As a 3COM dealer, I have not heard of this problem. However, I will bring it up with an engineer and see if there was something being reported, judging from the threads, there might be something. I'm a tech, so it is worth it to know if there might be a problem that I need to know about. Send me...
The most popular that I sell is the 3102, due to all of those buttons and FULL DUPLEX SPEAKERPHONE, which the 3101 doesn't have. Send me an email, and maybe I can help you?
We are a former Sprint / Mitel VoIP dealer. A customer requested that I look into selling the 3COM NBX as he was Cisco certified and wanted to take care of the system himself. He was giving me $20K for everything and getting about 30 sets. So, he too considered the ones that you did, but he...
2 pair CAT3 is being phased out because the phone companies are rewiring the USA for Triple Play, thus CAT3 becomes irrelevant. FCC gave the power companies and phone companies permission for IPTV (phone companies and power companies) and telephony (power companies). All homes in NY (N.E. USA...
FYI... Per official CAT6 certification, CAT5 is rated at 100Mhz and 100MB, CAT5E is rated at 200MHz and 1.2GB and CAT6 is rated at 250MHz and 2.2GB. CAT5 and CAT5E are 24g wires, but CAT6 is 23g.
Bigger is better. Email me later and I will look for you what size would be the best for you per the CAT6 book. Can't remember off hand, unless you want the CAT5E code?
As I have Sprint Global Certification for CAT6 (meaning that I am certified for any phone company in any country in the world), you are best served by using either CAT5E or spending the extra money on CAT6. I was told (by Sprint) that the USA is being rewired for FTTX (Verizon and Sprint), and...
Depending on how you actually wish to get voice and data delivered to each outlet, you plug a splitter into the CAT5e in every room as the center pairs are lines 1 and 2. So you must have a line 1-2 splitter. This will mean that you use 1 pair for the voice and the other pair for the DSL. You...
Maybe you have a bad connection (bad wire) somewhere on one of the ends. Without a cable tester to show you that the cable is actually certified to work, all it takes is 1 misplaced wire to screw everything up.
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