home
about us
privacy policy
send email
site map
view cart
1.888.225.3999 FrillFreePhones
an AbleComm website.
Quality, Service, Value - since 1977.
Search
Home
> weird phone gallery
weird phone gallery
Most items on this page are shown for information and fun, only. Very few are available for purchase. Left-click on a picture to see it bigger.
SOLD-OUT. Shown for info only.
Ultimate rotary dial desk phone.
Has flashing light, on-off switch, headset jacks, ringer control.
WOW! ALL-DIGITAL ROTARY PHONE.
Has ridiculous dial with no letters.
FREE SHIPPING in the USA.
$125.00
world's heaviest portable phone
phone receiver holder
Schmoo phone
Bell's first phone
switchboard mess
deluxe phone booth
transparent Princess phone
multi-line Princess phone
another multi-line Princess
multi-line Trimline phone
desk drawer phone
GTE Linear
Pac-Man phone
1964 videophone (AT&T)
1968 videophone (Japan)
US Army WW1 battlefield phone
modern US Army field phone
vandal-resistant no-handset payphone
Genie
Grillo
early Motorola "brick" cellphone
Alexander Graham Plane
2-ear adapter
early answering machine
ancient answering machine
explosion-proof phone
Repairs
Rare & Special
Presidential phones
frequent questions
doing business
with us
customer comments
why our phones
are better
How'd we get new old phones?
Brand New Phones
New Old Stock
Nearly-New Phones
Refurbished Phones
Rough & Ready phones
Red phones
Pink phones
very rare
ORANGE
phones
Rotary-style Reproductions
Antique Phone Reproductions
phones with
ringing lights
our book store
desk/table phones
wall phones
touchtone phones
rotary-dial phones
Princess phones
Trimline (and similar) phones
no-dial phones
multi-line phones
more retro stuff
accessories
fix, update, clean
telephone parts
installation supplies
tools & testers
old phone ads
the phone makers
phone colors & custom combos
$14,000 phone rental!
museums & clubs
telephone terms
weird phone gallery
historical
1A2 phones & parts
ComKey 416 phones & parts
Merlin phones & parts
Ancient telecom terminology
Phone bottom markings
"mechanical hold"
(not quite 1A2)
Same model number, different phone
Why call it a "key" system?