I have seen too high of audio levels cause echo. It can also distort
the audio. I imagine either of which I imagine the system can detect as
a doubled digit. When I experienced this on some lines in Glufport, MS,
random digits were doubled. He's tried everything else.
Brent Davidson wrote:
>
Would TXgain really affect DTMF detection all that much on an incoming
call? I can see how RXgain might cause some problems if it was too high
or too low, but I adjusted both of these settings according to the echo
cancellation guide using the Type 102 Milliwatt test lines. My rxgain
is alrea
I was having the digit duplication early on, but turning the relaxdtmf
option on and X Windows off solved the duplication problem. I have
logging turned up extremely high and there are no digits detected on the
calls that are unable to dial an extension. The way I have my dial plan
set up dia
Lower the rxgain and txgain on your Zap channels.
bilal ghayyad wrote:
> Hi Brent;
>
> I have been suffering from this problem since about 2
> monthes and until now still did not resolved 100%.
>
> First of all, I need to tell u that mostly u have a
> problem that the first digit is duplicated,
Hi Brent;
I have been suffering from this problem since about 2
monthes and until now still did not resolved 100%.
First of all, I need to tell u that mostly u have a
problem that the first digit is duplicated, for
example: if ur customer entered 108 then it will be
recognized 110 (the 1 duplicat
I've recently installed Asterisk-based servers at several of our branch
offices. Each server has 2 X100P cards to handle 2 incoming voice
lines. I was having a lot of trouble with Echo until I got OSLEC
running on all of the servers, but now we have a new problem. Incoming
callers are not al