jgwi...@gmail.com
2024-02-14 07:55:39 UTC
Does anyone know what ring voltage BT configures its ATA191/ATA 192 Analogue Voice Adapters to use?
I have just helped set up Cloud Voice Express for our village pub. The pub has a non-BT router without a VOIP port (and it makes sense to stick with that). BT had provided a Cisco ATA191, and I had followed the included BT instructions to try and connect and configure it. I had failed: it eventually turned out that despite the BT instruction leaflet, I ATA191 or ATA192 configuration needs an engineer visit.
The engineer came yesterday to configure the ATA191. The configuration took nearly two hours and I was short of time so couldn't test everything before the engineer left, but the ATA191 was handling inbound and outbound calls to a reasonably modern corded handset, so all looked good.
But testing everything later, there is a problem. I think the ring voltage is too low.
An old BT-branded phone handset fails to ring when connected to the ATA191 but rings on my domestic PSTN landline.
Incoming calls aren't being seen by the ancient SouthWestBell 1+8 PBX (REN=4) that the publican wants to continue using.
I found an old BT REN booster and tested it on my domestic PSTN landline - it works, and you can hear the relay click with each ring. I connected it to the ATA191 extension socket, and it didn't click (and the PBX still didn't ring).
So I am suspecting that the ATA191 is set with too low a default ring voltage for older equipment. Does anyone know what the default setting is? And what are my chances of getting BT to set it higher?
I have just helped set up Cloud Voice Express for our village pub. The pub has a non-BT router without a VOIP port (and it makes sense to stick with that). BT had provided a Cisco ATA191, and I had followed the included BT instructions to try and connect and configure it. I had failed: it eventually turned out that despite the BT instruction leaflet, I ATA191 or ATA192 configuration needs an engineer visit.
The engineer came yesterday to configure the ATA191. The configuration took nearly two hours and I was short of time so couldn't test everything before the engineer left, but the ATA191 was handling inbound and outbound calls to a reasonably modern corded handset, so all looked good.
But testing everything later, there is a problem. I think the ring voltage is too low.
An old BT-branded phone handset fails to ring when connected to the ATA191 but rings on my domestic PSTN landline.
Incoming calls aren't being seen by the ancient SouthWestBell 1+8 PBX (REN=4) that the publican wants to continue using.
I found an old BT REN booster and tested it on my domestic PSTN landline - it works, and you can hear the relay click with each ring. I connected it to the ATA191 extension socket, and it didn't click (and the PBX still didn't ring).
So I am suspecting that the ATA191 is set with too low a default ring voltage for older equipment. Does anyone know what the default setting is? And what are my chances of getting BT to set it higher?