Check your local fire code first. Last I checked various cities around San Francisco they require *two* analog lines (specifically non voip) or cellular/radio connected fire panels.
Up to you, of course, but I would not want to be held liable for something like that. Same concept with elevator phones. Burglar alarms are a lot less restrictive for whatever reason. As far as ATA's go, I like Yeastar. They are about the size of a deck of cards and have all the bells and whistles you should need to connect to your PBX or hosted provider, etc. Best, *Brandon Svec* *15106862204 <15106862204> voice|sms**teamonesolutions.com <https://teamonesolutions.com/>* On Tue, Dec 15, 2020 at 1:35 PM Camille Issa <cami...@alianza.com> wrote: > Hello all – looking for recommendations (other than keeping the analog > line) for VoIP ATA’s that are compatible with fire alarm panels. Anyone got > a good working solution out there? > > > > Camille Issa | Vice President, Sales > * Alianza – The Cloud Communications Platform Company* > > Call Or *Text* 919-229-4040 | cami...@alianza.com > Alianza <http://www.alianza.com/> | Blog > <http://www.alianza.com/call-to-the-cloud> | LinkedIn > <http://www.linkedin.com/company/alianza> | Twitter > <http://www.twitter.com/alianza_inc> > > > _______________________________________________ > VoiceOps mailing list > VoiceOps@voiceops.org > https://puck.nether.net/mailman/listinfo/voiceops >
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