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just found the specs for the phone. On 22AWG wire the phone can be run up to 5500 feet, on 24 AWG wire can be run up to 3500 feet so distance should not be an issue...
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Hal, what do you mean by "clamping" and "strapping out" the protectors?
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Joined: Mar 2002
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Moderator-Avaya, Nortel
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Moderator-Avaya, Nortel
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IROBs can be a real pain. Just for test purposes, remove all the IROBs and run the cable clean and see if you get the same issue.
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RIP Moderator-Nisuko-Tie, General
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RIP Moderator-Nisuko-Tie, General
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have you tried bypassing the circa (for test only ) ? I had issues on a panasonic two bldg install , worked ok if I bypassed the primary . I called circa and they guy told me the right modules to order , worked just fine after that
Skip ------------------------------------
Serving SW and West central Fl since 1984
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Ok, I see who Circa is, I actually had the information. The 3B1E should be fine. I use similar all the time. You can go to 75v if you want if there is no ringing voltage.
Hal, what do you mean by "clamping" and "strapping out" the protectors?
Hmm, I never said "strapping out", I would suppose that would be replacing them with jumpers. Clamping refers to a protector going into protection, it will clamp the voltage at no more than it's rating. In the case of your 3B1Es that would be 350v. So, if the voltage on the pair exceeds 350v the protector conducts and basically becomes a dead short to ground "clamping" the voltage at no more than 350v.
And no, you do not want to permanently remove toe protectors or the IROBs. The NEC and Avaya require them.
In putting the CAT5 in the middle, which I'm sure is 24 gauge, you've reduce everything to 24 gauge. Just like water in a pipe...
Well, actually no. They would be series resistances and would add. It would all depend on the lengths of the respective runs and the resistances per foot of each wire size.
From what I can see you have a problem with the wiring here. You are certainly within the loop limit. Start by doing a voltage test at all points from the begining to end. Then I would check for grounds and resistance across the pair.
-Hal
CALIFORNIA PROPOSITION 65 WARNING: Some comments made by me are known to the State of California to cause irreversible brain damage and serious mental disorders leading to confinement.
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Well guys, another 5 hours out there today. I tested the voltage at all points and it was pretty steady at between 47.6 and 50.6V. The one thing I noticed is that when I plug the phone in at the far end and watch the voltage it stays at about 47.6V and after about 10 seconds drops to 3.3V and after about another 10 or 15 seconds it went back up to 47.6V. As a test I watched the voltage on another port of the Definity and shorted out the pins on the 66 block and lo and behold the same thing. It seems like it is shorting out somewhere but the voltage holds steady at 47.6V until I plug the phone in..I have not tried to bypass the Circa but will tomorrow..btw skip555, which Circa modules did you end up using? I will call Circa on Monday...
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Have you disconnected it from the PBX and with the phone unplugged (open both ends) checked the resistance across the pair and from each side to ground? Then short one end and check the resistance again across the pair from the other.
Is the 1100' run underground and how long has it been there?
-Hal
CALIFORNIA PROPOSITION 65 WARNING: Some comments made by me are known to the State of California to cause irreversible brain damage and serious mental disorders leading to confinement.
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Oh, and I did take the IROB's out of the picture...with no luck again..
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I did not check the resistance. To do that would I remove say one pair at one end, twist it together and put my test leads on the other end? And as far as testing from each side to ground, I am not sure how I would do that. The whole reason for this job is someone hit the existing direct burial cable with a forklift and that's when the phone stopped working. I tested all the pairs and could not get it to work either so suggested replacing the cable. They ran the old cable themselves and did not have any form of protection on either end. They simply had the pairs stripped and used wire nuts to make thier connections...
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Check both pairs for shorts, grounds, crosses, opens and balance with any volt ohm meter.
Retired phone dude
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