Touch-tone receivers, 016, 012, and 008 opt modules – Lucent Technologies MERLIN LEGEND 6 User Manual

Page 88

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MERLIN LEGEND Communications System Release 6.0
System Manager’s Guide

555-660-118

Issue 1

February 1998

System Components

Page 3-6

Control Unit

3

module serves both the phone and T/R device, each device has its own extension
number and operates independently. In contrast, if you want to use both an
analog multiline telephone and a modem or other adjunct at the same location in
the system and give each one its own extension number, you must use

two

physical extension jacks on the module.

The Voice Announce to Busy feature, which allows a telephone user to hear a
voice page (also called a voice-announced call) while on another call, has the
same requirements as an adjunct that operates independently from the phone:
one extension jack (and no adjunct) for an MLX phone; two extension jacks for an
analog multiline telephone. Single-line telephones and cordless or wireless
telephones (which are analog multiline telephones) cannot receive voice pages.

NOTE:

There is a distinction between an extension jack (sometimes referred to as
a

logical ID or port) and an extension number. In system programming, you

sometimes need to use port/jack/logical ID numbers rather than extension
numbers or system line/trunk numbers. Port/jack/logical IDs are numbered,
starting at 1, from the bottom of a module, and are fixed: they cannot be
changed. The extension and line/trunk numbers that people in the system
dial are flexible and can be programmed

.

Touch-Tone Receivers

3

In addition to jacks for connecting lines/trunks and extensions, various modules
also include components called

touch-tone receivers (TTRs). These TTRs allow

the system to process touch tones entered by outside callers for special purposes,
such as automated attendants that answer calls from people with touch-tone
phones, voice mail systems, and remote access callers who call into the system
and use its services. When your Lucent Technologies representative helps plan
your system, he or she makes sure that your modules have enough touch-tone
receivers to support your needs. When you add an application or adjunct to your
system, you sometimes have to make more TTRs available as well, for example,
tie trunks connecting networked systems (Release 6.0 and later systems,
Hybrid/PBX mode)

. When you make a change to your system, consult your

Lucent Technologies representative for information about additional TTRs that
may be required.

016, 012, and 008 OPT Modules

3

Extension modules that support single-line telephones or off-premises telephones
(OPTs) must have ring generators so that the phones get electrical current for
their ringers. All 016 extension modules, which are compatible only with Release
4.0 and later systems, include built-in ring generators. Since late in 1993, 012 and
008 modules have come with ring generators built in. Earlier modules required

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