Hi Guys,
I've got what is most likely a simple question for the Nortel gurus out there!
I am integrating some of my NextGen E911 equipment to a CS1000 via OPX ports, for the purpose of adding in "administrative lines" to the 911 calltaker positions.
The CS1000 connects to the PSTN via multiple PRIs.
Several DIDs point to the PRI and are then routed to the analog OPX ports, which deliver the calls to my Audiocodes FXO analog to IP gateways.
Outbound calls are also made from the FXO gateways, via the OPX cards and out the PRI.
Here is my dilemma:
When an incoming call is received down the PRI and in to the CS100, sent to the FXO and answered - if the far end disconnects, disconnect supervision is received (hookflash disconnect at 900ms) and processed correctly, and the call clears as expected.
When an outbound call is made from the 911 equipment, to the FXO gateway, out the OPX and sent to the PSTN via the PRI, when the far end disconnects, NO disconnect supervision is received. Hence, the call will hang open until the near end operator presses release and tears down the call manually.
(I know this doesn't seem like a big deal to most of us that would "hang up" the phone or reach over and press release when the call is complete, but to a 911 dispatcher who is doing 30 things at once, they are fighting back against having to look up and press release. The other issue is the lack of DS prevents them from dropping out of established conferences, since the lack of DS will hang the ports.)
The other feature that is available in the CS1000 and compatible with my Audiocodes Gateways, Dialtone Disconnect is not an option. There are a lot of hookflash xfers, and also a LD code prompt on outbound calls that is a "dialtone" that can't be changed.
I go back to my old days of doing voicemail integration to PBXs via analog ports - and wonder if the hookflash disconnect feature was ever intended to work on outbound calls. My thought was that Nortel designed it specifically for incoming calls, to prevent incoming calls from hanging the voicemail ports and leaving 30 minutes of a busy cadence recording.
Common logic says that when an outbound call is made and the call is complete, the near end HANGS UP. This shouldn't be an issue, but it is.
I know it sounds like a silly question... But I'm dealing with several layers of bureaucracy that are supporting the demand that the dispatchers don't want to reach over and press the release button on their phone.
Can anyone give a 100% definitive answer on the intended design of this feature? Should it work on both in/outbound calls?
(By the way, I've listened with a butt-set, and tested with a meter. The DS is definitely there on inbound calls and definitely not there on outbound calls).
Any help would be appreciated!!!
Thx
I've got what is most likely a simple question for the Nortel gurus out there!
I am integrating some of my NextGen E911 equipment to a CS1000 via OPX ports, for the purpose of adding in "administrative lines" to the 911 calltaker positions.
The CS1000 connects to the PSTN via multiple PRIs.
Several DIDs point to the PRI and are then routed to the analog OPX ports, which deliver the calls to my Audiocodes FXO analog to IP gateways.
Outbound calls are also made from the FXO gateways, via the OPX cards and out the PRI.
Here is my dilemma:
When an incoming call is received down the PRI and in to the CS100, sent to the FXO and answered - if the far end disconnects, disconnect supervision is received (hookflash disconnect at 900ms) and processed correctly, and the call clears as expected.
When an outbound call is made from the 911 equipment, to the FXO gateway, out the OPX and sent to the PSTN via the PRI, when the far end disconnects, NO disconnect supervision is received. Hence, the call will hang open until the near end operator presses release and tears down the call manually.
(I know this doesn't seem like a big deal to most of us that would "hang up" the phone or reach over and press release when the call is complete, but to a 911 dispatcher who is doing 30 things at once, they are fighting back against having to look up and press release. The other issue is the lack of DS prevents them from dropping out of established conferences, since the lack of DS will hang the ports.)
The other feature that is available in the CS1000 and compatible with my Audiocodes Gateways, Dialtone Disconnect is not an option. There are a lot of hookflash xfers, and also a LD code prompt on outbound calls that is a "dialtone" that can't be changed.
I go back to my old days of doing voicemail integration to PBXs via analog ports - and wonder if the hookflash disconnect feature was ever intended to work on outbound calls. My thought was that Nortel designed it specifically for incoming calls, to prevent incoming calls from hanging the voicemail ports and leaving 30 minutes of a busy cadence recording.
Common logic says that when an outbound call is made and the call is complete, the near end HANGS UP. This shouldn't be an issue, but it is.
I know it sounds like a silly question... But I'm dealing with several layers of bureaucracy that are supporting the demand that the dispatchers don't want to reach over and press the release button on their phone.
Can anyone give a 100% definitive answer on the intended design of this feature? Should it work on both in/outbound calls?
(By the way, I've listened with a butt-set, and tested with a meter. The DS is definitely there on inbound calls and definitely not there on outbound calls).
Any help would be appreciated!!!
Thx