size, whereas with a K6 the middle pane is bigger with 2 smaller side panes. I’m not sure if any K8’s were preserved in real use? These were introduced I think in the 1970s, and were the kiosks with the single big panes of glass.I don't know of a specific list anywhere, but a useful search term is "K6 telephone box" - K6 being the 'model'.
Just the box is fine whatever its use nowDoes your red phone box have to have a phone in it? For that matter, does it still have to be red? In villages often I pass through, lots of old phone boxes are now defibrillator holders or book exchanges (the latter usually repainted).
Thats exactly whst im after. Thanks
True. But the rise of the mobile has lead to the death of the public payphone. There are many phone boxes that have single digit numbers of calls made per month, and some with as many per year.Sadly it's getting more difficult to find any phone boxes these days, red or otherwise.
Oh I completely understand that they're costing money with very little use, and I can see why BT want to get rid of them. I certainly cannot remember the last time I used one, and I had to double-check that we actually still had one nearby. I had walked past it so many times that I'd forgotten it was there.True. But the rise of the mobile has lead to the death of the public payphone. There are many phone boxes that have single digit numbers of calls made per month, and some with as many per year.
It's not fair on BT as a private company to have to spend hundreds (or if vandalised, thousands) of pounds to maintain phone boxes that very few (if any) people use.
You also need to add K2. These are older but still around, especially in London. They look a bit chunkier than a K6, and you can tell the difference but looking at the window panels. In a k2 all the windows are the same size, whereas with a K6 the middle pane is bigger with 2 smaller side panes. I’m not sure if any K8’s were preserved in real use? These were introduced I think in the 1970s, and were the kiosks with the single big panes of glass.
It will be one of the few to never have had any, through the GPO/BT not having inheriting the Universal Service Obligation.Is Hull the only UK city with no red boxes?![]()