On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 17:25:11 -0500, Steve Kann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > C F wrote: > It realy depends what you are trying to accomplish, if all you want to do > is add more extensions that happen to be offnet using VoIP, then you could > just add analog extensions, and use FXO in * and then IP phones in the > remote offices. On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 13:31:16 -0800, Sean Kennedy > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi all, I've got an old avaya partner acs <7.0 system here. I'd like to add > a simple voip bridge so I can hook up our remote offices. From my research, > it would seem the pre-7.0 series doesn't have a t1 port, so if I wanted to > do this, I would have to feed the avaya system fxs ports from the asterisk > box. Does that sound about right? Has anybody ever done this? Does anybody > have any experiences they'd like to share in this area? Sean We had to add > Data and Voice for 20 users in a remote office (about 8 miles in the same > town), we were using an Avaya Difinity G3. So we got a leased data line > (Full T1), using 2 Adit 600 (not even Asterisk involved) boxes, configured > with 24 FXS ports on one of the Adit boxes, adn 24 FXO ports on the other, > and a 24 port station card on the Avaya Difinity, got us everything done. > However this only allowed us to use analog phones (yikes), since the > Difinity doesn't support E & M. But it is still running fine. Why didn't you > just get a T1 card for the definity? > > > Becuase we wanted the Definity to see the remote phones as extensions, and not as trunks. It would mike life misreable the other way around.
To Sean: >From what you describe it looks like it is much better to get rid of your Avaya box (put it on eBay, and let it collect some $800). _______________________________________________ Asterisk-Users mailing list [email protected] http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
