Nortel Modular Ics 6.1 Installer Guide
Have a look at the manual Nortel Modular Ics 6.1 Installer Guide online for free. It’s possible to download the document as PDF or print. UserManuals.tech offer 211 Nortel manuals and user’s guides for free. Share the user manual or guide on Facebook, Twitter or Google+.
Terminals&Sets / 331 P0603534 02Modular ICS 6.1 Installer Guide Intercom keys This setting assigns the number of intercom buttons to a telephone. Intercom buttons provide a telephone with access to internal lines and line pools. Press CHANGE to select the setting: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, or 8. Remember that if you set prime line to I/C (intercom), you may wish to assign loop start lines to the first line pools. When the system searches for an outgoing line, it begins at line pool A and chooses the first available line. By assigning a line pool as a prime line, a telephone can be made to search automatically for an idle line in a pool. This is described in the section on programming Line type (Trk/Line Data). Tips - Each intercom button assigned during programming automatically appears on the telephone. The buttons start with the lower right-hand button, or one button above, if the handsfree/mute feature is assigned to the telephone. A telephone needs two intercom buttons to be able to establish a conference call with two other Norstar telephones. Only one intercom button may be required if the button will only be used to make and receive internal calls, and to access line pools. Two intercom buttons are required if a telephone has several lines assigned to ring only. The M7100 and T7100 default assignment of two Intercom buttons can be changed to up to eight buttons. These buttons do not appear on the telephone and only two calls can be handled at a time.
332 / Terminals&Sets Modular ICS 6.1 Installer GuideP0603534 02 Answer DNs Calls for other Norstar telephones or Business Series Terminals can appear and be answered at the telephone being programmed. The DNs of the other telephones are referred to as Answer DNs. This is commonly used when twinning Companion cordless handsets to allow mobile users to have one phone number that reaches them either at their desk or elsewhere within radio range. 1. Press ≠ and enter the Answer DN (the DN of the remote telephone). 2. Press CHANGE to change the setting for the Answer DN: Unassigned, Appr&Ring or Appr only. 3. To assign additional Answer DNs, press ‘, then enter the next Answer DN. Tips - Press SCAN to view the Answer DNs assigned to this telephone. Every Answer DN assigned to the telephone automatically assigns an Answer button with an indicator to the telephone. These buttons should be labeled accordingly, identifying the telephone with its name or DN. The maximum number of Answer DNs that can be assigned to a particular set is eight. More than one telephone can have an Answer button for the same DN. In this way, more than one telephone can provide call alerting and call answering for any calls directed to that DN. When a call to a Norstar telephone is received via Call Forwarding, the Answer DN for that telephone will not alert.
Terminals&Sets / 333 P0603534 02Modular ICS 6.1 Installer Guide OLI # Some ISDN devices may require the network Called Number digits, called the outgoing line identification (OLI), to be able to accept a call. The OLI as called # parameter, available only for Profile 1 and 4, permits the OLI digits to replace the internal DN digits of the ISDN device during call setup. To enable this capability, set the OLI as called # parameter to Y for all DNs used by the device. 1. At Terminals&Sets, press ≠ and enter the ISDN set number. The set displays 221:221. 2. Press ≠ twice to reach Line Assignment. 3. Press ‘ until the display shows OLI#s. 4. Press ≠. The displays shows OLI as called #:N. 5. Press CHANGE to select Y to allow for OLI substitution. 6. Press the ® button to exit programming. For PRI, the OLI# is based on the set number. However, when you make an outgoing call on a BRI line, the Call Display information which appears on the telephone you are calling is usually based on the first Network DN associated with the service profile identifier (SPID) and line. If the SPID and line have more than one Network DN, you can program a DN to use a Network DN other than the first one for the outgoing Call Display information. When you program the alternate Network DN as the 10-digit OLI number, and you make a call using the line associated with the Network DN, the OLI number appears on the telephone you are calling. If an outgoing call is made using a SPID and line that are not associated with the Network DN number used as the OLI
334 / Terminals&Sets Modular ICS 6.1 Installer GuideP0603534 02 number, the network ignores the number and the default Call Display information is displayed. This is the first or only Network DN associated with the SPID and line. 1. At Terminals&Sets, press ≠ and enter the ISDN set number. The set displays 221:221. 2. Press ≠ twice to reach Line Assignment. 3. Press ‘ until the display shows OLI#s. 4. Press CHANGE and enter the 10 digits used for the OLI. 5. Press CLR to choose None. Note: If your system is equipped with a mixture of digital line cards, program the telephones to use line pools when making calls. If line pools are not properly configured, a telephone may use a line with a network range that does not include the calling line ID for the telephone, causing the network to present an incorrect CLID to the called party.
Terminals&Sets / 335 P0603534 02Modular ICS 6.1 Installer Guide Capabilities Settings that control how the system interacts with individual telephones and the calls they receive are found under Capabilities. The following table lists these headings. The default settings are shown in bold. SettingDescriptionOptions Fwd no answer Fwd toRedirect all incoming calls when this telephone does not answer.Enter DN None Forward delaySelect the number of rings before an unanswered call is forwarded.2, 3, 4, 6, 10 Fwd on busyRedirect all incoming calls when this telephone is busy with another call.Enter DN None DND on BusySelect whether an incoming call rings if the user is already on another call.Y, N HandsfreeSelect whether handsfree will be available to a telephone.Auto, Std (Standard), None HF answerbackSelect whether a user can automatically answer a voice call without lifting the receiver or pressing the handsfree/mute button.Y, N Pickup grpAssign this telephone to a pickup group.None, 1to9 Page zoneAssign this telephone to page zone.None, 1to 6 PagingSelect whether paging announcements can be made from this telephone.Y, N D-DialSelect whether you can call the Direct- dial telephone from this telephone using the Direct-dial digit. Set1to Set5, None Priority callSelect whether to allow this telephone to interrupt calls or to override Do Not Disturb at another telephone.Y, N
336 / Terminals&Sets Modular ICS 6.1 Installer GuideP0603534 02 HotlineSelect whether a telephone number will be dialed automatically when a user lifts the receiver or presses the button labeled handsfree/mute.Intrnl, Extrnl, None Intrnl #Appears if Hotline is IntrnlEnter DN, None Extrnl #Appears if Hotline is ExtrnlNone, facility choiceAppears if Hotline is Extrnl and number is specified. Use routing tabl option routes numbers through the Routing Table. Target lines cannot be used as the facility.Use Prime line Use line: Pool code: Use Routing tabl Aux. ringerSelect whether an auxiliary ringer (if installed) will ring for incoming calls at this telephone.Y, N Allow redirectSelect whether to allow this telephone to redirect its lines.Y, N Redirect ringSelect whether a telephone rings briefly when a call on one of its lines is redirected by the Line Redirection feature (≤°›).Y, N ATA settings ATA ans timerSelect the length of delay between the last digit you dial and when the ATA device is ready to receive DTMF tone. To accommodate the device attached to the ATA, you may need to change the delay. If a modem or fax machine is attached to the ATA, you will want to keep the delay short. If a call to a fax machine or modem cannot be connected, try shortening the delay. If an individual is dialing the number for a fax machine or modem, you may want to make the delay a little longer.3, 5, 7, 10 ATA useSelect where the ATA can be used.On site, Off site SettingDescriptionOptions
Terminals&Sets / 337 P0603534 02Modular ICS 6.1 Installer Guide For more information, refer to the Modular ICS 6.1 System Coordinator Guide. Name The default name for a telephone is the DN, but it can be changed to any combination of letters and numbers to a maximum length of seven characters. For more information, refer to the Modular ICS 6.1 System Coordinator Guide. MsgIndicateSelect the type of message indicator. When a message is received, Tone sends a Message Tone through the handset and Lamp turns on the Message Lamp.None, Tone, Lamp ATA dvcSelect the a device code for the telephone or terminal attached to your ATA. This feature enhances ATA telephone connects from an ATA over PRI/BRI lines.Telephon Modem Intrusion Protect lvlDetermine the level of access this telephone will have to allow the user to break into calls on other telephones in the system (Meridian 1 MCDN Break-in feature). To be able to use Break-in, the Protect lvl for this telephone must be less than that of the attendant telephone on the Meridian.None, Low, Medium, High SM SupervisorDetermine if this telephone will be allowed to monitor Hunt group calls.N, Y SettingDescriptionOptions
338 / Terminals&Sets Modular ICS 6.1 Installer GuideP0603534 02 User prefernces Any programming a user can do at a set can also be done through User prefernces. In the following table, the default settings are given in bold. For more information, refer to the Modular ICS 6.1 System Coordinator Guide. SettingDescription MdlAllows you to pre-program the model of telephone which will use this DN (M7208). Note: M7100 is used for T7100; M7208 is used for T7208, M7310 is used for T7316 and T7406; M7000 is used for T7000. The T7316E has settings for individual terminals, and settings for combination configurations of up to four KIMs. Button prgrmingAllows you to program the buttons with internal and external autodialers and/or programmed feature keys. User speed dialAllows you to program user speed dialers (No defaults). (speed dial codes 256 to 279) Call log opt’nsAllows you to select how the telephone will log calls: Log all calls, No autologging, No one answered, or Unanswered by me. Dialing opt’nsAllows you to select how the system will dial for this telephone: Standard dial, Pre-dial or Automatic dial. LanguageAllows you to choose the language that will display on the set. The choices are based on the Profile chosen when the system was set up. Profile 1, 3 and 4: English, French or Spanish. Profile 2: English, French, Spanish or Turkish Display cntrstAllows you to adjust the contrast of the display 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.....9 Ring typeAllows you to select a ring type 1, 2, 3, 4
Terminals&Sets / 339 P0603534 02Modular ICS 6.1 Installer Guide Restrictions Restrictions prevent a user from making certain kinds of calls from a telephone or from lines that are available at the telephone. It also restricts some features. When you are finished programming restriction settings for one telephone, you can copy those settings to other telephones by using COPY at the Restrictions ˆ display. For ISDN PRI, all line restriction changes are applicable to all lines. For more information about copying set programming, see Copying telephone programming on page 306. Filters Restriction filters group call restrictions and overrides in packages that allow you to make restriction assignments to lines and sets with just one package indicator. In addition to restricting telephone numbers, you can prevent people from entering dialing sequences used by the public network to deliver special services and features. Some public network features provide the caller with dial tone after they have entered the special code, usually £ or •, so users may have an opportunity to bypass restrictions. To prevent this from happening, you should create filters that block these special codes. You create a filter by defining the dialing sequences that are denied. There will also be variations of each sequence that you will want users to be able to dial. Sequences that can be dialed are called overrides.
340 / Terminals&Sets Modular ICS 6.1 Installer GuideP0603534 02 Once you create the filters, you can assign the restrictions to a telephone (Terminals&Sets), to a line (Lines), to a particular line on a telephone (Terminals&Sets), and to remote callers (Remote access). 1. Press ≠ and enter the number of the restriction filter you want to program, or press ‘ to move through all the available filters. 2. Press ≠ to see the first restriction in the filter. The first four digits of the number that will be denied are included in the display. The full number can be seen by pressing ≠ again. 3. Use ADD , the dialpad, and OK to program a restriction for each filter. 4. Press ‘ when the full restricted number is on the display (it shows Deny: and the number) to see any overrides to the restriction. 5. Use ADD , the dialpad, and OK to program overrides for each restriction filter. 6. Press ANY to enter a wild card character that represents any digit in a sequence of numbers when denying numbers or creating overrides. 7. You can press REMOVE to delete a restriction. The overrides will be deleted as well and the restrictions will renumber to fill the gap.