I cranked them up around 15 and now the voice levels appear to match the levels for the automatic voice (like the voice mail and the directory). Doing that seems to distort the caller id so Asterisk can't decode it. I'm still experimenting. Thanks!


--On Wednesday, March 12, 2003 8:55 PM +0000 T Aksoy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


rxgain and txgain are in db.

We have a similar problem which is even more noticeable since we divert
calls by receiving on one fxo card #1 and sending out on fxo card #2. I
can't seem to find a properly working solution for the attentuation which
is taking place.

For your issue, try setting txgain to around 6.0 and see if it's any
better. I think that you will need to restart asterisk for settings to
take effect.

Tan



----- Original Message -----
From: "Jim Archer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 12, 2003 2:06 AM
Subject: [Asterisk-Users] Gain settings


Hi All...


I am using Asterisk on Debian with a single FXO card.  I find that when I
dial into it it sounds very soft.  I also noticed that when I record VM
greetings (I use the USB device for FXS) they are very soft.

I saw the rxgain and txgain.  Can some one tell me how these are used?  I
have seen examples with 0.0 and others with 100%.  I have played with
integers and found they can make it very loud and distorted.

Whats the proper system?

Thanks...

Jim

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