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Toshiba Perception E Ex Digital Pbx Installation And Maintenance Manual
Toshiba Perception E Ex Digital Pbx Installation And Maintenance Manual
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INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 FEBRUARY1992 NMDU PCB 30 5 32 7 34 9 36 CKT TL8 ; j 7 I ,3 RL7 i ; 4. I ’ CKT RL8 ; ! 8 ’ I ,5 ’ .- : - 1 500/2500-TYPE CROSS-CONNECT BLOCK FiJil BLOCK -. ( I ’ I W-W ; I TLl (BL-W) ! ; RLI W-G) ’ I ; i TL2 (G-W) : 1 TO TELEPHONE #2 RL2 ’ I W-S) ; ; TL3 I TO TELEPHONE #3 RL3 TL4 TO TELEPHONE #4 RL4 TL5 RL5 1 TO TELEPHONE #5 TL6 I TO TELEPHONE #6 RL6 TL7 TO TELEPHONE #7 RL7 TL8 TO TELEPHONE #8 RL8 ‘25-PAIR CABLE “J” CABLE CONNECTOR PINS FIGURE 4-66-STANDARD TELEPHONE CONNECTION 4-59
INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 FEBRUARY1992 , NMDU PCB CROSS~ CKT 1 CKT 2 CKT 3 CKT 5 CKT 6 CONNECTOR PINS CONNECT BLOCK RJII DDll (W-BL) I-: * TLl I (BL-W) ; , RLl (W-G) i / I TL2-L TO 6-W ; i I RC~ -- DDIU #2 (W-S) ] ! TL3 2 ‘1 -rn I (S-W) ; ! FiL3 I ’ (R-0) I TL4 (O-R) ; ’ RL4 I ’ (R-BR) : ’ ! I TLS (BR-R) . ’ I RL5 W-B’-) f , TL6 J MODEM #2 - I TO MODEM #3 1 l CORRECT TO POLARITY MODEM #4 25-PAIR CABLE J-MA FIGURE 4-67-MODEM POOLING CONNECTION (DDIU-MA ONLY) 3) Using Tables 5-8 and 5-15 for guides: l Connect the trunks selected for emer- gency use to the Jl block “CO Tip” and “CO Ring” terminals. l Connect the NCOU circuits supporting the emergency trunks to the Ji block “NCOU Tip” and “NCOU Ring” terminals. 4) Using Tables 5-6, 5-7, 5-9, 5-14 and 5-16 for guides: l Connect the standard telephone stations, designated for emergency use, to the properterminals on the J2 block“TELTip” and “TEL Ring” terminals. 5) At the MDF, connect the DPFT to the system as follows: PERCEPTION, DPFT Jl (trunk) = LCEWNCEC-M & S J8-J15/ J508-J515 Pin 25 (S-V) = Pin 25 (S-V)* Pin 50 (V-S) = Pin 50 (V-S)* DPFT 52 (station) = LCEWNCEC-M & S J4- J15/J504-J515 PERCEPTION, Any trunk position *On the J7 connector, the pin 25 connection provides the -24 VDC input required to drive the DPFTand the pin 50 connection provides ground, There are no power connections on connector J2. 9.20 Reserve Power 9.21 Install Reserve Power as follows (Figure 4- 68): 1) Place the customer-supplied battery pack where it will be located. 4-60
CA UT/ON! Batteries can emit fumes that are poison- ous to people, potentially explosive, and corrosive to electronic components. Lo- cate batteries so that any fumes are ade- quately vented per local fire codes. 2) Place the POWER switch (on the front of the main power supply) in the OFF position and remove the AC power cable from the outlet. 3) Connect the battery pack leads (customer- supplied) to TB2 BAT on the NPSA-M or LPSA (Figure 4-68). Observe the correct polarity. Leave the leads from the peak load battery PEAK LOAD I I IllIll \\I POWER NOTE: CABLE Ensure that the correct polarity is maintained. FIGURE 4-68-RESERVE POWER INSTALLATION 4-61 4) Connect the leads to the battery pack (Figure 4-67). Observe the correct polarity. Fix battery leads to the cabinet using the clamp. 5) Place the BAT BACK UP switch on the front of the main power supply in the ON position. INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 FEBRUARY1992 6) Plug the AC cable into the outlet and turn the POWER switch ON. 9.30 Paging Equipment 9.31 By combining a single customer-supplied paging amplifier with the system’s paging interface and speaker zone switching, it is possible to pro- vide a paging system of up to five zones with All Zone Page capability. 9.32 Figures 4-69, 4-70 and 4-71 show possible paging arrangements. As a standard feature (part of the NPRU PCB), the system provides a 600-ohm output to a paging amplifier. If more than one paging zone is required, the output of the amplifier can be routed back to the NPRU PCB where it will be switched to one of five sets of speakers. The speaker operated is determined by the access code dialed by the station user. The actual access code is assigned in software (see Section 200-255- 300, Programming). 9.33 An All Page code can also be defined in software. When that code is dialed, all relays will be activated simultaneously to permit paging to all speaker zones. 9.34 If the power loads of the different zones are such that a single amplifier is not suitable, multiple amplifiers (up to one for each zone) can be con- nected as shown in Figure 4-71. 9.35 If music is to be broadcast over the paging system, two arrangements are possible: 1) If the music is supplied from a separate ampli- fier (as in Figures 4-70 and 4-71), it can be connected between the speaker common line and the PG GND input to the NPRU (PERCEPTlONe J2/J502 and pin 2 or PERCEPTlONe, Jl/J2 and pin 2). The music will be connected to all speaker zones when no page is in progress. When a page access code is dialed, the music is disconnected from the zone and the page amplifier output is connected. 2) If the music is connected to a second input Of the paging amplifier (Figure 4-69), the PG1
INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 FEBRUARY 1992 I Pe -J2/J502 jl,, -.. x-1 %x-J1/J2 3c: L I < I I- IN- ; PRl 1 #I I I I I I I IThA ---t e- I I I -mm-, I MUSIC i 1-e-m-q I SOURCE : ,,,,-,,-,,,,,,J I FIGURE 4-69-PAGINGWlTHMUSlCOVEREXTERNALSPEAKERFROMSAMEAMPLlFlER control lead (52 and J502 pin 27 or Jl and 52 for PERCEPTION,&,, , respectively) can be connected to the MUTE terminal of the page amplifier music channel. When any page ac- cess code is dialed, a ground output is applied to the PGl lead to mute the music. 9.36 All paging connections are made at the J2 and J502 or Jl and 52 connectors on the PERCEPTION,&,, systems, respectively. The connectors are located on the rear of the basic and expansion cabinets. See Tables 5-4 and 5-10 for details, 9.40 Music-on-Hold 9.41 A Music-on-Hold (MOH) interface is a stan- dard feature on the system. The circuitry occupies part of the NPRU PCB. If MOH is equipped, it will be heard by any station or trunks on-hold in the sys- tem, or by any trunk put into the camp-on state. 9.42 A tuner or other program source, supplied by the customer, is connected to the MOH input via pins 4 and 29 (Br-W and W-BR) of J2 or J502 / Jl or J2 forthe PERCEPTION e&ex systems, respectively (see Tables 5-4 and 5-10). The input impedance is 600 ohms. (This cannot be the same source used to provide music over external speakers.) 9.43 Adjust the MOH volume with the MOH vol- ume control on the front of the NPRU PCB. Maxi- mum volume is limited by internal circuits in order to comply with FCC regulations. 9.50 Universal Night Answer 9.51 The Universal Night Answer (UNA) feature provides an output of interrupted ringing voltage (85 +10 VRMS, 20 Hz superimposed on -24 VDC) whenever the system is in Night Service and an incoming call is received by a trunk designated for UNA. Any station user, upon hearing the chime or bell, can dial the UNA access code and be con- nected to the caller. 9.52 The ringing voltage output is intended to control a strategically located chime or loud ring- ing bell. The available power is five ringer equiva- lents. 9.53 Two UNA zones can be installed in tenant systems. Either zone can be assigned in program- ming to either tenant. For PERCEPTION,, con- nections to the UNA ringing signal are via pins 12 and 37 (0-BK, BK-0) of J2. This connection is to J502 in the expansion cabinet for UNAZone 1 (see Tables 5-4 and 5-10). UNA zone 1 requires a second NPRU PCB in the expansion cabinet. 4-62
INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 FEBRUARY1992 P,-J2lJ502 P,, -J 1 lJ2 ZONE 1 ZONE 2 ZONE 3 ZONE 4 ZONE 5 I I hi- I PGl I < 4 27 ! I i , PGGND I < +-z-- ‘-““--“-“--“-, i I I MUSIC AMP I 1 OPTIONAL r-----1 I ,““““““” r-4 I I ,,,-,,---,----,I I I L-1 I I CONNECTION NPRU MUSIC : FOR MUSIC SOURCE ; I i IN- ; i PUT OUT- I i PUT: ! OVER EXTERNAL i SPEAKER 1-j I----! L------l ,,,,,,-,,,,,,,I FlGURE4-70-PAGING WITH ONE AMPLIFIER 9.54 UNA connections for PERCEPTION,, are made at pins 12 and 37 connectors Jl and 52 on the basic cabinet. A second UNA device requires a second NPRU to be installed in the basic cabinet. 9.60 Station Message Detail Recording 9.61 The Station Message Detail Recording (SMDR) feature enables a business to monitor and control its telephone costs. Data can be collected for each outgoing and/or incoming trunk call. Each such call generates a call record that is output at the SMDR connector on the connector panel at the upper rear of the LCEC-M or NCEC-M. (In Lodging/ Health Care applications, data specific to those applications are included in the SMDR output.) 9.62 SMDR output can be connected to a variety of customer-provided equipment: l A local 80-column printer for an on-line printout at the termination of each trunk call. l A recording device to store data for subsequent processing, either on-site or by a service bureau. 0 Call accounting equipment to provide custom- ized call reports. 4-63
INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 FEBRUARY 1992 NPRU -------------------. J2 I I i PGGND i -----------,-,-I ZONE 2 ZONE 3 ZONE 4 OPTIONAL CONNECTION FIGURE 4-71-PAGING WITH MULTIPLE AMPLIFIERS 4-64
9.63 Refer to the external device manufacturer’s documentation for information on its SMDR con- nector pin assignments. 9.64 The SMDR output speed can be set for either 300 bps or 1200 bps by the MDR switch on the front panel of the LCCU PCB (Figure 4-72). SMDR pin assignments are as follows: FIGURE 4-72-LCCU SWITCHES 9.70 The recording criteriaand account code length are defined in DMDR Program (see Section 200- 255-300, Programming). 1 5 1 Clear to Send (to SMDR device) I 6 Data Set Ready 7 Sianal Ground 1 8 I Carrier Detect I 20 I Data Terminal Readv (from SMDR device) I 4-65 9.65 The code used by SMDR is standard 7-level ASCII using one start bit, one stop bit and one parity bit (even parity). 9.66 SMDR can be programmed to record data under any one of the following conditions: 0 Incoming calls only. l Outgoing calls only. l Incoming and outgoing calls. l Outgoing toll calls only. l All incoming calls and outgoing toll calls. 9.71 Each time a trunk is seized, data is collected for that call until the trunk is released. This data is output at the SMDR port in thefollowingformat (see Figure 4-73). l Time l Start of Call Hour - tens - units Minute - tens - units l Call Duration Hour - units Minute - tens- units Seconds - tens - units l Condition Code (see table) A = Attendant handled D = Call > 10 hours E = Maintenance (SMDR port) F = Maintenance (trunk test) I = Incoming call K = Outgoing call L = Conference Attendant or 3-party M = Transfer or Call Forward N = SPCC #l 0 = SPCC #2 P = Date/Time change Q = System Initialize R = Incomplete call S = Date printed (every hour) l Access Code 3 digits maximum INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 JANUARY 1993 9.67 When outgoing calls are chosen, all calls seizing a trunk will be recorded regardless of dura- tion. On incoming calls, all answered calls will be recorded. Calls disconnected by Toll or Code Re- striction features are not recorded. 9.68 Timing for recorded calls will start as follows (Figure 4-73): l Outgoing-when trunk is seized. l Incoming to attendant only-when attendant answers. l Incoming and extended by the attendant-when attendant answers. l Incoming to a station-when answered. 9.69 A station user can enter a charge account code of up to 12 digits for each call. This code is included in the SMDR output.
INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 JANUARY1993 I 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 6 9 101112131415161716192021222324252627282930313233343536373639404i424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636165666768697071 72 73 /?/202:13310:00:25A~X9C001~1-516-669-1234/:201Iii002~123456789012~~ OUTGOING - -- -- START OF CALL CALLWRATlON CONDlTlON ACCESS TPN DIALEDPHONENUMBER STATION PGRT ACCOUNTCODE OR STROKE COUNT FIGURE 4-73-EXAMPLE: SMDR CALL RECORD l Dialed Number 15 digits maximum l Calling DN 4 digits maximum l Trunk Port 3 digits maximum l DNIS Digits 4 digits maximum l Calling Port No. 3 digits maximum l Account Code 12 digits maximum or l Stroke Count 4 digits maximum 9.72 The format of the special record, for Initialize/ Reload and Time Change, is as follows: Initialize/Reload: NNNN etc. (previous records-usual call) 00 (initialize or reload) 9.73 Any record printed after the initialize record will appear on the same line and be offset three columns from the usual record. Example: NNNN (previous record) 00 NNNNN (initialize and next record) NNNNNN Time Change: MM DD (old date) HH : MM (old time) MM DD (new date) HH : MM (new time) 9.74 Some complex calls will cause multiple call records (CR) for the same station or trunk. Examples: 1) Station 1 transfers Trunk 1 to Station 2 CR for Station 1 - Trunk 1 = Condition Code I or K CR for Station 2 - Trunk 1 = Condition Code M 2) Station 1 transfers Trunk 1 to Trunk 2 CR for Station 1 - Trunk 1 = Condition Code I or K CR for Station 1 - Trunk 2 = Condition Code L CR for Trunk 1 - Trunk 2 = Condition Code M 3) Station 1 holds Trunk 1 and calls Trunk 2 CR for Station 1 - Trunk 1 = Condition Code I or K CR for Station 1 - Trunk 2 = Condition Code K 9.75 All connections to miscellaneous equip- ment are made via J2, Jl, TTY, SMDR, and MODEM connectors on the connector panels of the system. 4-66
9.80 Lodging/Health Care Data Audit 9.81 The Lodging/Health Care Data Audit feature enables the user to record and analyze the registra- tion and operation of specific features in Lodging/ Health Care applications. 9.82 Lodging/Health Care audit data is output at either the SMDR (as part of the SMDR printout) or the TTY (as a separate report) connector on the upper rear of the basic cabinet. (Because the TTY connector is required for on-site programming and maintenance procedures, it is recommended that the SMDR port be used.) The selection of data to be output and the connector choice (lTY or SMDR) are software-controlled (see DHMF Program in Sec- tion 200-255-300, Programming). 9.83 The SMDR or TTY output can be connected to either: l A local 80-column printer for an on-line printout. l Compatible call accounting or property manage- ment interface equipment, supplied by another vendor. 9.84 The audit pin-out assignments at the SMDR or the TTY connector are not identical. Refer to Paragraph 9.64for the pin-out assignments of each connector. For instruction on connecting equip- ment provided by other vendors, refer to the manufacturer’s documentation. 9.85 The audit data output rate can be set for either 300 bps or 1200 bps (depending on the configura- tion of the receiving equipment) at either the SMDR switch or the TTY switch on the front panel of the LCCU PCB. CAUTION! If the TTY connector is used for program- ming and maintenance operations, (either with an on-site teleprinter or remotely via a modem) be careful not to change the data rate setting of the 773’ switch so that it is incompatible with programming equip- men t. INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTIONZOO-255-204 FEBRUARY1992 9.86 Figure 4-74 shows a typical Lodging/Health Care audit printout. Notes on the figure explain the possible value for each column. 10. SYSTEM POWER UP 10.00 General 10.01 Upon initial power up, the system will automatically load its operating system and cus- tomer data from the disk. Two sets of disks are provided with each system; one set should always be mounted in the drive, the other kept as a spare. 10.02 Activate the system as follows: 1) Be sure the main power switch on the NPSA- M is in the OFF position, and plug the AC cord into the outlet. 2) If the system uses D.02 or later version soft- ware, insert the SYSTEM disk in FDDO. If two drives are used, insert the MAINTENANCE disk (Figure 4-75) in FDDl . If the system uses D.O1 software, insert the program disk in FDDO. 3) Turn the main power switch on the NPSA-M to the ON position. 4) The floppy disk will run: LED will come on. l LCCU MAJ ALARM LED will be on. l NPRU PFT LED will be on. 5) When loading is complete, the system will initialize and clear all LEDs. Only a true fault indication will remain. Refer to Section 200- 255-500, Fault Finding Procedures, for meaning of indications and assistance with fault clearing. 6) Refer to Section 200-255-300, Programming, to complete customer data assignments. 4-67
INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS SECTION 200-255-204 FEBRUARY 1992 ROOM/DIRECTORY NUMBER FEATURE ’ OPERATION * TIME FEATURE WAS REGISTERED/ACTIVATED ROOM STATUS CODE 3 TELEPHONE SET STATUS/AGENT REGISTERING OR CANCELLING FEATURE4 NW AAzmma CANCEL LYL!VVd202nAWU~SETAAAAAAl5:11~0307660~M~15:1~~ q m NOTES: 1. FEATURE MW = Message Waiting A WU = Automatic Wake-up MRA = Message Registration Audit Room Status = Room Status Audit 2. OPERATION 4. This column shows either the status of the station accessed for feature opera- tion (for example, a wake-up call) or the agent who registered the feature. STATUS RNA = Ring No-Answer ON = Set at Attendant Console OFF = Cancelled at either Bsy = Busy $XxX.Xx = Total call charges for this station Attendant Console or Station SET = Set at either Attendant Console or Station CANCEL = Cancelled at either Attendant Console or Station M = Maid in Room XX:XX = Time Wake-up Call Scheduled for AGENT MC = Message Center EXT = Station 3. ROOM STATUS CODE 1 = Vacant and clean 2 = Occupied and clean 3 = Vacant and needs cleaning 4 = Occupied and needs cleaning FIGURE 4-74-EXAMPLE: AUDIT PRINTOUT (LODGING/HEALTH CARE) 4-68