> The main catch is that they have a 50-pin Centronics style connector on them which you will have to break out somehow to your RJ11s.<p>This is just another lost art (traditional phones are either dead or are instead IP) that I once learned a fair bit about:<p>The name varies regionally (I've heard them called Centronics, cinch, and CHAMP; though around here, we call them Amphenols). The Easy Method is the same regardless of name: It centers around a split (aka "50 pair") 66 punch block[1] that is mounted to a wall, or to a wall-like object.<p>Buy a pre-terminated 25-pair cable with the right connector on at least one end, and punch that down in order[2] on one side of the 66 block. That connects the system to the punch block. Importantly, those wires never get touched again.<p>Phones (or more precisely, wires for jacks for phones) connect to the other side of the 66 block. Those wires also never get touched again.<p>The two things (phones, systems) are connected/disconnected with bridge clips that combine the two halves of the block (which only allows 1:1 ordering, but that's often just fine).<p>Alternatively, a "we fancy!" variation uses single-pair cross-connect wire so that arbitrary phones can quickly be connected to arbitrary system ports -- maybe on completely separate blocks.<p>After that, plug in the Amphenol. Plug in the phones. Have fun talking to yourself.<p>(Or, at least: That's an easy way for small stuff. Bigger stuff (hundreds or thousands of pairs) eventually really wants better organization, but punch blocks are still normally the order of the day there, too.)<p>[1]: <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/66_block" rel="nofollow">https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/66_block</a><p>[2]: <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41428998">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=41428998</a>