As your system is presently set up, if you dial a 7-digit number, the PAP2T will accept it, FreePBX will accept it, no modification will be done and it will be sent to your provider as 7 digits. However, by default, most providers will either not accept it, or interpret it as an international number treating the first digits as the country code. Many providers have a setting on their web portal to allow this format for North America calling.
S4 , which did not work. I also tried to have no dial pattern thinking that the FreePBX will do the translation and that did not work.
For example, if you want to be able to dial 7 digits for a local call, the area code must be supplied somehow. But, you need to plan and do it in a consistent way. Do they have to match and why do both have a dial pattern? If you want to wait until the timeout or press at the end of dialing you can have X.
That is not very elegant. Most users match the internal extensions, then the emergency codes, then feature codes, then local short dialing and LD dialing.
The outbound route dial patterns not dial plan select what outbound route a PSTN call will take. In that plan if a user dials 7 digits then you need to add the area code in the prefix of that pattern and a 1 if you carrier needs it. All my examples are based on North American Dial Plans. Thanks, now I understand. Anyway, I will give it a try. In the mean time I installed a Grandstream HT which just works.
All I had to do is give it a proxy, extension and password and … bingo … it just works. There will be a delay after dialing, but it should work. If not, there is something wrong with the config, other than the dial plan. That is correct. And I am sure that the grandstream has a delay after you press the last digit.
Try dialing an internal extension and see how long it takes to start ringing. What task are your referring to? Setting up dialing plans? If you use either of the Endpoint managers, this task is made much simpler. Lastly if you have more than a handful of phones to provision, programming them manually is very difficult and hard to manage.
But, I very much appreciate your help and I certainly learn quite a bit. Sorry to hear you give up so easy. When one line port uses G. Using compression like G does is processor intensive and both these ATA models do not have a capacity to handle simultaneous G calls.
VoIP Mechanic. How many phones do you have? Are you looking for a quote for: Home. Home-based Business. What is your buying time frame? Less Than 1 Month. More Than 6 Months. What is your data connection? Need New Connection. Fill out the form below: First Name:.
0コメント