BT Ultimate 106

Small Business PABX · Late 1990s · British Telecom

The BT Ultimate 106

The BT Ultimate 106 is a compact Private Automatic Branch Exchange (PABX) designed for small businesses. Manufactured in the late 1990s for British Telecom by PDT Limited, it provides up to six extension lines alongside a direct connection to the public telephone network.

For its era the Ultimate 106 is a surprisingly capable unit — featuring voicemail, a crosspoint switch, day/night mode, a call director, and an answer machine function, all within a compact desktop enclosure. The electronics are well-designed and the build quality is solid. Many units survive in working condition today, a testament to the engineering of the period.

This site documents one such unit — acquired in mostly working condition, investigated, and repaired — with the aim of helping others who encounter the same common fault.

BT Ultimate 106 PABX — top view

What You'll Find Here

This site is a practical record of acquiring, understanding, and repairing a BT Ultimate 106. The most common failure mode — the ringing circuit fault that prevents any extension from ringing — is documented in detail, including circuit analysis, component identification, and the repair procedure.

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Hardware Overview

Photographs, PCB layout, and an overview of the main functional blocks inside the unit.

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Fault & Fix

The ringing circuit failure explained — diagnosis, root cause analysis, calculations, and the repair.

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Further Notes

Additional technical observations, disassembly procedure, and notes for future reference.

Note The ringing circuit fault described on this site — capacitor C22 and resistor R20 failure — appears to be a relatively common age-related failure in the Ultimate 106. If your unit powers up and operates normally but extensions will not ring when dialled, this is the likely culprit.