Reliant Octel 200 and Octel 300 Message Servers PB6001401 User Manual
Page 276

6-46
Installation and Maintenance Volume
Octel Overture 200/300 Serenade 3.0
PB60014–01
@PRT 1
IN–2
IN–2
IN–0
FLASH
EXPECT DIAL TONE
420 MS
T ON
600 MS
DIAL TONE
DIAL–2
DIAL–2
DIAL–0
2620 MS
T ON
1000 MS
T OFF
2880 MS
T ON
980 MS
T OFF
2920 MS
T ON
790 MS
ANSWER
The Octel Overture 200/300
monitors tones for dial tone.
The caller enters DTMF digits.
Octel Overture 200/300
dials DTMF digits.
Octel Overture 200/300
ignores the first tone change.
Octel Overture 200/300 monitors call progress tones from
the
PBX
to determine the status of the called extension.
Failure:
Octel Overture 200/300
detects an answer condition
because one of the tones from the
PBX
does not conform to
delays in the Application Delay Table.
Dial tone is detected.
6.
Review the
PRT
display to determine the tone cadence of the tone being monitored. Refer to the
How to Modify Application Delays section in this chapter to find the application-delay indexes that
refer to the error received.
7.
Enter UPDATE to list the current values in the Application Delay Table; at the dot (.) prompt, type
L APP
Enter
8.
Create a tone timing diagram to help determine the tone cadence.
The tone values from the
PRT
display and the current application-delay values listed in the
Application Delay Table can be included in the diagram to determine how much an individual tone
needs to be modified.
For the preceding
PRT
example, the application-delay indexes that refer to the error received are
indexes 50 and 54. Figure 6-3 shows what the failure would look like on a tone timing diagram. Note
that the failure occurred when the PBX sent a TONE ON for 790 ms. The Octel Overture 200/300 was
set to expect a TONE ON (ringback) for no less then 800 ms and no greater than 1200 ms. This is
referred to as the “window.” In the diagram, the window for the silence period (TONE OFF) between
rings is set to no less than 2800 ms and no greater than 3400 ms. The TONE OFF values are within
that window.