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Modifiable application-delay indexes – Reliant Octel 200 and Octel 300 Message Servers PB6001401 User Manual

Page 277

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Maintenance

Commands 6-47

Octel Overture 200/300 Serenade 3.0

PB60014–01

Figure 6-3 Ring/No Answer Tone-Timing Failure

PBX Tone ON

PBX Tone OFF

1000 ms

2880 ms

Answer Condition

800 ms

1200 ms

980 ms

800 ms

1200 ms

790 ms

1200 ms

2800 ms

3400 ms

2920 ms

2800 ms

3400 ms

Maximum Tone ON (53)

1

2

3

4
5

6

1

2

Minimum Tone ON (54)

3

4
5
6

Minimum Tone OFF (56)
Maximum Tone OFF (55)

Actual Time Tone ON

Actual Time Tone was OFF

800 ms

9.

Modify the required application delays.

In this case, Application Delay index 54 would be changed from 800 ms to 760 ms. Decreasing
Index 54 allows for the 790 ms TONE ON.

.

Index 50 must be equal to or less than Index 54.

10. After modifying the appropriate delays, remove Attribute 70, and retest the calls that failed.


If calls still fail, repeat this procedure from step 1.

Modifiable Application-Delay Indexes

The application-delay indexes that can be modified at the Maintenance level while in UPDATE are listed
below, with descriptions of what the delay does and how to use it.

Application Delays for Addressing

WAIT DURING ADDRESSING TO RESOLVE DIGIT ENTERED

During addressing, Application Delay 131 causes a delay between digit entries when 0 is the
first digit of mailboxes and extensions or when local mailbox addresses overlap network
prefixes. The default delay is 2.0 seconds.

Use — When 0 is the initial digit for mailboxes and extensions, after 0, or 00–09 are entered,
the message server waits for more digits. If no more digits are entered, the call is transferred
to the operator (0), to the Dial-by-Name directory (00), or, in the case of a PDL address
(01–09), the address is registered.

When local mailbox addresses overlap network prefixes, the message server waits for more
digits after the local mailbox address is entered. If more digits are entered before the timeout

131