Phonebook example, Multivoip user guide quick start instructions 73, Flagstaff office – Multi-Tech Systems MULTIVOIP MVP-410ST/810ST User Manual

Page 73: Santa fe office, Boise office, One common situation, Inbound phonebook

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MultiVOIP User Guide

Quick Start Instructions

73

Phonebook Example

Flagstaff Office

204.16.49.75

8-Channel

Analog VoIP

(MVP810)

PSTN

PBX System.

Main Number:

777-5600

30 extensions

Area: 520

Santa Fe Office

PBX System.

Main Number:

444-3200

40 extensions

PSTN

204.16.49.74

8-Channel

Analog VoIP

(MVP810)

Area: 505

PBX System.

Main Number:

333-2700

204.16.49.73

24-Channel

Digital VoIP

(MVP2410)

PSTN

Boise Office

Area: 208

90 extensions

IP

Network

Each

Outbound Phonebook

contains two

pairs of entries, two entries for each
remote site. Whenever an out-of-town
employee dials a 12-digit number
beginning with the listed 5-digit
destination pattern (9+1+area code) of
another company location, the PBX
hands the call to the voip system. The
local voip strips off the “9” and directs
the call to the IP address of the remote
voip. The remote voip receives the call
and hands it to its PBX. The PBX then
completes the call to the PSTN.

The one-digit

Outbound

destination

patterns pertain to 3-digit calling
between company employees.

Inbound Phonebook

One Common Situation

Voip Example. This company has offices in three
different cities. The PBX units all operate alike.
Notably, they all give access to outside lines using
“9.” They all are ‘smart’ enough to identify voip calls
without using a special access digit (“8” is used in
some systems). Finally, the system operates so that
employees in any office can dial employees in any
other office using only three digits. Here are the
phonebooks needed for that system.

Each

Inbound Phonebook

contains

two entries. The first entry (4 digits)
specifies how incoming calls from the
other voip sites will be handled if
they go out onto the local PSTN.
Essentially, all those calls come to the
receiving voip with a pattern
beginning with

1+area code

. The local

voip removes those four digits
because they aren’t needed when
dialing locally. The local voip
attaches a “9” at the beginning of the
number to get an outside line. The
PBX then completes the call to the
PSTN.

The second

Inbound

Phonebook entry

(1 digit) is for receiving calls from
company employees in the other two
cities. The out-of-town employee
simply dials 3 digits. The first of the
three digits is uniquely used at each
site and so acts as a destination
pattern (Boise extensions are 7xx,
Santa Fe extensions 2xx, Flagstaff
extensions 6xx).

The local voip sees the pattern in its
inbound phone book and notes the
first digit (here either 2, 5, or 6).

To make the match, this first digit,

three-digit number.

specific extension identified by the

PBX. The PBX can then dial the

voip will send all three digits to the

added back once again so that the

field. This first digit must then be

2, 5, or 6 is put in the “Remove Prefix”

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