IP Telephone systems
What is an IP PBX ?
An IP PBX is a telephone switchboard which uses
IP (the Internet protocol) to carry telephone
calls over computer networks instead of using
the PSTN (the regular phone network) and
traditional phone lines (ISDN or analogue).
Telephone extensions on a traditional PBX are
connected using regular analogue connections
(phone sockets) with each socket being wired
back individually to the PBX. An IP PBX doesn't
use phone lines (analogue/ISDN) to connect to
the PSTN but instead uses the Internet (or
sometimes a private IP network) to connect to a
PSTN gateway (IP Trunk).
An IP network uses your
existing Ethernet (CAT5/UTP) within your
premises. Once your IP PBX is installed onto
your network, your IP telephones can communicate
with the PBX by plugging into any of your
network sockets, in the same way that you can
plug in any computer. You do not need specific
extension sockets so installation is much
simpler and more flexible as you can move an
extension just by plugging it into a different
socket (an extension's identity is determined by
the phone's settings, not the socket it is
plugged into).
IP, being the protocol of the
Internet can be passed directly onto the
Internet using your broadband line or other
Internet connectivity so if you have an IP phone
plugged in somewhere else on the Internet
(anywhere in the world) that phone can connect
to your PBX and call to/from the IP phones in
your office.
VoIP Trunks
Of course, until the whole
world uses IP, most of your calls will still be
to or from the regular telephone network (PSTN)
so you need a method to call to/from your IP
network. On a pure IP PBX, there are no analogue
or ISDN trunk lines; the IP PBX has no direct
connection to the PSTN, just a connection to the
Internet. You therefore need to use a PSTN
gateway - this is a server which interconnects
your IP network with the PSTN so that your
outbound calls can be passed onto any regular
phone number and you can have a regular PSTN
phone number which routes into your PBX. This
service, or provision is called a VoIP Trunk (or
a 'SIP' trunk as SIP is the signalling protocol
used).
The following two diagrams
show the topology (the connection relationship
of all components) in firstly a traditional PBX
and then an IP PBX:
Above is traditional PBX. For every line, you
need another connection into the PBX from the
outside world, so line rental costs and for
every extension, you need another dedicated
cable all the way from the phone back to the
PBX. This means a lot of wiring, and therefore
difficult to change later. Traditional PBXs are
also generally much larger physically.
With an IP PBX (above) you use
your existing computer network, so only one
connection is required back to the PBX.
Splitting anywhere along the way with additional
Ethernet switches as required. A DSL trunk (your
connection to the outside world) replaces all of
your multiple incoming lines.
We supply, install and
maintain a range of IP telephony hardware for
the small business, with systems supporting up to
100 telephone extensions (local or remote) and
with up to 32 simultaneous external calls in
progress at any one time.
IPPBX 2820 Integrated IP-PBX &
ADSL Router
- Voice-over-IP PBX
- ADSL Firewall/Router
- 802.11n WiFi ('IPPBX 2820n' only)
- Up to 30 VoIP Extensions (local or remote)
- Up to 6 SIP Trunks & 20 Channels
- FXO Port (Analogue Line Interface)
- Voicemail with personal user messages
- Remote Access to Voicemail
- Trunk/SIP Budget controls
- T.38 Fax support on analogue extension
- Hunt Groups
- Call Diversion/Transfer
- IVR (Voice Auto-Attendant)
- Two ISDN2e Interfaces (4 channels)
- Analogue Phone Interface (with POTS failover)
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IPPBX 3510 IP-PBX
- Voice-over-IP PBX
- Firewall/Router
- Two Ethernet WAN Interfaces
- Up to 100 Extensions (local or remote)
- Up to 6 SIP Trunks & 32 Channels
- Voicemail with individual user messages
- Remote Access to Voicemail
- Trunk/SIP Budget controls
- Hunt Groups
- Call Diversion/Transfer
- IVR (Voice Auto-Attendant)
- Optional ISDN Interfaces
- Optional FXO/FXS Analogue Interfaces
- T.38 Fax support on analogue extension
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IP-Phone 350
- Voice-over-IP
Telephone
- Standard SIP
Protocols
-
Power-over-Ethernet (802.3af PoE)
- Hands Free
Speakerphone
- Dedicated Headset
Port
- Auto-Provisioning
with IP-PBX
- Dot Matrix LCD
Screen (Backlit)
- 16 Flexible
'Soft' Keys with multi-colour status
LEDs
- BLF (Busy Lamp
Field)
- Dedicated Line
Keys
- Five Speed Dial
Keys
- Large MWI light
(Message Waiting Indicator)
- UP to 10 SIP
Accounts (For registrars or IP PBXs)
- Two Ethernet
Ports (LAN + PC)
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SLD
Security & Communications
The Old Forge, Ockham Lane
Ockham, Surrey
GU23 6PH
England
Tel: 01483 225633
Fax: 01483 225634
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