Autodialler, Autodialler basics – Muratec F-160 User Manual

Page 38

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Beyond the Basics

Your fax machine’s autodialler stores your most frequently called phone and fax
numbers for instant recall so you don’t have to remember them. It’s something like
an electronic phone book.

Autodialler basics

How do you autodial?

There are two kinds of autodialler numbers. The difference between the two is how
you dial them:

Type

How to dial

Amount stored

One-touch

Press one of the keys, marked 0164

64

on the right side of the control panel

Speed-dial

Press

SPEED DIAL

/

TEL INDEX

followed by a

136

three-digit identifier, from 001 to 136

Total amount of numbers stored

200

Autodialling fax and phone numbers

Your fax machine’s autodialler will hold more than just fax numbers. You can store
phone numbers, too.
This is because when you use the autodialler to dial a number, the fax checks to see
if there’s a document in its feeder. If there is, the machine dials as a fax machine. If
there isn’t, it dials as a phone.

Location

ID

s and the EasyDial directory

When you store numbers in your autodialler, you can give these numbers descriptive
names, such as “Chicago office” or “Billing department”. Your machine calls this
name a Location

ID

.

Your machine’s autodialler sorts these location

ID

s alphabetically. Using your

EasyDial directory, you can look up these numbers by their descriptive names, just
as if you were using a phone book.
We’ll explain how to store the numbers and location

ID

s in the next few pages. The

EasyDial directory is discussed in detail on page 2.15.

Special Dialling Characters

Your fax machine allows you to enter special dialling characters when programming
the autodialler. These characters include hyphens and dashes, which make phone
numbers easier to read, and special characters needed for international calls.
The chart below briefly describes each of these characters. It also tells you what
keys to press on your fax machine to store those characters in your autodialler:

Char.

What it does

Keystroke(s)

Makes long numbers easier to read.

DIALING OPTIONS

(once)

Doesn’t change fax machine operation.

/

(Has no effect in the Europe.)

DIALING OPTIONS

(twice)

!

(Has no effect in the Europe.)

DIALING OPTIONS

(3 times)

Enters a pause, during the dialling of
long-distance numbers or when you’re

REDIAL

/

PAUSE

[after entry of at

–/

dialling through

PABX

. Each pause uses

least one other character]

two of the characters you can store in
one phone number.

If your fax machine is on a pulse (not
tone-dialling) line, switches from pulse-
dialling to tone (“

DTMF

”)-dialling.

DIALING OPTIONS

(once),

–!

Use after the actual phone number but

then

PROGRAM

(once), then

before any characters (such as a long-

DIALING OPTIONS

(3 times),

distance carrier’s access code) which

then

PROGRAM

(once)

must be in

DTMF

tone. Do not use on a

tone line.

Enter “flash” signal to exchange

PABX

/

to

PSTN

before actual phone number.

Soft key which registered the

However, “/” must be entered to the

flash signal. (See page 2.24.)

first of number

2.7

Autodialler

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