The UK's Number One VoIP Resource
This is a discussion on Grandstream HT 486 within the uk.telecom.voip forums, part of the Newsgroup Forums category; Hi, Just got one of these but are having a few problems:- 1. I have the box connected to my ...
|
|||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
|
|||
|
Hi,
Just got one of these but are having a few problems:- 1. I have the box connected to my cable modem and then the box is connected to a wireless router. About every 10mins I keep losing the wireless connection. Before the Grandstream never had a problem and never lost a connection. Is there something I need to adjust in the Grandstream?? Unfortunately my wireless router has only one land sockets so the adaptor has to go before the router. 2. I have 2 phones both DECT but I am only able to dial out with one!!!. The one I can't dial out with will allow me to get to the speaking menu of the Grandstream and I can dial up the various menus !! so I know the box is recognising the numbers. Any ideas thanks Nigel -- Winter and Summer holidays in the alps!!! [url]www.austrianfamilyholidays.co.uk[/url] |
|
|||
|
-- "Nigel" <dgfh@ndhs.net> wrote in message news:es6btn$n8b$1@news.datemas.de...[color=blue] > Hi, > > Just got one of these but are having a few problems:- > > 1. I have the box connected to my cable modem and then the box is > connected to a wireless router. About every 10mins I keep losing the > wireless connection. Before the Grandstream never had a problem and never > lost a connection. Is there something I need to adjust in the > Grandstream?? Unfortunately my wireless router has only one land sockets > so the adaptor has to go before the router.[/color] If it is indeed the wireless connection that is dropping, this must have something to do with where the router is sited or the wireless configuration (channel etc.) What else have you changed since the WLAN worked OK? If the connection between your router and the 486 is dropping, then it could help if you disable router functions in the 486. As it is positioned before your router, you would probably need to enable the bridging function, although there are a number of problems associated with this, the key one being how you access the 486 as I think bridging will leave the unit without an IP address. You could try putting the 486 the other side of the router and disabling routing functions (NAT and probably also DHCP), although call quality may suffer, particularly if your router is not QoS. My general view on the 486 is that it is not particularly robust, but can work OK if you play around with it - i.e.OK as a first VoIP box. If you have the opportunity of taking it out of the main routing and using a different router/firewall, then this tends to work better. [color=blue] > > 2. I have 2 phones both DECT but I am only able to dial out with one!!!. > The one I can't dial out with will allow me to get to the speaking menu of > the > Grandstream and I can dial up the various menus !! so I know the box is > recognising the numbers. Any ideas[/color] Have you tested the phone on a PSTN line (i.e. is it just a problem with VoIP?) If it does, it could be the DTMF sending method. IIRC there is a box in the configuration to switch between methods of sending DTMF, although I thought this only affected DTMF sending after the number had been dialled. |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|