These locations are all Essential Edition, anywhere from R8.1 to R11.1, 9508 phones. In addition, it's at multiple customer locations around the country.
Incoming calls ring in normally, but all outbound calls receive a fast busy. The outbound calls go out normally at the DMARC from a tech's butt-set, but as soon as the lines are plugged back into the IPO all outbound calls get a busy signal. Unused trunk ports on the Combo Card have been tried without success, new Combo Cards have been installed without success, and the old Combo cards pulled from the system have been tested once received back and work as they should. There are no lines tied up, no alarms are being given off in System Status, and there have been no programming changes - outgoing calls just suddenly start receiving the fast busy.
A LEC tech told me that it's a programming issue at the Central Office, but of course then the LEC says there's NTF and the calls work at the DMARC so it must be the phone system. Usually the problem disappears once the LEC ticket is escalated, so I always assumed that LEC tech was correct and the LEC figured it out on their end.
Any ideas on the actual issue? Should I run SysMonitor, and if so what should I be looking for?
Incoming calls ring in normally, but all outbound calls receive a fast busy. The outbound calls go out normally at the DMARC from a tech's butt-set, but as soon as the lines are plugged back into the IPO all outbound calls get a busy signal. Unused trunk ports on the Combo Card have been tried without success, new Combo Cards have been installed without success, and the old Combo cards pulled from the system have been tested once received back and work as they should. There are no lines tied up, no alarms are being given off in System Status, and there have been no programming changes - outgoing calls just suddenly start receiving the fast busy.
A LEC tech told me that it's a programming issue at the Central Office, but of course then the LEC says there's NTF and the calls work at the DMARC so it must be the phone system. Usually the problem disappears once the LEC ticket is escalated, so I always assumed that LEC tech was correct and the LEC figured it out on their end.
Any ideas on the actual issue? Should I run SysMonitor, and if so what should I be looking for?