I still have a SIP-T28P (B&W screen) on my desk and am perfectly happy with
it.

For "budget" office setups on a tight budget you can occasionally find
large numbers of the smaller screen B&W phones on eBay in good condition.
Last year I bought eight SIP-T22P for $41 a piece with AC power adapter for
an NGO with very limited funds.

If you get a yealink phone without the power adapter and can't do 802.3af
for whatever reason, the older B&W phones all run on 5VDC 1A adapters with
a normal sized barrel plug, which you can buy for very cheap.



On Tue, Jan 26, 2016 at 9:49 AM, Jon Auer <[email protected]> wrote:

> +1. We're using the Yealink T4-series phones. Our office is all T46G &
> T48G. We went from Cisco 7940s and these are a world of difference (for the
> better), both in voice quality and tolerance/interop for NAT.
>
> I personally prefer the T41P/T42P as the 46 & 48 have a slight digit input
> lag that bugs me.
>
> On Mon, Jan 25, 2016 at 3:38 PM, Eric Kuhnke <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> Take a look at the higher end Yealink phones.
>> On Jan 25, 2016 11:47 AM, "Chuck McCown" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Anyone used the Panasonic sip phones?  I have a business office that
>>> doesn’t like the UBNT products due to the feel of the handset etc.  They
>>> also want a DECT wireless option.
>>>
>>> Personally I am OK with AASTRA but in this situation I am trying to make
>>> front office folks happy.  We will be turning down their old panasonic key
>>> system soon and I want to try to approximate the type of handset they have
>>> been using.  Could just swap handsets but they don’t work and they don’t
>>> fit the switchhook of the sip phones.
>>>
>>
>

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