User guide

Table Of Contents
Configuring for the First Time 5-15
Internet and inter-office dial-on-demand
connections
1. Print out the following configuration checklist, and gather the information
required.
Table 5-3: Checklist for Internet and Inter-office connections, ISDN Dial-on-Demand
Configuration parameter Examples Enter your data below
If you have an AR140 with phone ports, your ISDN provider may have supplied you with
one or two ISDN numbers that external callers will use to ring the phone extensions. In
North America your ISDN service may support call waiting. If so, decide whether to enable
it on each phone port. Determine whether you want a call to one of the phones to ring
both phones, or only that phone.
Local ISDN number for
Phone 1
35676767
Call waiting on Phone 1
(North America only)
Enable call waiting
Local ISDN number - Phone 2
356767
Call waiting on Phone 2
(North America only)
Disable call waiting
Each number rings one or
both phones?
RIng only the phone on the
port for the number called
In North America, you will also need some ISDN setup information from your ISDN service
provider. This includes the ISDN switch type to which you are connected, SPIDs and
associated phone or directory numbers to identify your ISDN service, and your ISDN
connection speed.
ISDN switch type
NI1
SPID 1
2462462-1
Local data number 1
2462462
SPID 2
2463457-2
Local data number 2
2463457
ISDN connection speed
56K, 64K
The following information comes from your ISP service provider. The ISDN number is the
phone number your router dials to connect to your ISP. Most ISPs allocate dynamic IP
addresses. If your ISP has given you a fixed IP address, record it here. In Australia your ISDN
service may offer a lower rate for a semi-permanent connection. For instance, if you
subscribe to OnRamp Express, configure your router to make calls semi-permanent.
ISDN number
3456789
ISP Username
janes
ISP Password
tea4tWo
IP address or dynamic
allocation
Dynamic
Make ISDN call semi-
permanent (Australia only)
OnRamp Express