According to Jim Archer:
Well, the line has two pairs on it, on the red/green pair and the
blk/yellow pair. I am not sure which pins those correspond to on the
connector so I'm sure your right (it seems the inner pins are one pair and
the outer pins another).
I once heard a phone wiring
Hi All...
I have installed a single X100P card in my PC and am playing with Asterisk.
The wire I plugged into the X100P has two POTS lines on it, wired on the
RJ45 in the normal way.
I am getting odd behavior. It seems when I dial out that the X100P dials
both lines at the same time.
I have
First, I see that the X100P is only a single channel. Does this
mean that I can only use one POTS line with it? When I installed it
I thought that it would support two POTS lines. I guess I thought
this because it has an ordinary phone jack that had 4 little metal
fingers in it.
Is
On Thursday 06 March 2003 21:43, Jim Archer wrote:
Hi All...
I have installed a single X100P card in my PC and am playing
with Asterisk. The wire I plugged into the X100P has two POTS
lines on it, wired on the RJ45 in the normal way.
1. It's not two POTS lines. The second port is a
I can't speak for the x100p in particular but when a phone jack in an
arrangement like that has 4wires (2pair) the second pair is normally just
passed straight through from the line to the phone jack. This may be used
to supply power to the phones for lighted dials etc, supply end of line
Jim:
An RJ-11 has 4 pins and is the most commonly used POTS physical interface
1 2 3 4
A standard one line POTS will be on pins 23, and if you have a dual line
wire, then the other line is mapped to 14? If both your lines are on 23,
then X100P will dial out on both lines.
Do you have a