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Vodavi Infinite Dvx I, Dvx Ii Hybrid Key Telephone Systems Installation Manual
Vodavi Infinite Dvx I, Dvx Ii Hybrid Key Telephone Systems Installation Manual
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irlfinite DVX I and DVX ’ ~&$al Key Telephone Syetcms LCD DXSPLAYS Table 430-I LCD IXsplaps (Co&d) FLIIWXION CALLING STATION’S DISPLAY CALLED STATION’S DISPLAY Do Not Disturb Call Back Outside Line Transfer Message WaiEng Reply to a Message Waiting I T i DO NOT DISTURB ..(name).. MfNDDlYY HH:MM am CALL 8ACK FROM STA XXX MhVDDM HHMM am STAllON IN DO NOT DISTURB i MhUDDlYY HH:MM am I MMIDDp(Y HH:MMam 1 I CALL FROM STA XXX MSG:XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX MMIDDNY HH:MM 6m CALL BACK FROM STA XXX MMIDDIYY HH:MM am Issue 1, January 1993 430-E
LCD DISPLAYS imite DVX ’ and DVX ’ Digital Key Telephone Systems Table 430-I LCD Displays (Cont’d) FUh’C’I7ON I I I Programmed Flash ! Co-d (FJ Programmed Pause Command (PI 1 Programm ed Pulse-To- Tone Switchover (Sl CO Line 0ueW ACD or UCD Groups CALLING STATION’S DISPLAY F12 950777Fl234567 SPEED XX HH:MM am I 95mvst234S67 SPEED XX HH:MM am QUEUE CALL BACK LlNExx HH:MM am CALLED STATION’S DISPLAY 430-6 bsue 1, January l-3
iqfinite DVX ’ and DVX JJ D@itd Key Telephone~Spstems LCD DISPLAYS Table 430-I LCD Displays (Cont’d FUNCTION CALLING STATIONS DISPLAY I mging co Lines p------ I DispIay Security Feature t Staticm Fomardiq Off-Net Cal&g a Station Forwarded m-Net lbeiore and after call is answered) Calls in Queue ISupervisor) Calls in Queue (using Dial Code) -I ! Unavailable Mode (Agent St&on) Station calltng a Voice Mail Group Pilot Number L I CALLED SJZAlION’S DISPLCI’Y Iasuc1,Jan~1993 430-7
JXII DISPLAYG iqfinite DVX ’ and DVX ’ Digital Key Telephone Systems Table 430-l LCD Dfl3plays (Cont’d I FUNCTION 1 CALLING STATION’S DISPLAY I 1 I 1 I ; 1 /I DIAL NAME: Dial By Name MRUDDIYY HH:MM pm Off-Hook Voice tier (OHVO) ANNOUNCE TO STA XXX MMIDDNY H&MM am I I/ MONlTORtNG STA XXX i Executfve Override MWDDIYY HH:MM 8m I’ 1 CALLED STA’IIOWS DISPLAY 1 - 430-s Issue 1. JaQufiry 1999
infinite DVX ’ and DVX’ Di#t,al Key Telephone Systtms INSTALLATION SECTION 500 INSTALIATION 500.1 SITEPIANNING Selection of a suitable Iocation is the most basic, yet most critical consideration in the installation of a telephone system. The follow- ing should be considered when choosing an appropriate location for equipment installation: l Ampie space must be allowed to remove the KSU cover. to access assemblies and cards within the cabinet and allow space for the MDF (Main Distribution Frame). l Location of CO/PBX line terminations must be considered when selecting a location for the KSU. In the case of tele- phone company line, FCC approved con- nectors supplied by the telephone company. should be within 5 feet (I .5 meters) of the cabinet/main distribution fiane. l To nxinimb the length of cable runs between the stations and the system KSU. the location of the majority of the telephone sets (stations) should be taken iuto consideration when selecting a loca- tion for the cabinet. l A well ventilated, and well lighted area having an optima-n temperature range of 60 degrees to 80 degrees F and a reMive humidity range of 5 to 90% [non- condensing) must be provided. 0 Area lighting should be adequate for in- stallation and maintenance of the sys- tem. Hazardous or flammable materials should be removed from the vicinity. The immediate area must not be subject to flooding or excess moisture. The KSU should be isolated from areas of moving machinery or equipment. It is also rec- ommended that static electxicity-pro- ducing vts not be installed in this area. l A separately fused. dedicated 117V ac, HO?%. 15 Amp., 60 Hz. single phase, 3wire (parallel blade with ground] power outlet should be located within 5 feet (1.5 meters) of the system power SUPPlY. l ‘he Ksu and main distribution frame should be placed in au electrkally noise free environment, isolated and shielded from equipment that causes eleceo- magnetic interference @Ml) or radio fre- quency interference WI). Examples of electrical noise are rotating electrical machinery and arc welding equipment, refrigerators. copy machines, etc. Floor coverings that generate static electricity should also be avoided. l The system KSU should not be installed close to any equipment which may pro- duce RF7 (Radio Frequency Interference) such as a radio frequencytransmitter, or microwave oven. l lfthesystemistoheinstiedinaloca- tion prone to lightning strikes, provide lightming protection on the power Line. any station cable runs outside the build- ing, and CO lines. A. Symtem Grouadisg To ensure that the system WllI operate properly. a good earth ground is required. Use of the Telco ground (source not de- mark) or a mekllic COLD water pipe usu- ally provides a reliable ground path. Care- check that the pipe does not con- tain insulated joints that could isolate the ground. in the absence of the COLD water pipe, a ground rod or other source may be used. A No. 12 AWG copper wire should be used between the ground source and the KSU (25 feet maxirmxn). The farther from the ground sours the larger the ground wire used should be. The wire should be kept as short as possible and can be con- nected to the ground fug provided on the lower left side of the backplane on the KSU with the cover off. B. Lightningptottction The @fir& Digital Key Telephone System should have Central Office lines, Single Line Telephones and O&F?emfse Exten- sion stations protected with proper light- ning surge arrestors. This will provide protection from damaging surges on sensi- tive cabliug by non-direct lightning sties. The protection should contain a compli- ment of three-element gas-d&charge tubes to ground high potential surges. and asso- ciated circuits to absorb and filter lower kvel surges. This type of lightning protec- Issue 1, Jixnuxu-y 1993 500-l
infinite DVX ’ and DVX ‘* Digital Key Telephone Systems tion is available through telephone eqtip- ment supply houses. Care should be taken to ensure that such protection devices are installed in accordance with the manufac- turer’s instructions and to ensure that no more than one set of protectors be installed on central office lines at the installation premises. Improper installation can be a serious safety hazard. Failure to provide the proper lightning pro- tection wilI increase maintenance expense and require more available spare parts. SO0.2 INSTALLATION PLANNING FOR TEE Dvx I SYSTEM Prior planning of the installation will aid in a smooth cut-over and a satisfied customer. Se- lect a suitable location for the system. Deter- mine the number of telephones of each type. and the number of CO/Station ports from the sales contract and discussions with the cus- tomer. . programming information should also be gathered from the customer at this tfme so that the system may be pro- grammed either before. or while the sys- tem is being installed. l Determine the location and type of each telephone, and mark floor plans accord- m&Y- . Determine the location for the operator staticms. and mark the floor plans, . Arrange for power cabling Iif necessary) and station cabling of the site. . - Ifthe system is to be installed in an area subject to frequent lightning storms, consideration should be given to protid- ing additional lightning protection on the CO lfnes beyond what Is provided by the local telephone operatmg company. hzstol~ ahmrld be trained and thmmgh@i fmWut with the basic wmponmts of thei lm~bejim nttnnpting in8taLIotion Qfthis: produd. I 500.3 COMMON EQUIPMENT FOR THE DVX I SY!3TBM k Basic Key Service Unit ~4th Power Supply @rrsvl The DVX ’ Basic Key Service Unit (BKSU) is a system which comes fully confIgured for four CO/PBx/Centrex lines and eight stations. The Basic KSU also contains one RS-232C I/O port. one DTMFRecetver. one connector for background music and Mu- sic-on-Hold, an on-board 300 baud mo- dem port. and one External Page port. The Basic KSU also contains two connectors for adding a 2x4 Expander Module, a 2x4 SLT Expander Module (J9 and JlO). an op- tional I/O Module that adds one additional RS-232C port and one RS-422 port, and an optional 1200 baud modem can be added to increase the speed of transmission of the on-board modem port. A Reset (Halt) switch and a Background Music volume control are also mounted on the PCB. In addition, two connectors are provided for adding an Expansion KSU which will allow the system to expand to a total of 14 CO/PBX/Centrex lines and 28 digital sta- tion ports. Refer to Figure 500-l Digital Flatpack Mounting krangements for the component layout and location of connec- tors. Power Supply: The power supply, installed fn the Basic KSU at the time of manufacture, has an input voltage of 11 iv ac f10%. The power supply provides power, a fiItered/unregu- lated 112V dc. to the main key senrice board. A slo-blow 1.5 amp fuse on the AC side of the transformer provides the neces- sary fire and overload protection. Power is regulated and distrfbuted to stations / cir- cuttry in the system on the main key serv- co ! STAmO& , PORK5 PORTS r Basic IEW 4x8 1 6x:- t v., 1 l-4 l-8 J J JIJ J 2x4 Station or SLTExpander Module 1 5-6* g-12* J I / Expansion KSU 7-10 13-20 1 4x6 Expander Module 11-14 21-28 1 *If the 2x4 Station or SLT Ekpander Module is not installed in the Basic KSU and an Expansion KSU is part of the system cor&guration. CO Ports 5-6 and Station Ports 9- 12 can be r-e-assigned. Refer to Sec. 720.3 and/or Sec. 730.4. Flexible Port Assignment Features. soo-2 Issue 1, January 1883
irlfinite DVX’ 8xM DVX’ Digital Kep Telephone Systems INSTALLATION Basic Cabinet (4x81 Ferrite I* I, Expansion Cabinet (4x8) )7’ -mm- ----e --------- :a a : :i! :.t 1 0; I DTMF: --r---^-.C , L [ ExpZion -:I:” B K.’ +I- ,I,, +Tl”lf .,::;.: 1 . , . . . . .._ nr _.I .* , , . . r E 3/8 in. *- F --- - ,nr ------7 am 12c -PI ! :I3 Ra;pd -i .--J pL”---. MOlUBdM input Typical Conni3ction 14 CO has maximum ----------------------_^___-__________I Connectho Blocks I I Dedicated 117 VAC, 60 Hz, 15 Amp. Isme 1, Janumy 1993
INSTALLATION iqjinite DVX’ and DVX” Di@al Key Telephone Systems 14.50’ Figure 500-2 D&Hal Flatpack Mounting Dimcnaions 5004 rssue 1, Janauuy 1093
ice board. The power supply and cabinet meet all safety requirements to comply with UL 1459 Second Edition and CSA ~22.2 No. 225 standards. LED5 a hldicators: Four green LEDs are located on the main key seTYice board along the top of the PCB. lXvo of the LEDs IDS2 & DS3) indicate the presence of +5V & -5V dc. LEDs DSl ad DS5 indicate the presence of +12V dc used to supply power to the key stations (one LED per four stations). An extinguished LED indicates the absence of the associ- ated voltage. A red LED (DS4) located in the lower right portion of the main key service board pro- vides a system “heart beat” indication. Basic ESU BAotmting: The DVX’ Basic Key Service Unit (E3KSI-J) is housed iu a wall mountable cabfnet which contains the main key service board, power supply and pre-wired connectors for stations and CO Line interfaces. Once the zuea for the telephone equipment has been selected, mount a plywood back board to the wall. The back board size will vary depending upon the size of the MDF. The entire system and frame can be mounted ona 4’~6’~3/4”plywood. Ifmounwthe Basic KSU alone, the mfnimum backboard size is 25”~ 17” x 3/4”. A fully loaded KSU can weigh approrcimately 15 lbs. Make cer- tain proper mounting procedures are fol- IOwed. 1. Mount the KSU to the plywood using 3/4” L #I2 pan-head sheet metal su-ews such that the top of the KSU is appmately three feet (1 meter) from the ceiling. and bottom is four feet (1.2 meters) Corn the floor. 2, Use the mounting template supplied with the cabinet to locate the mounting holes. Refer to Figure 500-2 Digital F&pack Mounting Dimensions. 3. Drill the holes and mount the Basic KSU. Gro-: A NO. 12 AWG copper wire should be used to connect a ground between the ground source and the Basic KSU (25 feet maxi- mum). A two position terminal strip P3 is hated along the bottom edge of the main key service unit and is accessible through the bottom of the KSU. One terminal posi- tion can be used to connect the ground wire from a ground source and the other posi- tion may be used to connect the ground from the Basic KSU to the Expansion KSU. CPU and Memory: The DVX ’ system is controlled by a 16-bit (68000) main micro-processor which con- trols all system functions including the PCM/TDM voice switching under the di- rection of ROM and RAM software coding. The r&n key service board is responsible for all control functions, execution of all logic operations and control of system modules including control over the cir- cuitry necessary for yoice switching and conference connections. The main key service board is also responsible for all system tones, system timing, and station status control. Refer to Figure 500-3 Main Key Service Board of the Basic KSU. In addition the main key service board pro- vides software and hardware support of the following: l RealThnecibck l Watch dog time-r and recovery. l PCB status as to presence/absence of modules for automatic software confQu- ration setup. . State/event software design. l Backup of customer database RAM memory via a “Super Cap” (super capaci- tori . System software is provided in EPROM memory and is @staWcl on the main key service board. The system contains 512K of EPROM storage and is equipped with l28K of “battery”-backed static RAM. Pro- visions have been made on the card to address up to two megabytes of EPROM memory and up to two megabytes of static RAM. An option’dip” switch (S’WI) located on the main key service board a&ws the system EPROM memory to be configured utilizing dffferent size EPROM chips. 1 Megabit, 2 Megabit, 4 Megabit and 8 Megabit chips may be used to provide the generic soft- ware. Refer to Section 800, Maintenance and Troubleshooting for *dip” switch (SW 1) settings for various allawable configura- tlOllS.
A separate option strap (J26) allows the use of either 256Khit. 1 Megabit, or 4 meabit static RAM chips to be used for RAM memory. Refer to Section 800. Maintenance and Troubleshooting for the option strap choices. CO Line/Station Interfaces: ‘Ihe Basic Key Sertrice Unit (BKSUI con- tains the necessary circuitry to connect four CO/Centrex/PBX loop start lines and eight digital key telephones to the system. Thfs card also contains one additional voice (lransmit) path for external paging. The maCn key service board (KSB) conWns four Central Office. Centrex or PBX loop start. line interfaces. The protectfon cir- cuitry to allow the system to be classffied as a fully protected system are located on the card for each CO circufL The CO cir- cuits are equipped with current sensing circuitry that Identlfres distant end discon- nect (loop supervision). Each CO line inter- face design also provides proper fusing or protection to comp+vith the requirements of UL 1459 Second Edition and CSA C22.2 No. 225 standards. CO lines are connected to the system via W-11 modular jacks mounted on the bottom of the main key service board. The main key station board also provides the interface for eight Digital Key Tele- phones using two 64K cbarmel arrange- ments. Stations connect to the board via the MDF through a 50-pfn connector lo- cated inside the Basic KSU. Each station connection requires four wires to connect to the board. A Digital DSS Console, Single Line Tele- phone Adapter (Opx) or other spedficaIly _ designed adapter with a digital interface can be assigned to any one of the interface circuits. The key station interface circuits are protected from mis-wiring and over- ClUTfXk The m&n key service aIs0 cor~tains an on- board modem that is capable of msmit- ting data at a late of 300 Baud. The modem supports and is compatiblewith the Hayes command protocol. The Bell System (West- em Electric) standards 103 and 212A for modem design is incorporated into the de- sign of this modem. The modem operates on-line inbothFull and Halfduplexmodes. An optional 1200 Baud module may be added to the main key seme tit to ~.IIOW transmission at the rate of 1200 Baud. co Ldnes conxlcctioM: CO Lines are connected to the system &a modular RJ- 11 connectors accessed through the bottom of the Basic KSU. The Basic KSU connects CO Line ports 1.2.3. and 4 to the system through modular con- nectors J 1,52,53. and J4 respectively. The CO Line is wired to the green/red pair. The pinouts of the modular connector are as follows. l- I I:, _ L I,;: r b in :! II- .i.l 1 ! Ll -LY-, I .*,yr. Jj&l-l’& -A!!Qj j@L-a m-1 FUNGI’ stations connections: The station pm& are wired to the main distribution frame via a 25-p&r. (50-pin) male amphenol-type connector located on the main key sewIce board, connector J 11, A 25-pair cable w&b a 50-pin female am- phenol-type connector is required to ex- tend the station ports to the main dfstriiution tiame. Refer to Table 500-l Basic KSU Jl 1 Station Connections for pinout fnfoxmation. External Paging conntction5: The Basic KSU is equipped with an exter- nal page port [a one-way, tramxnit voice path) that is wired to the Jll connector (50-pin male amphenol-type connector) on the Violet/Slate, Slate/Violet pair of wires (pin’s 50 and 25). Refer to Table 500-l Basic KSU Jll Station Connections for pinout information. Background Music Connection: The source for Background Music / Music on Hold is connected to the system via an RCA type connector, 57 is located Fn the