On Thu, 2006-06-01 at 20:42 +0530, Rony wrote:
On Thu, Jun 01, 2006 at 04:31:49PM +0530, Arun K. Khan wrote:
On the flip side call my land line number from my mobile and I get audible indicating that the exchange does not think there is any problem with my line.
What does get audible stand for? You could be getting a ringing tone in your calling unit and no ringer signal on your phone or it even rings in your instrument. If it rings in your instrument, does it allow you to make a conversation? Do you get full speed in your downloads?
In Telco speak "audible" means the "calling" party gets a "normal" ringing tone while the exchange(s) in the network are routing the call to the "called" party. If there is any line error on the terminating end, then the network is so informed and the call is routed to a different tone or an announcement. Re: DSL speed I am getting ~230Kbps.
I remember, you have wired all your phones through the single splitter. That could be a heavy load on your splitter's series coils.
The splitter should be able to handle 2 phone units in parallel but as I said in my OP no dial tone when the phone is connected to MTNL pair directly.
one instrument is connected then its a line problem. Did you cross check your instrument on a working line?
I used 2 different phone instruments - no dial tone in either.
-- Arun Khan (knura at yahoo dot com) A copy of the universe is not what is required of art; one of the damned things is ample. -- Rebecca West