My apologies--I'm sure this question has been answered a dozen times already but I lack the vocabulary to know it!
Here's the deal: I have an area in NC where ten digit dialing is required but dialing via my BCM 200 hooked up to a PRI and putting a "1" in front (for 11 digits) will get you the message "it is not necessary to dial a one or a zero when dialing this number." But dialing a ten digit number with no leading 1 you get the message "your call could not be completed as dialed..." If I place the 10 digit call with my cell phone it goes through as expected. The Telco told my coworker that "your PBX must not be configured to support 10 digit dialing for area code 910." We're in area code 919. This problem makes me think of this old thread: thread1361-1223492 but then not totally.
So my rudimentary understanding of the BCM's Dialing Plan is that if it sees a sequence of N digits dialed on a handset it finds a private or (in this case) public network DP that matches the length of the dialed number and tacks whatever the DP says at the front as a prefix. In the 11 digit example from above presumably the default DP is simply passing the sequence along unmodified so it's 1###-###-####. In the ten digit case I suppose another DP is applying some wild prefix so the number isn't even recognized by the phone network. Am I even close?
Now thread thread1361-1223492 mentions changing the default DP. So my concern are:
1) Will changing the default DP from 7 to 10 digits make local 7 digit calls not work? How safe is it to change the default? This is a live phone system under pretty heavy use.
2) Is there a better way to do this? I noted I cannot add a DP with an empty prefix so it looks like the default is the only answer.
3) Is the Telco just plain wrong and the problem is not with the PBX?
Thanks for any help you can provide and sorry if this is a bonehead question--what can I say, I write software for living and configuring PBXs isn't on my resume!
Joe
Here's the deal: I have an area in NC where ten digit dialing is required but dialing via my BCM 200 hooked up to a PRI and putting a "1" in front (for 11 digits) will get you the message "it is not necessary to dial a one or a zero when dialing this number." But dialing a ten digit number with no leading 1 you get the message "your call could not be completed as dialed..." If I place the 10 digit call with my cell phone it goes through as expected. The Telco told my coworker that "your PBX must not be configured to support 10 digit dialing for area code 910." We're in area code 919. This problem makes me think of this old thread: thread1361-1223492 but then not totally.
So my rudimentary understanding of the BCM's Dialing Plan is that if it sees a sequence of N digits dialed on a handset it finds a private or (in this case) public network DP that matches the length of the dialed number and tacks whatever the DP says at the front as a prefix. In the 11 digit example from above presumably the default DP is simply passing the sequence along unmodified so it's 1###-###-####. In the ten digit case I suppose another DP is applying some wild prefix so the number isn't even recognized by the phone network. Am I even close?
Now thread thread1361-1223492 mentions changing the default DP. So my concern are:
1) Will changing the default DP from 7 to 10 digits make local 7 digit calls not work? How safe is it to change the default? This is a live phone system under pretty heavy use.
2) Is there a better way to do this? I noted I cannot add a DP with an empty prefix so it looks like the default is the only answer.
3) Is the Telco just plain wrong and the problem is not with the PBX?
Thanks for any help you can provide and sorry if this is a bonehead question--what can I say, I write software for living and configuring PBXs isn't on my resume!
Joe