this post was submitted on 01 Nov 2023
1 points (100.0% liked)
VoIP
1 readers
1 users here now
Rules
-
Be civil. Disagreements of varying intensities will happen, but particularly vitriolic attacks will be pruned from the discussion.
-
Do not promote or advertise for any business, service or product unless responding to a specific request for recommendations. This includes recommending a user change providers when they have not indicated they are interested in doing so.
-
Do not send private messages to users, or invite users to send you a private message, for the purpose of promoting or advertising a business, service or product.
-
Do not invite, encourage, or seek help with engaging in unethical or fraudulent activity relating to VoIP, such as call spoofing, robocalling and autodialers, or fraudulent STIR/SHAKEN attestation.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
All depends on the REN (Ringer Equivalency Number) of the ATA and connected phones. Each phone usually has a REN number, often indicated on the information placard or sticker on the bottom of the phone. If the ATA supports 3 REN, then that is 3 normal phones with a REN of 1 or 2 REN 1.5 or 1 REN 3. All of the phones on the line should not add up to more than the REN rating of the ATA or incoming calls get auto-answered and immediately hung up on as the line draws enough ringer current for the ATA to believe that one of the phones has gone off-hook.
Thanks a lot for the explanation. So if the REN values are okay I can just plug the two old phones into a standard T-piece/multi-way and plug that into the ATA?