MNEMONIC" is not a bad thing. That is what you would see on a hospitality system background terminal. Hopefully you are also getting a "." prompt.
What happens if you enter
.PR OP
?
Did you try entering LOGI?
Could it be that 9 is AC2 and you are looking at the NPA in AC1, or vice versa?
Also, do you actually dial 91717508xxxx for a number in your free calling area? Could it be simply NPA 717, not 1717?
Best way to do this is with Pretranslation.
These are the instructions from GHTROUT (RIP).
You may want to check to see if it is already enabled on your switch by printing the FTR_DATA in LD 21.
Dial Out Without "9"
Making it so you don't have to dial 9 on a set - by using the pretranslation...
No way to sync time directly between PBX and PMS but, depending on your software and hardware, you may be able to reference both systems to an NTP server.
Suggest you start by looking here:
https://pbxbook.com/meridian/admin/time_ntp.html
If the CS1000 is older then you may have to manually...
There is no non-ringing option for a 500 set in the CLS. You would have to turn off or disconnect the ringer.
The CS1000 was interpreting your MCNA as NAMA, a totally different feature.
So why did it take MCNA?
Back in the day, many of the commands were created so that they could be changed...
If the originally dialed number is known then the CallPilot voicemail will send the call to the mailbox for that number, even if it is external. "Design intent" as they say.
Sometimes the workaround is to add that number as an extension DN in the preferred mailbox. Or you could add it to the SDN...
And what happens when you call that number from another line outside of your PBX?
If that works then you could try an enhanced trace.
LD 80
.entc ll s cc uu hhmm (TN plus duration of the trace in hours and minutes)
.gotr (to start the trace)
Then try the call and see if it goes out on a trunk...
I have connected 2250 to a PC running the Attendant PC software. So it works the same as the PCCIU but with a bigger footprint.
But I never looked at the details of the serial communication. Guessing it has some proprietary Nortel twist to complicate it but maybe not.
I have never had to enter a password on the 1005r that I deal with. Just left it blank and it has never prevented me doing anything in full access mode.
BRI is configured in LD 27. Both DSL and TSP parameters are required. You need to be careful if you are changing things. BRI can be finicky.
Are you really sure they are being used? Pretty old-school.
REQ prt
TYPE dsl
REQ prt
TYPE tsp
Mike's PBX Cookbook has some info on BRI that may be helpful.
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