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Adding location to networked Magix

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phonesaz

Vendor
Dec 18, 2006
880
US
I have an existing networked Magix that has a T1 for inbound/outbound calling, and 2 other T1's to connect 2 additional locations. I have added an E&M Tie line board to connect a third location, and a corresponding tie line board at the third location.

If I know the station range I am using at the new location (350 through 358) and have printouts of the main location and one of the existing remote locations, what else do I need to know to do the programming to connect the two, and how difficult is it going to be?

I am using Multitech VoIP units at both ends to actually provision the tie line circuits off a just-installed point to point T1, so if anyone has actually used those, I would be interested in info on that as well.
 
If you have 3 T1 boards in system, that's 72 trunks.
An E&M board has 4 trunks. That's 76, and that's if you DONT HAVE any other combo cards (ie 412 or 800xx) in the system.

You may be at your 80-Trunk Limit already ...
Just a reminder though!!

UDP programming is not hard.. the worst part is getting the trunk to work between the switches!


MrTelecom1
Re-Living the AT&T/Lucent/Avaya issues since 1979!
 
If you don't have the Legend Network Reference document, you can download it from support.avaya.com. The info in this document applies to both the Legend and Magix and there is only one version that I know about, version 6.

The System Planning Guide may be helpful in keeping things organized.

....JIM....
 
I do not have any experience with the MultiTech boxes, but I have done the exact same thing with RAD IPMux-1 units. These units essentially do the same thing: turn TDM streams into IP packets. Switches don't really "care" whether the circuit is true or emulated. I've seen Legend/Magix tandem links built over infrared and radio frequency wireless.

The key thing on the network piece has to do with deriving or recovery of network timing. As Jim suggests, study the MERLIN LEGEND® R6.1 Network Reference document. Search for the words "timing" and/or "synchronization" for details.

Please feel free to contact me directly if you get into a jam on this stuff. I'm pretty seasoned in regards to networking PBXs in unconventional manners.

Tim Alberstein
 
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