Is there a doc somewhere that explains when to use loop start vs. kewl start in 
certain situations?  I've seen in a lot of posts that most people just say 'use 
kewl start', but nobody really explains why.  It seems that if kewl start 
should be used 100% of the time then why is there even an option for loop 
start?  After some research, it seems like there are 4 main loop start setup 
options:

 1.  loop start (classic)
 2.  loop start with battery reversal
 3.  loop start with battery drop (kewl start)
 4.  loop start with tone detection

Am I correct in assuming that when using kewl start that both these things 
happen?

 1.  If the far end disconnects, the code will look for battery drop
 2.  If the near end disconnects, the code will initiate a battery drop

My question is, if I'm using a T1 channel bank, do these values matter on the 
T1 interface, or only on the channel bank itself.  In other words, do the 
disconnect supervision signals cross the channel bank and end up in the T1 
signal, or does the T1 signal use a different mechanism to signal a disconnect?

Specifically, I'm trying to use an Adtran Total Access 850 with FXO cards, and 
fairly often I will get phantom calls.  I believe this to be a result of a 
hangup not being detected correctly.

On a side note, Is there some kind of 'learning' tool that I can run that 
monitors the line and displays these kinds of events during the duration of a 
call?  For instance I could run the tool and then it could guide me through a 
series of 'I call you, you call me' scenarios and then the tool would tell me 
what settings to use?
Justin Killen

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