Dave: Oops. I thought you were able to call on the cheap or something.
Things have progressed. The manufacturer said that the voltage swings by 76Vrms around the -48V level. I hadn't tried the second DID card in the same chassis. When I did, Asterisk was able to answer the call fine. Both sets of ports worked. We're also getting supervised disconnect if the caller hangs up the line. Cool! So I pulled the first card and put in our third, which is supposed to be a spare. It worked also. We appear to have a defective card. Hopefully this is just a fluke. I know they were rushing to get a new batch made up. This one could just be a casualty of the rush. We now have a DID trunk conversion solution. I just have to do some dial plan modification to get the digits captured and play a greeting based on those also. This doesn't seem too hard. Thanks for you help. I will try to keep y'all posted if you want. Peter M. > > The reason I asked if you were local is that we might have been able to > arrange for a loaner of a > TE400 or an ATA. > > If you're handy with a scope, give it a try. At least then you know what > you're facing. > > DD > > On 12/18/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Interesting..... thanks.I'm on PEI.902-892-1204 but I'm not full time > right > now. You can leave a message.From the thread, it looks like there is a > patch for the wcfxo.c code that may fix the problem.Do you think I should > try that or put an oscilloscope on the line first and see what the ring > voltage > is like?Maybe I'll take the spare card home and see what it does.If it is > a > single polarity ring voltage, I will have to install all of the Asterisk > source first > since its Trixbox that's supposed to answer the line. > > Peter M. > Asterisk Telephony User and Installer.
