I thought the whole thing with the hardware echo cancellation is that it was 
basically in liu of the equivilent echo cancellation done in software...  The 
reason to go to the hardware was for high-density systems??  For two FXOs, I 
thought I'd be safe in getting the non-echo cancellation cards, but perhaps no, 
huh?!  :-(
 
-Steve

________________________________

From: Lorentz Hinrichsen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wed 4/5/2006 8:56 AM
To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion
Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Frustrated with echo...



http://www.voipsupply.com/index.php?cPath=99_359_360

A20002 no echo can = 359
A2002D with echo can = 659

Both above are with 4 FXO

I don't know if these are the best prices you can find, but for comparison - 
from the same vendor:

http://www.voipsupply.com/index.php?cPath=99_103 

DGM-TDM04B = 378.90

The above is without echo can.  There is no option for echo can, you are stuck 
tuning the gain, which when I tried - left my call volume too low or caused the 
echo to be worse!

I agree that rebooting sometimes brings the digium card back to life. 

I've yet to have a problem with the Sangoma, also -- I have not tried their 
board without the echo cancellation.  I'm thinking you'd be stuck adjusting the 
gain though.



On 4/5/06, Steve Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

        Can you tell me what model Sangoma cards you're talking about??  The 
ones I saw that had HW echo cancellation were substantially more expensive than 
the Digiums..  I'm hoping I was looking at the wrong model or something! 
        Thanks
        -Steve
        
        ________________________________
        
        From: Lorentz Hinrichsen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
        Sent: Tue 4/4/2006 10:48 PM
        To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion 
        Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Frustrated with echo...
        
        
        I've had very poor results with the Digium cards, I am using a couple 
of the new Sangoma ones now (they are cheaper and have hardware echo 
cancellation). 
        
        The digium boards proved almost impossible to completely eliminate 
echo, and I had random failures over time.
        
        
        On 4/4/06, Steve Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
        
                For phones, I've got a GS 101, a Sipura 841, and two analog 
phones hooked to an GS386 ATA (one phone per port).
        
                My troubles seem to be regardless of which phone is used, so I 
dont think it's on the phone-end of asterisk, but rather where I interface w/ 
Vonage and Verizon via POTS FXO...  My SIP connections to the outside world 
have so far been good [frantically knocking on wood] 
        
                I did go ahead and order the digium card yesterday evening, so 
I'm hopeful this will help.  I had played with the gain, and was able to 
discern a difference, but it seemed to make some scenarios better, while making 
others worse, so I'm hoping the real digium card/drivers will just be smarter 
about handling it dynamically.  Of course, my wife, who's a stay-at-home-mom is 
the biggest user of the system, but she's not interested in being a techy, so 
getting her to interrogate all callers about which number they dialed, etc.. 
and logging her opinions of the quality of the call hasn't worked!  ;-) 
        
                I also have some Cisco phones, but I haven't configured SCCP on 
my system yet, and dont want to use SIP on these phone (mostly to force myself 
to learn to configure SCCP on *) so that's another aspect that may help me 
after this weekend! 
        
                Good point about the interrupts - I dont know the answer to 
that, but hopefully that'll also be a non-issue after I get the new card, and 
therefore have only one PCI slot handling everything.
        
                Thanks for the ideas!! 
                -Steve
        
        
                ________________________________
        
                From: Mike Dent [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                Sent: Mon 4/3/2006 3:46 PM
                To: Asterisk Users Mailing List - Non-Commercial Discussion 
                Subject: Re: [Asterisk-Users] Frustrated with echo...
        
        
        
                On 4/3/06, Steve Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
                >
                > I've been using my Asterisk (At my house - 2 modem-type fxos, 
and an 
                > assortment of SIP endpoints for phones) for about 5 weeks 
now, and I've been
                > really happy with it, but I'm still having an echo problem 
that I've
                > exhausted google with, and can't get straight... 
                >
                > I think I've determined that because I'm using $7 voice modem 
clones for my
                > FXOs that bad echo is going to just keep being a pain to 
me...  I think I
                > should have only tried going through "proof of concept" state 
with them, 
                > switching to something a little better quality when it was 
time to actually
                > commit to Asterisk.
                >
                > So, my question is "What's better and why:  1: a 'real' 
digium PCI card with 
                > two fxo plugins, or using a couple external SIP fxo units 
like a
                > grandstream, zoom, or similar"  Personally, I think it would 
be desirable to
                > keep the FXOs out of the asterisk box itself, just to give me 
future 
                > flexability to move to whatever the platform of the day I 
want to put
                > asterisk on, without dealing with a PCI card to move, but if 
the consensus
                > is that the voice quality and support for the digium board is 
the best, then 
                > that's what I'll do..
                >
                > So, any comments on relative quality of these devices, and/or 
ones I've
                > missed?
                > 1:  Grandstream HT-488
                > 2:  Zoom 5801/5802 
                > 3:  DGM-TDM02B  (TDM 400P with two FXOs)
                >
                > Are there any IAX2 FXOs that I'm missing?  That seems to be 
an area that's
                > oddly not taken care of...
                > 
                > Any hints would be greatly appreciated!
        
                Steve,
                I have a similar setup at home, although I am in the UK. I've 
got the
                echo fairly well under control, however it seems much less when 
using 
                my Cisco 7960 rather than
                the Grandstrean BT102 phone.
                Have you tried dropping the gain?
                Have you made sure you have both cards on seperate IRQ's which 
are not
                in use by network, video etc? I disabled USB and on board audio 
in the 
                BIOS to help free up IRQ's.
                I think your best option is the TDM400 card, or perhaps 
consider the
                Sangoma card with a dual FXO module, maybe slightly cheaper!
                I'd be interested what SIP phones you are using and if echo 
differs 
                between them.
        
                Mike
        
        
        
        
                _______________________________________________
                --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com --
        
                Asterisk-Users mailing list
                To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
                   http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users 
        
        
        
        
        
        
        _______________________________________________
        --Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com --
        
        Asterisk-Users mailing list
        To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit: 
           http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users
        
        
        


<<winmail.dat>>

_______________________________________________
--Bandwidth and Colocation provided by Easynews.com --

Asterisk-Users mailing list
To UNSUBSCRIBE or update options visit:
   http://lists.digium.com/mailman/listinfo/asterisk-users

Reply via email to