Avaya Communication Manager Hardware Guide

User Manual: Avaya Communication Manager Hardware Guide Avaya Communication Manager

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Hardware Guide for
Avaya Communication Manager
555-245-207
Issue 1.1
December 2003
Copyright 2003, Avaya Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Notice
Every effort was made to ensure that the information in this document
was complete and accurate at the time of printing. However,
information is subject to change.
Warranty
Avaya Inc. provides a limited warranty on this product. Refer to your
sales agreement to establish the terms of the limited warranty. In
addition, Avaya’s standard warranty language as well as information
regarding support for this product, while under warranty, is available
through the following Web site: http://www.avaya.com/support.
Preventing Toll Fraud
“Toll fraud” is the unauthorized use of your telecommunications
system by an unauthorized party (for example, a person who is not a
corporate employee, agent, subcontractor, or is not working on your
company's behalf). Be aware that there may be a risk of toll fraud
associated with your system and that, if toll fraud occurs, it can result
in substantial additional charges for your telecommunications
services.
Avaya Fraud Intervention
If you suspect that you are being victimized by toll fraud and you need
technical assistance or support, in the United States and Canada, call
the Technical Service Center's Toll Fraud Intervention Hotline at
1-800-643-2353.
How to Get Help
For additional support telephone numbers, go to the Avaya support
Web site: http://www.avaya.com/support. If you are:
Within the United States, click the Escalation Management link.
Then click the appropriate link for the type of support you need.
Outside the United States, click the Escalation Management link.
Then click the International Services link that includes telephone
numbers for the international Centers of Excellence.
Providing Telecommunications Security
Telecommunications security (of voice, data, and/or video
communications) is the prevention of any type of intrusion to (that is,
either unauthorized or malicious access to or use of) your company's
telecommunications equipment by some party.
Your company's “telecommunications equipment” includes both this
Avaya product and any other voice/data/video equipment that could be
accessed via this Avaya product (that is, “networked equipment”).
An “outside party” is anyone who is not a corporate employee, agent,
subcontractor, or is not working on your company's behalf. Whereas, a
“malicious party” is anyone (including someone who may be
otherwise authorized) who accesses your telecommunications
equipment with either malicious or mischievous intent.
Such intrusions may be either to/through synchronous (time-
multiplexed and/or circuit-based) or asynchronous (character-,
message-, or packet-based) equipment or interfaces for reasons of:
Utilization (of capabilities special to the accessed equipment)
Theft (such as, of intellectual property, financial assets, or toll
facility access)
Eavesdropping (privacy invasions to humans)
Mischief (troubling, but apparently innocuous, tampering)
Harm (such as harmful tampering, data loss or alteration,
regardless of motive or intent)
Be aware that there may be a risk of unauthorized intrusions
associated with your system and/or its networked equipment. Also
realize that, if such an intrusion should occur, it could result in a
variety of losses to your company (including but not limited to,
human/data privacy, intellectual property, material assets, financial
resources, labor costs, and/or legal costs).
Responsibility for Your Company’s Telecommunications Security
The final responsibility for securing both this system and its
networked equipment rests with you - Avaya’s customer system
administrator, your telecommunications peers, and your managers.
Base the fulfillment of your responsibility on acquired knowledge and
resources from a variety of sources including but not limited to:
Installation documents
System administration documents
Security documents
Hardware-/software-based security tools
Shared information between you and your peers
Telecommunications security experts
To prevent intrusions to your telecommunications equipment, you and
your peers should carefully program and configure:
Your Avaya-provided telecommunications systems and their
interfaces
Your Avaya-provided software applications, as well as their
underlying hardware/software platforms and interfaces
Any other equipment networked to your Avaya products
TCP/IP Facilities
Customers may experience differences in product performance,
reliability and security depending upon network configurations/design
and topologies, even when the product performs as warranted.
Standards Compliance
Avaya Inc. is not responsible for any radio or television interference
caused by unauthorized modifications of this equipment or the
substitution or attachment of connecting cables and equipment other
than those specified by Avaya Inc. The correction of interference
caused by such unauthorized modifications, substitution or attachment
will be the responsibility of the user. Pursuant to Part 15 of the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) Rules, the user is cautioned that
changes or modifications not expressly approved by Avaya Inc. could
void the users authority to operate this equipment.
Product Safety Standards
This product complies with and conforms to the following
international Product Safety standards as applicable:
Safety of Information Technology Equipment, IEC 60950, 3rd Edition
including all relevant national deviations as listed in Compliance with
IEC for Electrical Equipment (IECEE) CB-96A.
Safety of Information Technology Equipment, CAN/CSA-C22.2
No. 60950-00 / UL 60950, 3rd Edition
Safety Requirements for Customer Equipment, ACA Technical
Standard (TS) 001 - 1997
One or more of the following Mexican national standards, as
applicable: NOM 001 SCFI 1993, NOM SCFI 016 1993, NOM 019
SCFI 1998
The equipment described in this document may contain Class 1
LASER Device(s). These devices comply with the following
standards:
EN 60825-1, Edition 1.1, 1998-01
21 CFR 1040.10 and CFR 1040.11.
The LASER devices operate within the following parameters:
Maximum power output: -5 dBm to -8 dBm
Center Wavelength: 1310 nm to 1360 nm
Luokan 1 Laserlaite
Klass 1 Laser Apparat
Use of controls or adjustments or performance of procedures other
than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation
exposures. Contact your Avaya representative for more laser product
information.
Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Standards
This product complies with and conforms to the following
international EMC standards and all relevant national deviations:
Limits and Methods of Measurement of Radio Interference of
Information Technology Equipment, CISPR 22:1997 and
EN55022:1998.
Information Technology Equipment – Immunity Characteristics –
Limits and Methods of Measurement, CISPR 24:1997 and
EN55024:1998, including:
Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) IEC 61000-4-2
Radiated Immunity IEC 61000-4-3
Electrical Fast Transient IEC 61000-4-4
Lightning Effects IEC 61000-4-5
Conducted Immunity IEC 61000-4-6
Mains Frequency Magnetic Field IEC 61000-4-8
Voltage Dips and Variations IEC 61000-4-11
Powerline Harmonics IEC 61000-3-2
Voltage Fluctuations and Flicker IEC 61000-3-3
Federal Communications Commission Statement
Part 15:
Part 68: Answer-Supervision Signaling
Allowing this equipment to be operated in a manner that does not
provide proper answer-supervision signaling is in violation of Part 68
rules. This equipment returns answer-supervision signals to the public
switched network when:
answered by the called station,
answered by the attendant, or
routed to a recorded announcement that can be administered by
the customer premises equipment (CPE) user.
This equipment returns answer-supervision signals on all direct
inward dialed (DID) calls forwarded back to the public switched
telephone network. Permissible exceptions are:
A call is unanswered.
A busy tone is received.
A reorder tone is received.
Avaya attests that this registered equipment is capable of providing
users access to interstate providers of operator services through the use
of access codes. Modification of this equipment by call aggregators to
block access dialing codes is a violation of the Telephone Operator
Consumers Act of 1990.
REN Number
For MCC1, SCC1, CMC1, G600, and G650 Media Gateways:
This equipment complies with Part 68 of the FCC rules. On either the
rear or inside the front cover of this equipment is a label that contains,
among other information, the FCC registration number, and ringer
equivalence number (REN) for this equipment. If requested, this
information must be provided to the telephone company.
For G350 and G700 Media Gateways:
This equipment complies with Part 68 of the FCC rules and the
requirements adopted by the ACTA. On the rear of this equipment is a
label that contains, among other information, a product identifier in
the format US:AAAEQ##TXXXX. The digits represented by ## are
the ringer equivalence number (REN) without a decimal point (for
example, 03 is a REN of 0.3). If requested, this number must be
provided to the telephone company.
For all media gateways:
The REN is used to determine the quantity of devices that may be
connected to the telephone line. Excessive RENs on the telephone line
may result in devices not ringing in response to an incoming call. In
most, but not all areas, the sum of RENs should not exceed 5.0. To be
certain of the number of devices that may be connected to a line, as
determined by the total RENs, contact the local telephone company.
REN is not required for some types of analog or digital facilities.
Means of Connection
Connection of this equipment to the telephone network is shown in the
following tables.
For MCC1, SCC1, CMC1, G600, and G650 Media Gateways:
For G350 and G700 Media Gateways:
For all media gateways:
If the terminal equipment (for example, the media server or media
gateway) causes harm to the telephone network, the telephone
company will notify you in advance that temporary discontinuance of
service may be required. But if advance notice is not practical, the
telephone company will notify the customer as soon as possible. Also,
you will be advised of your right to file a complaint with the FCC if
you believe it is necessary.
The telephone company may make changes in its facilities, equipment,
operations or procedures that could affect the operation of the
equipment. If this happens, the telephone company will provide
advance notice in order for you to make necessary modifications to
maintain uninterrupted service.
Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with
the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the
FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable
protection against harmful interference when the equipment is
operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates,
uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed
and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause
harmful interference to radio communications. Operation of this
equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful
interference in which case the user will be required to correct the
interference at his own expense.
Manufacturer’s Port
Identifier FIC Code SOC/REN/
A.S. Code Network
Jacks
Off premises station OL13C 9.0F RJ2GX,
RJ21X,
RJ11C
DID trunk 02RV2-T 0.0B RJ2GX,
RJ21X
CO trunk 02GS2 0.3A RJ21X
02LS2 0.3A RJ21X
Tie trunk TL31M 9.0F RJ2GX
Basic Rate Interface 02IS5 6.0F, 6.0Y RJ49C
1.544 digital interface 04DU9-BN 6.0F RJ48C,
RJ48M
04DU9-IKN 6.0F RJ48C,
RJ48M
04DU9-ISN 6.0F RJ48C,
RJ48M
120A4 channel service unit 04DU9-DN 6.0Y RJ48C
Manufacturer’s Port
Identifier FIC Code SOC/REN/
A.S. Code Network
Jacks
Ground Start CO trunk 02GS2 1.0A RJ11C
DID trunk 02RV2-T AS.0 RJ11C
Loop Start CO trunk 02LS2 0.5A RJ11C
1.544 digital interface 04DU9-BN 6.0Y RJ48C
04DU9-DN 6.0Y RJ48C
04DU9-IKN 6.0Y RJ48C
04DU9-ISN 6.0Y RJ48C
Basic Rate Interface 02IS5 6.0F RJ49C
If trouble is experienced with this equipment, for repair or warranty
information, please contact the Technical Service Center at
1-800-242- 2121 or contact your local Avaya representative. If the
equipment is causing harm to the telephone network, the telephone
company may request that you disconnect the equipment until the
problem is resolved.
A plug and jack used to connect this equipment to the premises wiring
and telephone network must comply with the applicable FCC Part 68
rules and requirements adopted by the ACTA. A compliant telephone
cord and modular plug is provided with this product. It is designed to
be connected to a compatible modular jack that is also compliant. It is
recommended that repairs be performed by Avaya certified
technicians.
The equipment cannot be used on public coin phone service provided
by the telephone company. Connection to party line service is subject
to state tariffs. Contact the state public utility commission, public
service commission or corporation commission for information.
This equipment, if it uses a telephone receiver, is hearing aid
compatible.
Canadian Department of Communications (DOC) Interference
Information
This Class A digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003.
Cet appareil numérique de la classe A est conforme à la norme
NMB-003 du Canada.
This equipment meets the applicable Industry Canada Terminal
Equipment Technical Specifications. This is confirmed by the
registration number. The abbreviation, IC, before the registration
number signifies that registration was performed based on a
Declaration of Conformity indicating that Industry Canada technical
specifications were met. It does not imply that Industry Canada
approved the equipment.
Declarations of Conformity
United States FCC Part 68 Suppliers Declaration of Conformity
(SDoC)
Avaya Inc. in the United States of America hereby certifies that the
equipment described in this document and bearing a TIA TSB-168
label identification number complies with the FCCs Rules and
Regulations 47 CFR Part 68, and the Administrative Council on
Terminal Attachments (ACTA) adopted technical criteria.
Avaya further asserts that Avaya handset-equipped terminal
equipment described in this document complies with Paragraph
68.316 of the FCC Rules and Regulations defining Hearing Aid
Compatibility and is deemed compatible with hearing aids.
Copies of SDoCs signed by the Responsible Party in the U. S. can be
obtained by contacting your local sales representative and are
available on the following Web site: http://www.avaya.com/support.
All Avaya media servers and media gateways are compliant with FCC
Part 68, but many have been registered with the FCC before the SDoC
process was available. A list of all Avaya registered products may be
found at: http://www.part68.org by conducting a search using “Avaya”
as manufacturer.
European Union Declarations of Conformity
Avaya Inc. declares that the equipment specified in this document
bearing the “CE” (Conformité Europeénne) mark conforms to the
European Union Radio and Telecommunications Terminal Equipment
Directive (1999/5/EC), including the Electromagnetic Compatibility
Directive (89/336/EEC) and Low Voltage Directive (73/23/EEC). This
equipment has been certified to meet CTR3 Basic Rate Interface (BRI)
and CTR4 Primary Rate Interface (PRI) and subsets thereof in CTR12
and CTR13, as applicable.
Copies of these Declarations of Conformity (DoCs) can be obtained
by contacting your local sales representative and are available on the
following Web site: http://www.avaya.com/support.
Japan
This is a Class A product based on the standard of the Voluntary
Control Council for Interference by Information Technology
Equipment (VCCI). If this equipment is used in a domestic
environment, radio disturbance may occur, in which case, the user
may be required to take corrective actions.
To order copies of this and other documents:
Call: Avaya Publications Center
Voice 1.800.457.1235 or 1.207.866.6701
FAX 1.800.457.1764 or 1.207.626.7269
Write: Globalware Solutions
200 Ward Hill Avenue
Haverhill, MA 01835 USA
Attention: Avaya Account Management
E-mail: totalware@gwsmail.com
For the most current versions of documentation, go to the Avaya
support Web site: http://www.avaya.com/support.
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 5
December 2003
Contents
Overview 25
Document Overview 25
Avaya media servers 25
Avaya media gateways 26
Avaya Integrated Management 26
Avaya communications devices 27
DEFINITY Server CSI 29
Overview 29
Detailed description 29
Configuration information 29
Reliability and recovery 30
System capacity 31
Avaya Communication Manager 31
Adjuncts 32
Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway 33
Overview 33
Detailed description 33
S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway 33
Standard components 34
Optional components 35
Reliability 35
Recoverability 36
Administration 36
Peer Web server 37
Telnet session 37
Avaya Integrated Management 37
Avaya Communication Manager 37
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway 39
Overview 39
Detailed description 39
Configuration description 39
Server features 40
Avaya G700 Media Gateway 41
LEDs 45
Maintenance software 46
Contents
6 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Avaya media modules 46
LEDs 47
MM710 T1/E1 media module 47
MM711 Analog media module 48
MM712 DCP media module 49
MM720 BRI media module 49
MM760 VoIP media module 50
S8300 Media Server in an LSP configuration 50
IP addressing 51
Preservation of customer translations 51
IA770 INTUITY AUDIX messaging 51
Call center 52
G700 announcement software 53
Customer configuration options 55
System management 55
Avaya Integrated Management 55
S8300 Media Server Web interface 56
Adjuncts 56
International information 56
Digital trunks and CO trunks 58
Avaya S8500 Media Server 59
Detailed description 59
Backing up an S8500 Media Server 60
Port-network connectivity 61
Media gateways 61
Remote Supervisor Adapter (RSA) 62
Modems 64
S8500 Media Server reliability 66
Migrating to an S8500 Media Server 66
RAM disk 68
High-level capabilities 68
System management 69
Avaya Integrated Management suite 69
Avaya S8500 Media Server Web interface 69
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway 70
Detailed description 70
Configuration information 70
S8700 Media Server control complex 70
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 7
December 2003
S8700 Media Server 71
IPSI Circuit Pack (TN2312BP) 71
Ethernet switch 72
UPS or power backup 73
USB modem 73
Media gateways 73
Reliability 79
Reliability when sending voice bearer over IP 79
Reliability when sending voice bearer over ATM or CSS 83
Connectivity 88
Connectivity when sending voice bearer over ATM or CSS 88
Connectivity when sending voice bearer over IP 89
S8700 recoverability 89
S8300 Media Server in an LSP mode 89
Power outages 89
Survivable Remote EPN (voice bearer over CSS only) 90
High-level capabilities 90
BHCC capacity for S8700 Media Server 91
System management 93
Avaya Integrated Management suite 93
S8700 Media Server Web interface 93
Adjuncts 94
DEFINITY Server SI 95
Overview 95
Detailed description 96
Configuration information 96
Options 101
Expansion Port Network 101
IP Media Processor 101
DEFINITY IP Solutions 101
Trunks 102
Connectivity 103
LAN Gateway 103
C-LAN 103
IP Asynchronous Links using C-LAN 104
Switch Client Applications 104
Switch Server Applications 104
Reliability 105
Contents
8 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
BHCCI 105
Adjuncts 106
DEFINITY Server R 107
Overview 107
Detailed description 108
Configuration information 109
Trunks 115
Connectivity 115
Reliability 120
BHCC 121
Adjuncts 121
Media gateways 123
Avaya G350 Media Gateway 123
Features 123
Deployment modes 124
Physical description 124
G350 capabilities 125
G600 Media Gateway 127
G600 Media Gateway cooling 127
Required circuit packs for a G600 Media
Gateway and an S8700 Media Server 128
IP Server Interface (TN2312BP) 128
C-LAN (TN799DP) 128
IP Media Processor (TN2302AP) 129
Required circuit packs for a G600 Media
Gateway and an S8100 Media Server 129
TN2314 Processor (S8100) 129
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector 130
Avaya G650 Media Gateway 131
Overview 131
Mounting G650s 132
Mounting a single G650 132
Mounting multiple G650s 132
Carrier addressing 132
I/O connections 135
I/O adapters 135
Fan assembly 135
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 9
December 2003
655A power supply 135
Input power 135
655A faceplate LEDs 136
655A ring generation 137
Avaya G700 Media Gateway 139
Expansion modules 140
X330 WAN Access routing module 140
Avaya P330 LAN expansion module 141
P330 stacking fabric (Octaplane) 142
Power supply 142
Motherboard 142
Fans 143
LEDs 143
Media module LEDs 143
System-level LEDs 143
Gateway software 144
Maintenance software 144
Connectivity 144
Media modules 145
CMC1 Media Gateway 147
SCC1 Media Gateway 150
Carriers 153
Basic control cabinet for a DEFINITY Server SI 153
Duplicated control cabinet for a DEFINITY
Server SI 154
Expansion control cabinet for a DEFINITY
Server SI, DEFINITY Server R, S8700 Media
Server, or S8500 Media Server 155
Port cabinet for a DEFINITY Server SI,
DEFINITY Server R, S8700 Media Server,
or S8500 Media Server 156
MCC1 Media Gateway 159
Auxiliary cabinet 161
Port network cabinet for DEFINITY Server R or SI 161
Port network cabinet for Avaya S8700 Media Server 161
Port network cabinet for Avaya S8500 Media Server 163
Expansion port network cabinet for DEFINITY Server R or SI 163
Carriers 164
Control carrier for DEFINITY Server SI 164
Contents
10 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Duplicated control carrier for DEFINITY Server SI 166
Processor carrier for DEFINITY Server R or SI 166
Expansion Control Carrier for all server models 167
Port carrier for DEFINITY Server SI or R,
S8700 Media Server, or S8500 Media Server 169
Switch node carrier for DEFINITY Server R or S8700 Media Server 170
Circuit packs and power supplies 173
1217A AC power supply 173
631DA1 AC power unit 173
631DB1 AC power unit 173
649A DC power unit 174
650A AC power unit 174
655A power supply 175
Input power 175
AC power 175
DC power 175
Serial bus 175
655A faceplate LEDs 176
655A ring generation 176
676C DC power supply 177
982LS current limiter 177
CFY1B current limiter 177
ED-1E568 DEFINITY AUDIX R4 177
J58890MA-1 Multiapplication Platform for DEFINITY (MAPD) 177
NAA1 fiber-optic cable adaptor 178
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) 178
TN433 Speech Synthesizer 178
TN436B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) 178
TN438B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) 178
TN439 Tie Trunk (4 ports) 178
TN457 Speech Synthesizer 179
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) 179
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1 (32 channels) 179
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) 180
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports) 180
TN497 Tie Trunk (4 ports) 180
TN553 Packet Data Line 181
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 11
December 2003
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire S/T-NT Interface (12 ports) 181
TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice Mail System (part of ED-1E568) 181
TN570D Expansion Interface 182
TN572 Switch-Node Clock 182
TN573B Switch-Node Interface for DEFINITY R 182
TN577 Packet Gateway 182
TN725B Speech Synthesizer 183
TN726B Data Line (8 ports) 183
TN735 MET Line (4 ports) 183
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) 184
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports) 184
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) 185
TN750C Recorded Announcement (16 channels) 185
TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) 186
TN754C DCP Digital Line (4-wire, 8 ports) 186
TN755B Neon Power Unit 186
TN758 Pooled Modem (2 ports) 187
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) 187
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports) 187
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports) 187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) 187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports) 188
TN771DP Maintenance and Test 189
TN775C Maintenance 189
TN780 Tone Clock 190
TN787K Multimedia Interface 190
TN788C Multimedia Voice Conditioner 190
TN789B Radio Controller 191
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports) 191
TN792 Duplication Interface 192
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) 192
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8 ports) 193
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface 193
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface) 194
TN802B MAPD (IP Interface Assembly) 194
TN1648B System Access and Maintenance (SYSAM) 194
TN1650B Memory 195
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) 195
Contents
12 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
TN1655 Packet Interface 195
TN1657 Disk Drive 196
TN2138 Central Office Trunk (8 ports) 196
TN2139 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk(8 ports) 196
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) 196
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) 196
TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) 197
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports) 197
TN2182C Tone Clock, Tone Detector, and Call Classifier (8 ports) 197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple countries (16 ports) 197
TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports) 198
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports) 198
TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12 ports) 199
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports) 199
TN2202 Ring Generator 200
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) 200
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) 200
TN2211 Optical Drive 201
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) 201
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports)
(International Offers or Offer B only for US and Canada) 202
TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) 203
TN2242 Digital Trunk 203
TN2301 Logic Switch 203
TN2302AP IP Media Processor 203
TN2305B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network
Interface for multimode fiber 204
TN2306B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network
Interface for single-mode fiber 204
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) 204
TN2312BP IP Server Interface 204
I/O adapters 206
Compatibility 206
Number of IPSI circuit packs per configuration 207
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels) 207
TN2314 S8100 Media Server 207
TN2401 Network Control/Packet Interface for SI 208
TN2401/TN2400 Network Packet Interface
complex assembly for SI upgrades 208
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 13
December 2003
TN2402 Processor 208
TN2404 Processor 209
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation,T1/E1 209
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL) 210
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) 210
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter 211
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter 211
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter 211
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter 211
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer 211
UN330B Duplication Interface 212
UN331C Processor 212
UN332C Mass Storage/Network Control for R 213
Media modules 215
MM312 DCP media module 215
MM314 LAN media module 216
MM340 E1/T1 media module 217
MM342 USP WAN media module 218
MM710 T1/E1 media module 219
Echo cancellation 219
CSU function 220
Loopback/BERT functions 220
E1 impedance 220
Bantam jacks 220
LEDs 220
DB 25 DCE connector 221
Loopback jack 221
MM711 Analog media module 222
External interfaces: CO trunk side 222
Caller ID 223
Analog line interface requirements 223
Companding 223
MM712 DCP media module 224
Hardware interface 224
MM714 Analog media module 225
MM720 BRI media module 226
Contents
14 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
MM722 BRI media module 227
MM760 VoIP media module 228
Ethernet interface 228
Voice compression 228
Optional components 229
Optional components for an S8100 Media Server 229
Media gateways 229
Circuit packs 229
Power circuit packs 229
Line circuit packs 229
Trunk circuit packs 230
Control circuit packs 230
Service circuit packs 230
Application circuit packs 231
Port circuit packs 231
Adapters 231
Avaya telephones 231
IP telephones 231
Digital telephones 231
Soundstation speakerphones 232
Analog phones 232
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephones 232
Wireless 232
Consoles 232
Optional components: S8300 Media Server with a G700 Media Gateway 233
Media gateways 233
Media modules for a G700 Media Gateway 233
Avaya telephones 233
IP telephones 233
Digital telephones 233
Analog telephones 234
Wireless telephone 234
Speakerphones 234
Optional components: S8500 235
Media gateways 235
Circuit packs 235
Power 235
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 15
December 2003
Line circuit packs 235
Trunk circuit packs 236
Control circuit packs 236
Service circuit packs 237
Application circuit packs 237
Port circuit packs 237
Avaya telephones 237
IP telephones 237
Digital telephones 238
SoundStation speakerphones 238
Analog telephones 238
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephone 238
Wireless telephone 238
Consoles 238
Optional components for an S8700 Media Server in
an IP Connect configuration 239
Media gateways 239
Circuit packs 239
Line circuit packs 239
Trunk circuit packs 239
Control circuit packs 240
Service circuit packs 240
Application circuit packs 240
Port circuit packs 240
Avaya telephones 241
IP telephones 241
Digital telephones 241
SoundStation speakerphones 241
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephone 241
Wireless telephone 241
Consoles 242
Optional components: S8700 – Voice Bearer Over CSS or ATM 243
Media gateways 243
Circuit packs 243
Power 243
Line circuit packs 243
Trunk circuit packs 244
Control circuit packs 244
Contents
16 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Service circuit packs 245
Application circuit packs 245
Port circuit packs 245
Avaya telephones 245
IP telephones 245
Digital telephones 246
SoundStation speakerphones 246
Analog telephones 246
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephones 246
Wireless telephone 246
Consoles 246
Optional components for DEFINITY Server CSI 247
Media gateways 247
Circuit packs for DEFINITY Server CSI 247
Power circuit packs 247
Line circuit packs 247
Trunk circuit packs 247
Control circuit packs 248
Service circuit packs 248
Application circuit packs 248
Port circuit packs 249
Adapter 249
Avaya telephones for DEFINITY Server CSI 249
IP telephones 249
Digital telephones 249
SoundStation speakerphones 250
Analog telephones 250
Explosive Atmosphere telephones 250
Wireless telephone 250
Consoles 250
Optional components for DEFINITY Server SI 251
Media gateways 251
Circuit packs for DEFINITY Server SI 251
Power Circuit Packs 251
Line Circuit Packs 251
Trunk Circuit Packs 252
Control Circuit Packs 252
Service Circuit Packs 253
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 17
December 2003
Application Circuit Packs 253
Port Circuit Packs 253
Avaya telephones for DEFINITY
Server SI 253
IP telephones 253
Digital telephones 254
Soundstation speakerphones 254
Analog phones 254
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephones 254
Wireless 254
Consoles 254
Optional components for DEFINITY Server R 255
Media gateways 255
Circuit packs 255
Power circuit packs 255
Line circuit packs 255
Trunk circuit packs 256
Control circuit packs 256
Service circuit packs 257
Application circuit packs 257
Port circuit packs 257
Avaya telephones 257
IP telephones 257
Digital telephones 258
Soundstation speakerphones 258
Analog phones 258
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephones 258
Wireless 258
Consoles 258
Telephones and speakerphones 259
Avaya telephones 259
Avaya IP telephones 259
Avaya 4602 IP telephone 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone 260
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone 261
Avaya 4612 IP telephone 262
Contents
18 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Avaya 4620 IP telephone 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone 264
Avaya 4624 IP telephone 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone 267
Avaya digital telephones 267
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone 268
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone 271
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone 273
Avaya Callmaster VI (606A) digital telephone 273
Avaya attendant consoles 274
Avaya 302D attendant console 274
Avaya Softconsole 275
Avaya analog telephones 276
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals 276
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone 278
Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone 279
Avaya wireless telephones 279
Avaya TransTalk 9040 279
Power for Avaya IP telephones 281
Power for Avaya 4602 and Avaya 4620 IP telephones 281
Power for Avaya 4606, 4612, and 4624 IP telephones 281
Power for Avaya 4630 IP telephones 282
SoundPoint and SoundStation speakerphones 283
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone 283
Highlights 283
Models 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone 283
Highlights 284
Models 284
3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing speakerphone 285
Highlights 285
Models 285
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 19
December 2003
Avaya UPS Units 287
Avaya Series 1 (AS1) UPS 287
AS1 1000 VA 120 V Online Uninterruptible Power Supply (UPS) 287
1000 VA 120 V models include the following accessories: 287
AS1 1000VA 230V Online UPS 287
1000VA 230 V models include the following accessories: 288
AS1 1500VA 120V Online UPS 288
The AS1 1500 VA model includes the following accessories: 288
AS1 1500VA 230V Online UPS 288
1500 VA 230 V models include the following accessories: 289
UPS Add-on Modules 289
Extended Battery Module-EBM24 1000 VA 289
UPS Extended Battery Module-EBM48 1500-2000 VA 289
SNMP MODULE 1000-2000 VA 289
BYPASS DISTRIBUTION MODULE 120V 1000-1500 VA 290
PWR UPS BYPASS DISTR MOD S1 1000VA-2K VA 290
Avaya Ethernet Switches 291
Avaya P330 Ethernet Switches 291
Features of the Avaya P330 Product Line 291
Auto-Negotiation 292
Congestion Control 292
VLANs 292
Multiple VLANs per Port 292
Leaky VLAN 292
Port Classification 292
Network TIME Acquiring Protocols 293
MAC Security 293
Link Aggregation Group (LAG) 293
IP Multicast Filtering 293
Radius Security 293
Port Redundancy 293
Intermodule Redundancy 294
Stack Redundancy 294
Hot-Swappable 294
Backup Power Supply 294
Fans 294
Network Management Agent (NMA) Redundancy 294
Contents
20 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Software Download 294
P330 Standards Supported by Avaya 295
IEEE 295
IETF 295
Avaya P330 Network Management 295
Avaya P330 Device Manager (Embedded Web) 295
Avaya P330 Command Line Interface (CLI) 295
CajunView 295
Avaya P330 Network Monitoring 296
Port Mirroring 296
SMON 296
Avaya P133 and P134 Ethernet Switches 297
Avaya P133G2 297
Avaya P134G2 297
General Features of the P133G2 and P134G2 Switches 297
Interfaces 298
Standards Supported 298
Physical Characteristics 298
Environmental Conditions 298
Power Consumption 298
Agency Approval 298
Site requirements 301
Rack mounting, temperature and humidity information
for the G600 Media Gateway 301
Heat dissipation for the G600 Media Gateway 302
Typical G600 Media Gateway heat-dissipation specifications 302
G650 specifications 303
Power requirements 303
AC power 303
DC power 303
Power output 303
Dimensions 304
Operating conditions 304
Environmental considerations for the G700 Media Gateway 305
Power requirements for the G700 Media Gateway 306
Thermal Protection 306
Manual Reset 306
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 21
December 2003
AC and Load Center Circuit Breakers 306
AC power distribution 306
AC Grounding/Protective Grounds 306
S8500 Media Server environmental specifications 308
Altitude, air pressure and air purity for the S8700 Media Server 309
Air Purity 309
Temperature and humidity for the S8700 Media Server 310
EMI and RFI specifications for the S8700 Media Server 311
Power supply specifications for the S8700 Media Server 312
BTU 312
Regulatory certification for an S8700 Media Server 313
Product-safety standards and approvals 313
Electromagnetic-compatibility (EMC) standards and approvals 313
Data rack mounting and media gateway floor
loading for an S8700 Multi-Connect 314
19-Inch Rack 314
S8700 Media Server 314
Avaya 700VA or 1500VA UPS Units 314
Avaya Ethernet switches 315
Media gateways 315
Site requirements for DEFINITY 316
Altitude, air pressure, and air purity for DEFINITY 316
Altitude and air pressure 316
Air purity 316
Cabinet dimensions and clearances 317
Floor load requirements 318
Power requirements 319
Global AC MCC power supply 319
AC power 319
50-Hz power sources in DEFINITY R 320
DC power 322
Circuit-breaker sizes for AC and DC cabinets 323
MCC1 power system 323
AC power distribution 324
Circuit breaker 325
48-VDC batteries 325
Battery charger 325
Contents
22 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
DC power relay 326
EMI filters 326
Ring generator 326
Fuses 326
Power backup 326
UPS 327
AC power-distribution unit (J58890CH-1) 327
Power backup 327
Small batteries 327
Large batteries 328
DC power distribution 329
DC power-distribution unit (J58890CF-2) 329
Ground isolation 330
DC power converter (649A) 331
AC and DC grounding 332
Approved grounds 332
Protective grounds 332
Approved floor grounds 332
Coupled bonding conductor 333
SCC1 power systems 333
AC power supply (1217A) 333
DC power supply (676C) 334
DC power-distribution unit (J58890CG) 334
Enhanced DC rectifier cabinet (J58890R) 334
CMC1 AC power supply (650A) 334
CMC1 UPS 335
Cabinet cooling fans 335
CMC1 fan unit 335
MCC1 fans 335
SCC1 fan unit 336
System protection 336
Protection from hazardous voltages 336
Overvoltage protection 336
Sneak current protection 336
Lightning protection 337
Earthquake protection 337
Temperature and humidity for DEFINITY 338
Contents
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 23
December 2003
Customer configurations 339
Small businesses 339
Medium-sized business solution 341
Large businesses 342
Branch Office and Multi-Site Configurations 344
Branch Office Configuration 344
Multi-Site Environment 346
Index 347
Contents
24 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Overview
Document Overview
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 25
December 2003
Overview
Document Overview
Avaya’s portfolio of MultiVantage™ applications enables a business to harness the power of a converged
IP-based voice/data network and put it to work for the business. Driven by Avaya’s rock-solid
Communication Manager application, this portfolio operates with Avaya’s media servers, media
gateways, Integrated Management (network-management tools), and communication devices.
Using Avaya’s MultiVantage applications, an enterprise can review the operation of its existing
communication networks, rethink where IP telephony can maximize returns on investment, and then
reshape the network to realize those goals. The choices are nearly unlimited, given Avaya’s flexible,
modular architecture and our commitment to standards-based software and hardware.
While Avaya brings continuous voice-application innovation to the enterprise, Communication Manager
delivers massive new scalability to provide network devices for as few as 20 users, or up to a million.
Avaya’s Communication Manager application is also highly scalable and reliable voice-application
software with
Rich call-processing and contact-center features
A widely accepted application-programming interface (API) supporting both 3rd-parties’ and
Avaya’s own applications
Avaya’s media servers and media gateways provide smart ways to rethink networking by adding top-tier
scalability and reliability, while supporting mission-critical applications in a distributed, yet secure,
multivendor environment. To provide businesses with maximum flexibility, the server and gateway
components in Avaya’s family of MultiVantage applications follow a modular mix-and-match approach.
A wide range of custom configurations can be deployed to meet a broad spectrum of business needs:
From a single location (upgrading to a converged IP network for 200 employees)
To a complex multinational converged network (capable of supporting 10,000-plus voice/data
users)
Avaya media servers
Avaya’s line of media servers provides a robust application platform based on industry-standard
operating systems to support distributed IP networking and centralized call processing across
multiprotocol networks. These servers are available as an integrated solution with other servers or can
operate independently.
Avaya media servers have the following features and benefits:
Redundant, survivable call processing and media processing supports crucial business continuity.
Standards-based computing supports Linux, Microsoft Windows, and Avaya’s DEFINITY®
operating system.
Distributed survivable IP networking supports campus, global-multisite, and branch
environments.
Overview
Avaya media gateways
26 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Avaya media gateways
Avaya media gateways are stackable and modular hardware elements that deliver applications – enabling
data, voice, FAX, video, and messaging capabilities to your network. Avaya media gateways support both
bearer and signaling traffic that is routed between packet- and circuit-switched networks. These gateways
are optimized for enterprise-class telephony. Avaya media gateways provide a variety of flexible
deployment options, including 100%-IP environments and blended environments such as IP and TDM.
Avaya media gateways have the following features and benefits:
Interoperable with standards-based data networks
Stackable, modular, and configurable component solutions
Redundant capabilities
Distributed networking
Compatible with cabinets in traditional Avaya systems
Avaya Integrated Management
Designed for a converged network environment, Avaya’s Integrated Management provides a
comprehensive set of standards-based software tools to facilitate management of a complex network
infrastructure (including both voice and data communications) through a common web-based user
interface. This enables you to improve your network’s uptime, increase your staffs productivity, and
reduce your operating costs.
Integrated Management has the following features and benefits:
Web-based system view – Of Avaya media servers, media gateways, and IP phones
Voice-over-IP monitoring – Based on endpoint information, provides industry-leading,
centralized monitoring of network quality
Directory-enabled [Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP)] platform – Enables
integration of management activities with business processes
On-demand phone and feature management – Provides users with necessary customization tools
Overview
Avaya communications devices
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 27
December 2003
Avaya communications devices
Innovative and standards-based, providing new mobility opportunities – Avaya offers a wide choice of
flexible, intelligent, mobile, and easy-to-use communication devices to meet your company’s unique
needs. With analog, digital, and IP telephones, the spectrum is covered. Highlights of the portfolio
include:
Avaya IP Softconsole – A software attendant console that brings features and functionality of a
high-end attendant console to your converged network.
Avaya IP Softphone for pocket PC – Brings the full functionality of an Avaya office phone to your
hand-held pocket PC.
Avaya 4630 Screenphone – A full-color touch-screen phone with Web access.
Avaya IP communication devices are supported without special power requirements.
DEFINITY Server CSI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 29
December 2003
DEFINITY Server CSI
Overview
Avaya’s Communication Manager on a DEFINITY® Server CSI is a solution for a medium-
sized office location that has from 50 to 900 stations. This solution uses DEFINITY TN circuit packs,
Avaya Communication Manager, and the CMC1 Media Gateway. It is easy and cost-effective for a
company to migrate from the DEFINITY Server CSI to another Avaya solution as the company grows.
Initial investment is protected since every DEFINITY CSI application and most of the hardware can still
be re-used.
The DEFINITY Server CSI can be used at a single site or be networked in multiple locations. For
example, DEFINITY Server CSI might provide a solution for a satellite office within a larger business or
a branch locations around the world. Multisite companies can use remote diagnostics and alarming to
maintain the DEFINITY Server CSI from a central location. An administrator can centrally administer
the system from a central location by using a system administration tool.
Detailed description
High-level description of the DEFINITY Server CSI:
Ideal for small single sites, multi-site locations, and branch locations
Supports up to 1300 ports
Supports 400 trunks and 900 stations
Uses Avaya Communication Manager
Consistent administration over a customers network when using an all-Avaya solution
Consistent user interface over a customer network when using an all-Avaya solution
Configuration information
A DEFINITY Server CSI consists of the following main components:
TN2402 Processor board
TN2182 Tone Clock
CMC1 Media Gateway
The following sections describe each component.
TN2402 Processor board
A TN2402 Processor board resides in slot one of cabinet A. This board contains 32 MB of DRAM
memory and 32 MB of flash memory. The software is stored on flash memory and on removable memory
through Flash-ROM that plugs directly into the TN2402 processor board. The memory on the Processor
board contains the generic program and the system translations. The cartridge contains a copy of the
system translations and error log. The TN2402 also provides:
A 5-volt ATA PC-card Memory Card interface
Three external RS232 interfaces [CD1]
DEFINITY Server CSI
30 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
A SAT terminal interface
An SMDR/Printer or other DTE interface
A connection for an external modem to dial out alarms
Tone-Clock (TN2182)
For any system-reliability configuration, a TN2182B Tone-Clock integrates the tone-generation, tone-
detection/call-classification, system-clocking, and synchronization functions onto a single circuit pack.
The TN2182 supports eight ports for tone detection and allows gain or loss applied to PCM signals that
are received from the bus.
CMC1 Media Gateway
A CMC1 Media Gateway has the following characteristics:
The size is 25.5 inches wide, 24.5 inches high, and 11.3 inches deep. It is designed for wall
mounting. Mounted on the floor or on a table where required.
Ten universal port slots plus one power supply slot per CMC1.
Standard-reliability option only.
Is limited to one PN that is made up of a maximum of three CMC1 Media Gateways. A PN
consists of a control CMC1 that is designated "A". The second and third CMC1s are optional and
are designated cabinets "B" and "C" respectively. Cabinet address ID within the PN is set using
the DIP switch on the backplane.
Circuit packs are inserted and removed from the left side. Cabinet I/O is from the right side.
The CMC1s in a port network are interconnected via shielded TDM/LAN bus cables.
The CMC1 is AC-powered only. There are no internal batteries, and no DC power option.
Two 12-volt DC variable-speed fans integrated into the bottom of the cabinet provide CMC1
cooling. The fans force air through a filter and up through the cabinet. Air exits from the back of
the cabinet. Speed control is provided by the 650A Global Power supply. The 650A varies the fan
input voltage between 8VDC and 14VDC depending on a temperature sensor that is mounted in
the power supply. The fan assembly includes the two fans, a frame to which the fans are attached,
wiring, and a connector that plugs into the backplane. The assembly is easily installed and
removed. The entire assembly must be replaced as a unit if a fan fails.
A fan failure will result in the following conditions:
An alarm through the power supply that will appears to the system
The remaining fan goes to high speed
The red LED on the 650A Global Power supply faceplate lights
Reliability and recovery
DEFINITY Server CSI provides the following capabilities:
Can survive minor power surges, including lightning-induced surges up to 2500 Volts peak,
without service interruption. Surge protectors can be purchased for increased coverage
Can operate in conditions that include above-average temperatures and humidity.
In case of a power failure, automatically restores the last saved version of user translations and
runs them at system restart.
DEFINITY Server CSI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 31
December 2003
Supports the remote diagnostics capability, which enables quick troubleshooting and
maintenance.
Conducts self-diagnostics and can self corrects many system errors. If further technical assistance
is required, DEFINITY Server CSI uses an external modem to place a call for support.
Conducts standard maintenance routines automatically.
Backs up all the user translations every day at midnight by default.
The single-processor configuration provides 99.9% reliability.
System capacity
Avaya Communication Manager
The DEFINITY Server CSI uses Avaya Communication Manager for call processing solutions in large
and small customer environments. For more information on these solutions, see the Overview for Avaya
Communication Manager.
Avaya Communication Manager is an open, scalable, highly reliable and secure telephony software
application. Avaya Communication Manager provides user functionality, and system management
functionality, intelligent call routing, application integration and extensibility, and enterprise
communications networking. Communication Manager offers over 500 features, in the following
categories.
Call center
Telephony features
Localization
Collaboration
Mobility
Messaging
Telecommuting
System management
Reliability
Security, privacy and safety
Hospitality
Attendant features
Networking
Type Capacity
Maximum trunks 400
Maximum stations 900
Maximum ports 1300 (limited by slots, not software
Maximum IP endpoints 390
DEFINITY Server CSI
32 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Intelligent call routing
Application programming interfaces
Adjuncts
The following is a partial list of the adjuncts that Avaya provides:
Voice messaging and response such as INTUITY AUDIX
Call center tools such as Avaya Call Management System, NICE Analyzer, Avaya Call
Recording, Avaya Visual Vectors and Avaya Basic Call Management System Reporting Desktop
System printer
Journal printer
Call Accounting Systems
Call Detail Recording (CDR)
Avaya Site Administration (ASA)
DEFINITY Network Management (DNM)
DEFINITY Translator ATM Manager (DTA)s
Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 33
December 2003
Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media
Gateway
Overview
The Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway is a complete solution for small-
to medium-sized offices, including branch offices of companies with multiple locations. The S8100
Media Server uses the Windows 2000 operating system. Avaya Communication Manager, Avaya
MultiVantage INTUITY™ AUDIX® messaging application, and Avaya Site Administration are
coresident applications on the platform. An optional Ethernet connection from the S8100 Media Server to
the customer’s LAN provides an easy access for administration.
The S8100 Media Server delivers a full range of global communications capabilities, including
traditional voice and trunking needs and voice-over-IP (VoIP) technology. The S8100 Media Server with
the G600 or the CMC1 Media Gateway supports up to 450 stations and 300 trunks.
Detailed description
This section includes information about the following:
S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway
Standard components
Optional components
Reliability
Recoverability
Administration
S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600
Media Gateway
Coresident applications
Avaya INTUITY AUDIX – An integrated voice mail system with eight ports and 100
hours of storage.
Avaya Communication Manager – For information about Avaya Communication
Manager, see the Overview for Avaya Communication Manager, 555-233-767.
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) servers and Trivial File Transfer Protocol
(TFTP) servers
Customer configurations
Single sites
Multiple sites and branch offices – The Communication Manager allows for a consistent,
common user experience across a customer's network
VoIP technology. With the addition of a CLAN and IP Media Processor boards, the S8100 Media
Server with the CMC1 Media Gateway provides complete IP gateway and IP gatekeeper
functions to support 100% VoIP capabilities
Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway
34 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Call center – Up to 100 agents
Avaya CMS and Basic Call Management Reporting Desktop
On-board announcement functionality – The Avaya S8100 Media Server supports eight
ports of integrated announcements and 1 hour of noncompressed speech via an on-board
speech and signal processor. These announcements are stored on the hard drive of the
S8100 Media Server and can be backed up like Communication Manager system
translations files are. In addition, standard *.wav files may be imported and used for
system announcements.
Network connectivity
Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
Internet Protocol (IP)
Supports Integrated Services Digital Network Primary Rate Interface (ISDN-PRI) access,
Distributed Communications System (DCS), and QSIG private networking
Standard components
The S8100 Media Server with the CMC1 Media Gateway or the G600 Media Gateway has the following
components:
A TN744E Call Classifier circuit pack that integrates tone generation, tone detection, call
classification, system clocking, and synchronization. (The tone-generation function puts tones on
time slots of the TDM bus.)
A Robotics 839 Sportster modem can be ordered separately.
The S8100 Media Server has the following characteristics:
TN2314 Processor circuit pack
Windows 2000 operating system
Occupies two slots in either the CMC1 Media Gateway or the G600 Media Gateway
Intel Pentium III (500-MHz) and Motorola processors
256 MB of synchronous dynamic RAM (SDRAM)
An Ethernet RJ45 jack on the faceplate for a services interface to facilitate switch
installation and maintenance
An RS232 port for an external modem for INADS access during the warranty period, and
when a maintenance contract is purchased
A 20-GB hard disk drive
Virtual ports for INTUITY™ AUDIX® and system announcements
Connectors for an optional, customer-provided keyboard, monitor, and mouse
A G600 Media Gateway has the following characteristics
The ability to connect up to three G600 Media Gateways together in one location
Seven universal slots for circuit packs in the first G600 Media Gateway
Ten universal slots for circuit packs in the second and third G600 Media Gateways
A choice of floor mounting or rack mounting
A weight of 40 pounds to 50 pounds metric (18 to 22.5 kilograms)
Dimensions of 12 × 19 × 22 inches (30 × 48 × 55 centimeters)
Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 35
December 2003
A CMC1 Media Gateway has the following characteristics:
The ability to connect up to three CMC1 Media Gateways together in one location.
The first CMC1 contains the S8100 Media Server and the TN744E Tone Clock board.
These two packs take up three slots leaving seven universal slots available for circuit
packs.
Ten universal slots available in the second and third CMC1 Media Gateways for circuit
pack placement.
The CMC1 Media Gateway weighs from 50 to 60 pounds.
The dimensions of the CMC1 Media Gateway is 11 × 25 × 25 inches.
A choice of floor mounting or wall mounting.
Optional components
The S8100 Media Server with the CMC1 Media Gateway or the G600 Media Gateway can also use the
following optional components:
Avaya circuit packs with a "TN" prefix
The following circuit packs for VoIP:
Control-LAN also called C-LAN (TN799DP) that provides TCP/IP connectivity over
Ethernet or Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) connectivity to adjuncts.
IP Media Processor (TN2302AP) provides media stream processing.
Supported Avaya telephones:
Analog telephones include the 6200-, 7100-, and 8100-series telephones.
Digital telephones include the 6400- and 8400-series telephones.
IP telephones include the 4600-series telephones.
Avaya recommends the use of an uninterruptible power system (UPS) to provide more
dependable power between an AC power source and the S8100 Media Server. In addition to better
power dependability, a UPS provides battery backup for a graceful shutdown if a power failure
occurs.
An Ethernet switch.
Reliability
Avaya incorporates high reliability and availability into the S8100 Media Server. The media servers
platform:
Detects and corrects errors as they occur
Minimizes the number of components that can cause a system-wide outage
Simplifies fault isolation to a replaceable component
The S8100 Media Server provides error detection and correction, system reconfiguration, and escalation
paths for alarms to necessary performance elements. The software recovers from intermittent failures and
continues providing service with minimal disruption.
The maintenance subsystem manages three categories of maintenance objects (MOs): hardware
maintenance objects, software processes, and data relationships. Hardware MOs are tested, alarmed and
Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway
36 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
removed from service by the software. When the hardware problem is isolated, the object is replaced. If a
software process encounters trouble, the process is recovered or restarted. Data relationships are audited
and corrected.
The following design elements help ensure high availability of the Windows 2000 operating system on
the S8100 Media Server:
A secondary on-board processor complex supports initialization, monitoring, and recovery
functions for every application that runs on the Windows 2000 Server operating system. When a
problem is detected, the secondary processor complex takes corrective action to minimize user
impact.
Executive Software’s DiskKeeper code is incorporated and runs regularly to eliminate disk
fragmentation problems.
The operating system is closed to any applications other than the ones that the manufacturer
provides. Every application is thoroughly pretested to ensure proper performance.
The Windows 2000 Server event log is proactively scanned for potential service-affecting items.
If service-affecting items are found, alarms are generated which may result in a service
technician’s site visit.
For further reliability, the G600 Media Gateway uses a fan unit, an assembly consisting of three hot-
swappable fans. The fan unit automatically senses temperature and adjusts each fan’s operating speed
accordingly. If one fan fails, the:
The system generates an alarm, notifying a technician to replace the fan unit
Other two fans speed up, providing sufficient cooling for up to several weeks
Recoverability
The S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway provides the following recoverability:
System survival of minor power disruptions without service interruption
Automatic restoration of the last saved version of the customer translations following a power
outage
Scheduled centralized backups of critical system information at remote sites
During an emergency, multiple copies of translations, INTUITY AUDIX subscriber information,
and the Windows 2000 Server registry are available. This saved information can be quickly
restored. Backups can be saved either to the provided PCMCIA card or to another server over the
LAN.
Emergency transfer equipment is an option that cuts up to six analog lines directly through to
analog trunks in the central office (CO).
Administration
Several methods can be used to administer the S8100:
The peer Web server
A Telnet session
Avaya Integrated Management Suite
Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 37
December 2003
Peer Web server
The Avaya S8100 Media Server can be administered through a Web interface that uses a Peer Web server
through a LAN connection. The administrator can download software, such as Message Manager,
connect to INTUITY AUDIX, schedule a backup, or view backup results and restore from a backup.
Telnet session
A terminal emulation access can be used via a Telnet session.
Avaya Integrated Management
Avaya Integrated Management offers a comprehensive set of Web-based network and system
management solutions that support the Avaya converged voice solutions. Integrated Management
combines individual applications into 5 offers:
Standard Management
Standard Management Solutions Plus
MultiService Network Management
Enhanced Converged Management
Advanced Converged Management
For more detailed information on Avaya Integrated Management see:
http://www.avaya.com > Products and Services > Products A-Z
Avaya Communication Manager
The S8100 Media Server uses Avaya Communication Manager software for call processing solutions in
large and small customer environments. Avaya Communication Manager is an open, scalable, highly
reliable and secure telephony application. Avaya Communication Manager provides user and system-
management functionality, intelligent call routing, application integration and extensibility, and
enterprise communications networking. Communication Manager offers over 500 features, in the
following categories:
Call center
Telephony
Localization
Collaboration
Mobility
Messaging
Telecommuting
System management
Reliability
Security, privacy, and safety
Hospitality
Avaya S8100 Media Server with a CMC1 or G600 Media Gateway
38 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Attendant features
Networking
Intelligent call routing
Application programming interfaces
For more information about these solutions, see the Overview for Avaya Communication Manager.
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 39
December 2003
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media
Gateway
Overview
An Avaya S8300 Media Server with a G700 Media Gateway and its media modules converges voice and
data into one infrastructure. Using the same form factor as a media module, an S8300 Media Server is a
Pentium-based processor residing in a G700 Media Gateway. An S8300 Media Server can also be
configured as a Local Survivable Processor (LSP). A G700 Media Gateway is based on an Avaya P330
switch, which contains VoIP resources and modular interface connectivity. The media modules provide
analog, digital, T1/E1, BRI, and additional VoIP capabilities.
The following figure shows an S8300 Media Server and media modules in a G700 Media Gateway.
Figure 1: S8300 Media Server, G700 Media Gateway, and media modules
Detailed description
This section contains information about the following:
Configuration description
Server features
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
LEDs
Maintenance software
Configuration description
The following components can be used with an S8300 Media Server and a G700 Media Gateway:
Avaya media modules:
MM710 T1/E1 Media Module
MM711 Analog Media Module
MM712 DCP Media Module
MM720 BRI Media Module
MM760 VoIP Media Module
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Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
40 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Avaya Communication Manager
For information about Avaya Communication Manager, refer to the "Overview for Avaya
Communication Manager," 555-233-767.
Avaya P330 expansion modules
Avaya WAN Access router modules for the Avaya P330 stackable switching system
An S8300 Media Server, the G700 Media Gateways, and all other components are described in more
detail in the following sections.
Server features
An S8300 Media Server is a Pentium-based processor running the Linux Red Hat operating system and
residing in Slot V1 of a G700 Media Gateway. It comes standard with the following:
Avaya Communication Manager application software
For a description of Communication Manager, refer to:
For customer access – www.avaya.com
For business partner access – http://avaya.com/businesspartner
Click solutions, products, and services.
For internal access – http://support.avaya.com
A 20-GB hard disk
256 MB RAM
NOTE:
The S8300B Media Server, when available, will have 512 MB RAM.
A Web server used for the following:
Backups and restores of customer data
Easy access to view current alarms
The ability to perform server maintenance including busy out and release busyout,
shutdown, and status of an S8300 Media Server.
Security commands to enable and disable the modem, start and stop the FTP server, and
view the software license
SNMP access to configure trap destinations and to stop and start the master agent
Configuration information about an S8300 Media Server
Upgrade access to an S8300 Media Server
Linux Red Hat operating system
Trivial File Transfer Protocol (TFTP) server
H.248 Media Gateway Signaling Protocol
Control messages tunneled over H.323 Signaling Protocol
Two USB ports and a 10/100 Base-T port
One services port.
The S8300 supports a maximum of:
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 41
December 2003
900 total ports (combination of trunks and stations)
450 IP, non-IP, or a combination of IP and non-IP stations
450 trunks
50 G700 Media Gateways
The following figure shows an S8300 Media Server and media modules in a G700 Media Gateway.
Figure 2: S8300 Media Server in a G700 Media Gateway
1S8300 Media Server in Slot V1.
2Services port
3Two USB ports
4Slot for an Avaya expansion module
5Dual 10/100 Base-T Ethernet switch ports
6Media module, Slot V2
7Media module, Slot V3
8Media module, Slot V4
9Console connection for on-site administration.
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
An Avaya G700 Media Gateway is scalable and offers options. It is functional on its own or with other
G700 Media Gateways. Up to 50 G700 Media Gateways can be supported using an S8300 Media Server.
Up to 250 G700 Media Gateways can be supported using an S8500 Media Server or an S8700 Media
Server. The G700 is also functional in a stack that is mixed with Avaya P330 devices such as the P333T,
P333R, and P334.
To power IP telephones without additional cables, stack the G700 Media Gateways with the Avaya
P333T-PWR.
The following list describes the basic architecture of the G700 Media Gateway:
Intel i960 controller that hosts the base switch control and management software
Supports 15 ports of tone detection
Fits in an EIA-310-D standard 19-inch data rack
Can sit on a desk top
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Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
42 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Contains four slots for media modules
One slot for an Avaya P330 expansion module
One slot for an Avaya P330 Octaplane stacking fabric
Contains an internal motherboard described in detail later in this section
Standards-based 10/100 Ethernet Interface connection types
Internal global AC power supply that provides low-voltage DC power to the fans, motherboard,
and media modules
Four internal fans that provide cooling for the internal components
A LED board that indicates system-level status
A serial port for command-line access
A VoIP engine that supports up to 64 G.711 single-channel calls
An 8-port layer-2 switch
The G700 Media Gateway has a similar physical design to the Avaya stackable switching products. The
following figure shows the G700 Media Gateway with two Avaya P330 switches. The G700 is shown at
the top of the stack.
Figure 3: G700 Media Gateway with two Avaya P330 switches
ALM
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Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 43
December 2003
Expansion modules
A G700 Media Gateway is architecturally based on the Avaya P330 switch. Therefore, customers can use
any of the P330’s expansion modules with the G700 Media Gateway. Additional Avaya local-area
network (LAN) and wide-area network (WAN) expansion modules connect directly to the G700 Media
Gateway without requiring additional hardware. Two expansion modules are available from Avaya:
X330 WAN Access routing module
P330 LAN expansion modules
X330 WAN Access routing module
Customers with multiple branch offices need network solutions that are simple, flexible, and scalable. An
Avaya X330 WAN Access routing module allows customers to deploy a unified, high-performance
LAN/WAN infrastructure in one data stack.
Highlights of an X330 WAN Access router:
Provides integrated WAN access that can be used with external firewalls or VPN Gateways
Works with the following WAN and routing protocols:
Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) over channeled E1/T1
—Frame Relay
Routing Information Protocol (RIP) v1 and v2
Single-area Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)
VRRP Redundancy
Throughput: wire-speed WAN routing
Congestion control
Standard auto-negotiation
Link redundancy
802.1Q/p virtual LAN (VLAN) and priority
P330 LAN expansion module
Highlights of a P330 LAN expansion module:
Maximum flexibility to the data stack
Standard auto-negotiation
Link Aggregation Group (LAG)
LAG redundancy
Link redundancy
Congestion control
802.1Q/p VLAN and priority
CAUTION:
Avaya expansion modules and Octaplane stacking modules are not hot-swappable. Turn
off the system before you remove or insert an expansion module.
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
44 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
P330 Stacking Fabric (Octaplane)
Octaplane is an Avaya hardware capability to bundle stackable components using bidirectional 4-Gbps
transmission. This technology combines separate units into a larger logical switch using different lengths
of cables that are connected to the expansion slots behind the units. The cables are wired in a ring
configuration, providing redundancy to the stack. If a single unit should fail, the stack’s integrity is
maintained. You can also remove or replace a single unit without disrupting operation or without first
reconfiguring the stack.
Power supply
A G700 Media Gateway uses an internal AC power supply that converts AC input power to voltages.
Motherboard
A motherboard resides in a G700 Media Gateway. This board controls the following:
The VoIP Engine which supports up to 64 channels. If more than 64 channels are needed, a VoIP
media module is required. The VoIP Engine performs the following functions:
IP/UDP/RTP processing
Echo cancellation
—G.711 A-/µ-Law
G.729 and G723.1 encode/decode
FAX relay
Silence suppression
Jitter buffer management
Packet loss concealment
Table 1: Octaplane cabling
Cable Description and function Length Length
(metric)
X330SC short Octaplane
cable (30 cm) Short Octaplane cable – light-
colored, used to connect adjacent
switches or switches separated by
one backup universal power supply
(BUPS) unit.
1 foot 0.3 m
X330LC long Octaplane cable
(2 m) Long Octaplane cable – light-
colored, used to connect switches
from two different physical stacks
6 feet 2 m
X330RC redundant Octaplane
cable (2 m) Redundant cable – black, used to
connect the top and bottom switches
of a stack.
6 feet 2 m
X330L-LC extra-long
Octaplane cable (8 m) Extra-long Octaplane cable – light-
colored, used to connect switches
from two different physical stacks
24 feet 8 m
X330L-RC long redundant
Octaplane cable (8 m) Long Redundant cable – black, used
to connect the top and bottom
switches of a stack.
24 feet 8 m
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 45
December 2003
The gateway’s processor complex controls every resource inside the gateway. The processors
functions include managing the media modules, and controlling the Tone Clock and H.248
signaling.
An Avaya P330 processor complex is based on the Avaya P330 data-switch architecture. This
complex provides an 8-port layer-2 switch function and manages the Expansion and Cascade
modules.
The electrical and physical connectivity for the four media module’s slots.
NOTE:
The motherboard cannot be replaced in the field.
For more information about the VoIP media module, see MM760 VoIP media module.
Fans
The G700 Media Gateway contains four 12-volt fans. These fans are monitored and can be alarmed via
SNMP to a management station.
Gateway software
Gateway software is responsible for:
Individual media-gateway operations
Terminating H.248 on the G700 Media Gateway
Interacting with maintenance operations
LEDs
An S8300 Media Server with a G700 Media Gateway uses two types of LEDs:
Media module
System-level.
Media module LEDs
A media module’s LEDs have the following characteristics:
Three or more LEDs reside on each media module to provide status information about the media
module, its ports, and its current maintenance or administration mode.
Every LED on each media module has a fixed user-visible location, spacing, and labeling.
System-level LEDs
An LED board visually indicates status of the system and its Ethernet data ports, and allows the customer
to change between status-indication modes. The LED board resides in the upper left front of each G700
Media Gateway. The board’s LEDs reside in an oblong fascia panel.
You must remove the LED board when you install or remove either an S8300 Media Server or an LSP-
configured S8300 Media Server. An S8300 Media Server and its LED board must be installed or removed
as a unit.
NOTE:
The LED panel is not the same size as standard slots for media modules. You cannot insert
a media module into the LED board’s slot, or vice versa.
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
46 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Maintenance software
An S8300 Media Server with a G700 Media Gateway has a dual maintenance strategy. Maintenance
software runs on both the G700 Media Gateway’s platform and the S8300 Media Server for subsystems
on the platform. This platform software performs initialization and motherboard maintenance, along with
internal environmental monitoring.
In contrast, media modules are tested and brought into service by the S8300 Media Server’s maintenance
software after a G700 Media Gateway registers with the S8300 Media Server. While the G700 Media
Gateway’s maintenance software is aware of its own media modules, these modules and their associated
ports are controlled by the S8300 Media Server. Error logs are also maintained on the S8300 Media
Server.
Avaya media modules
Media modules reside in a G700 Media Gateway and interact with the motherboard and backplane.
The G700 supports the following media modules:
MM710 T1/E1 Media Module
MM711 Analog Media Module
MM712 DCP Media Module
MM720 BRI Media Module
MM760 VoIP Media Module
The following figure shows a top view of a media module.
Figure 4: Top view of media module
mmdciso KLC 031502
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Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 47
December 2003
LEDs
Although some media modules have additional LEDs, a standard 3-LED pattern on each of their
faceplates indicates the following conditions:
Red – Fault condition
This LED also lights when the media module is physically inserted, and should turn off when the
board initializes.
Green – Test condition
Yellow – In-use condition
See the following figure for the LEDs on the media module.
Figure 5: Media modules LEDs
MM710 T1/E1 media module
An MM710 terminates a T1 or E1 connection. The MM710 has built-in channel-service unit (CSU) so an
external CSU is not necessary. The CSU is only used for the T1 circuit.
The attributes of an MM710 include:
Software-selectable T1 or E1 operation
Integrated CSU for T1 circuit only
A-law (E1) and µ-law (T1) companding
Gain control and echo cancellation
D4, ESF, or CEPT framing
ISDN-PRI capability (23B + D or 30B + D)
Line coding – AMI, ZCS, B8ZS (T1) or HDB3 (E1)
Trunk signaling to support US and International CO or tie trunks
Echo cancellation in either direction
Fractional T1 support
OIC DB 25-pin interface
A Bantam loop-back jack for testing T1 or E1 circuits
Figure notes
1ALM – Alarm LED
2TST – Test LED
3ACT – Active LED
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mmdcled KLC 031402
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Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
48 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
The following figure shows an MM710 media module.
Figure 6: MM710 T1/E1 media module
For more information, see MM710 T1/E1 media module.
MM711 Analog media module
An MM711 provides analog trunk and telephone features and functionality. Up to four 8-port M711
media modules can reside in one G700 Media Gateway.
An administrator can assign each analog port of an MM711 as follows:
Central Office trunk, either loop- or ground-start
Direct Inward Dialing (DID) trunks, either wink- or immediate-start
2-wire outgoing CAMA E911 trunks, with MF signaling for connectivity to the PSTN
Tip/ring devices such as single-line telephones, with or without LED message-waiting indication
The MM711 also supports:
Three ringer loads (ringer equivalency number) for up to 2000 feet for all eight ports
Up to eight simultaneously-ringing ports
NOTE:
The media gateway achieves this number of ports by staggering the ringing and pauses
between two sets of up to four ports.
Type-1 and -2 Caller ID
Ring-voltage generation for a variety of international frequencies and cadences
The following figure shows an MM711 media module.
Figure 7: MM711 Analog media module
For more information, see MM711 Analog media module.
E1/T1 EIA 530A DCE
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Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 49
December 2003
MM712 DCP media module
An MM712 allows you to connect up to eight 2-wire Digital Communications Protocol (DCP) voice
terminals.
The following figure shows an MM712 media module.
Figure 8: MM712 DCP media module
For more information, see MM712 DCP media module on page 224.
MM720 BRI media module
Each port of an 8-port MM720 provides an interface to the central office at the ISDN T reference point.
Information is communicated in two ways:
Over two 64-kbps channels called B1 and B2
Can be circuit-switched simultaneously
Over a 16-kbps channel called the D channel
Used for signaling
Occupies one time slot for all eight D channels
The circuit-switched connections have an A- or µ-law companding option for voice operation. When in
the data mode, the circuit-switched connections operate as 64-kbps clear channels.
The MM720 does not support the following:
BRI stations
Combining both B channels together to form a 128-kbps channel
The following figure shows an MM720 media module.
Figure 9: MM720 BRI media module
For more information, see MM720 BRI media module on page 226.
mmdc712 KLC 022702
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mmdc712 KLC 022702
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Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
50 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
MM760 VoIP media module
An MM760 is a clone of the motherboard’s VoIP engine. The MM760 provides an additional 64 VoIP
channels with G.711 compression.
The capacity is 64 G.711 TDM/IP simultaneous calls, or 32 compression codec, G.729 or G.723, TDM/IP
simultaneous calls. These call types can be mixed on the same resource; in other words, the simultaneous
call capacity of the resource is 64 G.711 equivalent calls.
The following figure shows an MM760 media module.
Figure 10: MM760 VoIP media module
For more information, see MM760 VoIP media module on page 228.
S8300 Media Server in an LSP configuration
An S8300 Media Server in a Local Survivable Processor (LSP) configuration uses the S8300 hardware
component and a software license to activate a standby feature. This software allows the LSP with a
G700 Media Gateway to be a survivable call-processing server for remote and branch locations. The
number of LSPs that can be supported in a configuration depends on the controlling media server. An
S8500 Media Server or S8700 Media Server can support up to 50 LSPs. An S8300 Media Server can
support up to 10 LSPs. An S8300 Media Server and the LSP cannot reside in the same G700 Media
Gateway.
The difference between an S8300 configured as a primary controller (ICC) and an S833 configured as an
LSP is entirely in software. Therefore, the hardware installation is identical for both configurations. On
the G700, the S8300 board is restricted to slot V1 under the LED panel. The S8300 board and the LED
panel must be inserted or removed together, as a single unit.
If for any reason communication between a G700 Media Gateway and its primary controller stops, an
LSP activates. This "fail-over" from the primary controller to the LSP is an automatic process without
human intervention. The LSP assumes control of any IP telephone provided that telephone has the LSP in
its list of controllers. Not every call is preserved during a fail-over. IP-to-IP shuffled calls are preserved;
any other calls end.
The fail-back from the LSP to the primary controller is manual, requiring a reset on the LSP. This reset
breaks the communication between the LSP and every registered endpoint and causes the endpoints to
register with the primary controller. During fail-back to the primary controller, every call is dropped with
the exception of IP-to-IP calls.
mmdc760 KLC 022702
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Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 51
December 2003
IP addressing
IP telephones obtain their own IP address from a DHCP server. The DHCP server also sends a list of
controllers, LSPs, and their associated IP addresses. The IP telephone then registers with the controller
corresponding to the first IP address in this list. When connectivity is lost between the controller and the
endpoint, the endpoint registers with the second IP address in the list, and so on. This list is administrable
for telephones on the DHCP server.
Preservation of customer translations
An automatic process copies customer translation changes made on the primary server to every LSP.
IA770 INTUITY AUDIX messaging
IA770 INTUITY™ AUDIX® messaging is an optional voice mail system used with an S8300 Media
Server. IA770 requires a small circuit board that plugs directly into a connector on the media server. The
IA770’s software and Communication Manager communicate over a TDM-bus connection that exists
between the circuit board and the media server.
INTUITY AUDIX uses the circuit board to:
Convert messages to the code-excited linear prediction (CELP) format
Convert text to speech
Process touch tones and FAX signals
The IA770 can be a stand-alone solution for one location or networked with other voice mail systems
using TCP/IP, AMIS, and Avaya Interchange.
Highlights of an IA770:
Available in two sizes:
Four ports with up to 100 local users
Eight ports with up to 300 local users
Up to 500,000 remote messaging subscribers
Up to eight networking channels
INTUITY AUDIX LX
Message Manager
Up to 500 clients
Up to 64 simultaneous sessions, four when using text-to-speech
Internet Messaging
35 different languages are available for prompts
Backup of translations and messages over LAN and WAN
Message storage of up to:
30 minutes for each mailbox
300 total hours
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
52 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
An IA770 uses many resources of the S8300 Media Server and the G700 Media Gateway where it
resides. The following outlines the S8300’s shared resources used by the IA770:
Hard drive for data storage and retrieval
TFTP server for:
Downloading and updating the license file
Backing up and restoring data
Updating and upgrading software
IP address for administration access
License file for feature activation
General Alarm Manager for alarm display
Web interface to start and stop the system
The IA770 also shares the same switch-tone parameters established for the S8300 Media Server. The
following countries require country-specific switch-tone parameters:
Brazil
Canada – uses the same parameters as the United States
China
France
Germany
Hong Kong
Italy
Japan
Korea
Mexico
United Kingdom
United States
Additional countries will be added in the near future.
Call center
An S8300 Media Server provides an excellent solution for a small call center. An S8300 Media Server
with a G700 Media Gateway supports the following call-center capabilities:
All three Avaya call-center packages: Avaya Call Center Basic, Avaya Call Center Deluxe, and
Avaya Call Center Elite
Supports up to 250 agents
Supports a maximum of 16 ASAI links
Avaya G700 announcement software
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 53
December 2003
G700 announcement software
Voice announcements are used in a call-center environment to announce delays, direct customers to
different departments, entertain and inform calling parties. The announcement capability is standard and
coresident on a G700. The G700’s announcement software has many capabilities of the TN2501AP VAL
circuit pack.
The following table compares the G700 Announcement software and the VAL circuit pack.
Area description TN2501AP (VAL) circuit
pack G700 announcement
software
Requires hardware Yes No
Maximum storage time per
board for TN750 or TN2501AP Up to 60 minutes at 64-kbps
sample rate Up to 20 minutes at 64-kbps
uncompressed speech
Concurrent Calls per
Announcement 50 when using a DEFINITY
Server SI or DEFINITY Server
CSI
1,000 when using the
DEFINITY Server R or S8700
Media Server
1,000
Backup and restore over LAN Yes Yes
Recording Method Use PC or telephone Use PC or telephone
File portability to multiple
DEFINITY or Avaya servers Yes Yes
Playback quality Toll quality Toll quality
Backup speed 2.6 seconds for each 60 seconds
of announcement time 2.6 seconds for each 60 seconds
of announcement time
Reliability High High
Firmware downloadable Yes Yes
Number boards or G700
announcement software per
configuration
5 with the DEFINITY® CSI
and DEFINITY SI
10 with the DEFINITY R and
S8700 Media Server
250 when using the S8700
Media Server
50 when using the S8300
Media Server
Announcements per board 256 256
Maximum number of
announcements in a
configuration
128 DEFINITY Server CSI or
DEFINITY Server Si
1,000 DEFINITY Server R
3,000 S8700 Media Server
6,400 when using the S8700
Media Server
1280 when using the S8300
Media Server
Format CCITT A- or µ-law
companding CCITT A- or µ-law
companding
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
54 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Sample bits eight eight
Sample rate 8,000 Hz 8,000 Hz
Channels Mono Mono
Area description TN2501AP (VAL) circuit
pack G700 announcement
software
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 55
December 2003
Customer configuration options
An S8300 Media Server with a G700 Media Gateway provides a standards-based, IP communications
infrastructure without compromising the customers applications, reliability, and multiservice
networking. This solution can be installed for either small customers or large customers with branch
offices or a multisite configuration.
An S8300 Media Server with G700 Gateways provides the following networking benefits:
Feature transparency across the network via QSIG or DCS+
A consistent user experience with the same user interface
Unified system management
Applications controlled by Avaya’s Communication Manager, yet offering a rich enterprise
feature set administered using an H.248-based control interface
Ease of moves, adds, and changes using the same administration interface
For examples of configurations see:
Small-business solution using the Avaya S8300 Media Server in the G700 Media Gateway
Branch Office Configuration
Multi-Site Environment
System management
Avaya Integrated Management
Avaya Integrated Management offers a comprehensive set of Web-based network and system
management solutions that support the Avaya converged voice solutions. Integrated Management
combines individual applications into five offers:
Standard Management
Standard Management Solutions Plus
MultiService Network Management
Enhanced Converged Management
Advanced Converged Management
For more detailed information on the Avaya Integrated Management suite see:
http://www.avaya.com >Products and Services>Products A-Z
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
56 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
S8300 Media Server Web interface
The Web browser-based tool on the S8300 Media Server uses a graphical user interface (GUI) interface
to perform server-administration tasks such as:
Backing up and restoring customer data
Viewing current alarms
Maintaining the media server including:
Checking the media servers status
Busying out and releasing busy out the media server
Shutting down the media server
Executing security commands to enable and disable the modem, start and stop the FTP server, and
view the license
Accessing SNMP to configure trap destinations and to stop and start the master agent
Accessing the media server to acquire configuration information and upgrade access
The media servers Web interface contains an extensive help system that describes every Web screen and
its procedures.
Adjuncts
The following are some Avaya-provided adjuncts:
A system printer is supported when a terminal server is used.
A journal printer is supported when a terminal server is used.
Call Detail Recording (CDR) is supported when a terminal server is used.
External INTUITY AUDIX
Avaya Business Communication Management System
Avaya Call Management System
International information
An S8300 Media Server is available in the following countries:
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Bahamas
Belgium
Bermuda
Brazil
Bolivia
Canada
Chile
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 57
December 2003
China
Colombia
Costa Rica
France
Germany
Guatemala
Hong Kong
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Korea
Mexico
Panama
Paraguay
Peru
Puerto Rico
The Netherlands
New Zealand
Nordics
Russia
Singapore
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
Trinidad
Tobago
United Kingdom
United States
Uruguay
Venezuela
Avaya S8300 Media Server and an Avaya G700 Media Gateway
58 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Digital trunks and CO trunks
The following table contains digital- and CO-trunk information for each country.
NOTE:
These are nominal voltages. In general, a reference to 110 V applies to a range from 100 to
160 V. Whereas, a reference to 220 V applies to a range from 220 to 240 V.
Country Digital
trunk CO trunk AC power
(see note) Plug
type DC
power1Companding ICID R2MFC
over
Argentina E1 LS 220 V B, C, E -48 V A-law -2E1
Australia E1 LS DID 220 V C - A-law - -
Austria E1 LS 220 V B, E -48 V A-law - -
Belgium E1 LS 220 V A, B, E -60 V A-law - -
Brazil E1 LS 110/220 V A, B, D, E -48 V A-law - E1
Canada T1 LS GS DID 110 V A - A-law Bellcore FSK -
China E1 LS 220 V B, C, E -48 V A-law - E1
Denmark E1 -220 V B, E -60 V A-law - -
Finland E1 - 220 V B, E -60 V A-law - -
France E1 LS 220 V B, E -60 V A-law - -
Germany E1 LS 220 V B, E -60 V A-law - -
Hong Kong T1 LS 220 V D, E, I -µ-law Bellcore FSK -
Ireland E1 LS 220 V B, D, E -60 V A-law - -
Israel E1 LS DID E&M 220 V B, G -48 V A-law - -
Italy E1 LS E&M 220 V B, F -60 V A-law - -
Japan T1 LS DID 100 V A - µ-law NTT Clip -
Korea E1 LS DID 110/220 V A, B - A-law - -
Mexico E1 LS 110 V A-60 V A-law Bellcore FSK E1
Netherlands E1 LS 220 V B, E -60 V A-law - -
New Zealand E1 LS DID 220 V C - A-law - -
Norway E1 - 220 V B, E -60 V A-law - -
Russia
Singapore E1 LS DID 220 V B, D, E, I - A-law Bellcore FSK -
Spain E1 LS 220 V A, B, E -48 V A-law - -
Sweden E1 - 220 V B, E -60 V A-law - -
Switzerland E1 LS 220 V B, E -60 V A-law - -
Taiwan E1 LS DID 110 V A -48 V µ-law - -
U.K. E1 LS 220 V D, E -60 A-law - -
U.S. T1 LS GS DID 110 V A - µ-law Bellcore FSK -
1 DC power is only a TA issue in China.
2 Indicates that the feature is not important or applicable.
Avaya S8500 Media Server
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 59
December 2003
Avaya S8500 Media Server
The Avaya S8500 Media Server is a rack mounted telephony server, running Red Hat Linux 8.0
Operating System, and featuring the Avaya world class call processing application, Communication
Manager. The S8500 is capable of supporting both Internet Protocol (IP) and traditional endpoints
enabling new technology, and the ease of migration from legacy Avaya systems. The S8500 Media Server
is a perfect solution for mid-sized customers, with growth of up to 3200 ports. See the following figure
for an example of the front of the S8500 Media Server.
Figure 11: S8500 Media Server (front)
Detailed description
The S8500 Media Server comes standard with the following hardware components:
Pentium IV 512 KB Level-2 cache and MMX (MMX2) technology Microprocessor.
512 MB RAM
IDE CD-ROM
Figure notes
Number Description
1CD-ROM drive activity LED When this LED is lit, he CD-ROM drive is in use.
2CD eject button Press this button to release a CD from the CD-ROM drive.
3Power-control button Press this button to turn the server on or off manually
4USB connector 1 This USB port configures automatically and uses a serial
interface standard for telephony and multimedia devices.
5USB connector 2 This USB port configures automatically and uses a serial
interface standard for telephony and multimedia devices.
6System-error LED This amber LED lights when a system error occurs.
7Hard disk drive activity LED When this LED is flashing, it indicates that the associated
hard disk drive is in use.
8Reset button Press this button to reset the server and run the power-on
self-test (POST).
9Power-on LED When this LED is lit, it indicates that the server is turned
on.
disc
7
2 4 5
68 9
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Avaya S8500 Media Server
60 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
40-GB (minimum) hard drive
Two USB ports
One serial port
A keyboard port
A mouse port
Two 10/100/1000Base-T Ethernet ports
A Remote Supervisor Adapter (RSA)
An external Compact Flash Memory Reader
A Compact Flash 120 MB industry media (optional)
One USB modem
One serial modem
AC or DC powered (seperate models)
Includes RAM disk.
NOTE:
An optional dual-NIC card can be added to the configuration when the network control is
sent over a dedicated LAN.
Backing up an S8500 Media Server
You can backup the S8500 Media Server to a server on the LAN or to the compact flash memory reader
that is installed in one of the USB ports. The compact flash memory reader uses a 128-MB compactflash.
Avaya recommends that use of the industrial grade compactflash for the following reasons:
Improved data integrity and reliability
Powerful error correction
Extreme endurance
2,000,000 program/erase cycles per block
Increased reliability
Mean time between failures (MTBF) greater than 3 million hours
Industry-leading 7-year warranty
Enhanced durability
New RTV silicone for added strength and stability
The industrial grade compactflash is available through Avaya and Avaya business partners.
Avaya S8500 Media Server
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 61
December 2003
Port-network connectivity
The S8500 Media Server uses IP connectivity between the Port Networks (PNs). Forms of traditional
network connectivity such as Center Stage Switch (CSS) and ATM port-network connectivity (ATM-
PNC) are not supported. Also traditional options of survivability such as the Survivable Remote
Processor or the ATM WAN Spare Processor are not supported.
Port Network connectivity is provided by the IPSI-2 (TN2312BP) circuit packs and the IP Media
Processor (TN2302AP) circuit pack. Direct connection between expansion interface boards is available
for systems migrating from a DEFINITY G3r or DEFINITY G3si. The S8500 Media Server
configurations with four or more PNs requires a IP PNC.
Media gateways
The G650 Media Gateway is used for new S8500 Media Server configurations. The following media
gateways are supported in a migration from an existing Avaya solution to the S8500 Media Server:
CMC1
SCC1
MCC1
G600
NOTE:
The G700 Media Gateway and the G350 Media Gateway are supported through the
CLAN board mounted in a CMC1, SCC1, MCC1, G600, or G650 Media Gateway.
NOTE:
Media Gateway types cannot be mixed within the same PN.
G650 Media Gateway
The Avaya G650 Media Gateway is a fourteen slot, rack mounted carrier configured for TN format
circuit packs. The G650 is 8U high (14 inches (35.6 centimeters)) and mounts in a standard 19 inch (48.3
centimeters) data rack. The G650 uses one or two 655A power supplies, operating on either AC and DC
input power. Either power supply can provide all the power needed by the G650. When two power
supplies exist, they share the power load. One power supply can operate on AC power and the other on
DC power. The system will always use AC power if available.
See Figure 12, G650 Media Gateway, on page 62 for an example of a G650 Media Gateway.
Avaya S8500 Media Server
62 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 12: G650 Media Gateway
For more information on the G650 Media Gateway, see Avaya G650 Media Gateway on page 131.
Remote Supervisor Adapter (RSA)
A Remote Supervisor Adapter (RSA) is installed in PCI-X slot 1 of the S8500 Media Server. It monitors
and reports alarms on S8500 components and provides control to power-on and power-off the S8500.
Administration of the RSA is accomplished through the Advanced System Management (ASM) Web
interface using a browser.
See Figure 13, RSA, on page 63 for an example of the RSA.
Figure notes
Number Description
1EDS ground jack
2655A power supply
3TN2312BP IP server interface (IPSI)
4TN799DP CLAN
5TN2302 IP media processor
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
2
1
5
3 4
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Avaya S8500 Media Server
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 63
December 2003
Figure 13: RSA
Standard features of the RSA are:
Continuous health monitoring and control of the S8500 Media Server
Automatic notification and alerts
Event log showing time-stamped entries
Remote access through the LAN and serial modem
Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) trap support
Domain Name System (DNS) server support
Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) support
Remote power control
Remote firmware updates
NOTE:
The S8500 Media Server monitors the health of the RSA and generates an alarm if a
failure condition is detected.
Figure notes
RSA Component Description
1Clip Power cord retaining clip
2External power-supply
connector Connect the power-supply adapter to this connector. A power cord
connects from the power-supply adapter to the power source. This
connection provides power to the RSA that is independent of the
S8500 Media Server power supply.
3Power and error LEDs The green LED: Shows the status of the power connection.
The amber LED: Shows that an error condition exists on the RSA.
4Ethernet RJ-45
connector A 10/100 Mbps connector for LAN connectivity.
5Serial connector Used for serial modem connectivity.
6ASM RS-485 RJ-14
connector Not used in the S8500 Media Server configuration.
h3msrsap LAO 071503
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Avaya S8500 Media Server
64 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
RSA power
The RSA obtains power from an external power source or from the S8500 Media Server. Avaya
recommends that an external power source on a different circuit from the S8500 be provided for the RSA.
For external power, plug the cord from the power-supply adapter into the power connector on the RSA.
For domestic installations a 3 pronged power cord will be plugged from the power-supply adapter into the
power source. For international installations a power cord with a male IEC320 connector is used. The
RSA can only be plugged into a AC power source. A power LED on the RSA lights when one or both of
the following conditions are met:
The RSA is receiving power from the external power-supply adapter.
The RSA is receiving power from the S8500 Media Server in which it is installed.
Modems
The S8500 Media Server is equipped with two modems for remote alarming. One modem connects to the
USB port on the front of the S8500 Media Server and is used for Communication Manager alarms. The
other modem connects to the RS232 port on the RSA and is used for S8500 O/S and environmental
alarms. The RSA modem provides remote access for diagnostics for the S8500. See Figure 14, Modem
connectivity to the S8500, on page 65 for an example of modem connectivity to the S8500.
Avaya S8500 Media Server
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 65
December 2003
Figure 14: Modem connectivity to the S8500
NOTE:
Avaya recommends that an external power source on a different circuit from the S8500 be
provided for the RSA. If the RSA and the S8500 Media Server are powered by the same
power supply, the ability to access the RSA may be prohibited in the case of a power
failure.
Figure notes
Number Description
1Serial modem: used for the RSA.
2Serial modem cable: connects a serial modem to an RS-232 port on the RSA
3Serial modem cable: connects a serial modem to an RS-232 port on the RSA
4Telephone line: connects the serial modem to the CO line
5USB modem: used for Communication Manager
6USB cable: connects a USB modem to a USB port in front of the server.
7Telephone line: connects a USB modem to the CO line
8Two USB ports on the front of the server: one for the USB modem, the other for the
compact flash memory reader.
9Compact flash memory reader: connects to a USB port in front of the server.
h3msmdsd LAO 072303
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133 MHz/64 Bit, 100 MHz/64 Bit
Multi
Modem
MultiTech
Software
Multi
Modem USB
MultiTech
Software
PWR
7
1
2
34
5
6
8
9
Avaya S8500 Media Server
66 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
S8500 Media Server reliability
The S8500 Media Server supports a simplex-reliability configuration. See the following figure for an
example of a simplex configuration.
Figure 15: S8500 simplex configuration
Migrating to an S8500 Media Server
Migrations from the DEFINITY R, DEFINITY SI, DEFINITY CSI and S8100 Media Server are
supported to a S8500 Media Server configuration. The following describes a high-level migration from
the DEFINITY R, DEFINITY SI, DEFINITY CSI and S8100 Media Server platforms:
DEFINITY R simplex:
Direct-connect configurations only
All control circuit packs will be removed and replaced with an IPSI (TN2312BP) circuit
pack.
Voice announcements must be on a VAL board or migrate to a VAL board.
The PPN control carrier must be replaced with an EPN control carrier.
DEFINITY SI:
Direct-connect configurations only
SCC1 EPN cabinet will migrate to a SCC1 PN
SCC1-SPE cabinet will be removed and replaced with a SCC1 EPN or the G50 Media
Gateway.
112
13 24
CONSOLE
cymssmpx LAO 072903
IPSI
G650
IPSI
G650
Ethernet
Switch
S8500
Laptop
UPS
disc
Avaya S8500 Media Server
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 67
December 2003
SI processor, Net Pkt (TN2401), and Tone Clock (TN2182), are removed and replaced
with an IPSI (TN2312BP).
Voice announcements must be on a VAL board or migrate to a VAL board.
DEFINITY CSI:
The CSI Media Server (TN798 or the TN2402) and the Tone Clock (TN2182) will be
removed and an IPSI (TN2312BP) circuit pack will be installed in slot 2.
Voice announcements must be on a VAL board or migrate to a VAL board.
S8100 Media Server in a G600 Media Gateway or a CMC1 Media Gateway:
The S8100 Media Server (TN795) will be removed and replaced with a IPSI (TN2312BP)
circuit pack.
The Tone Detector (TN744) will be removed.
The S8100 Media Server runs Intuity Audix co-resident. In the event of a migration the
subscriber data and voice files must be retranslated to an external voice messaging
solution.
Voice announcement must be on a VAL board or migrate to a VAL board.
See Figure 16, S8500 Media Server in a direct-connect configuration, on page 67 for an example of the
S8500 Media Server in a direct-connect configuration.
Figure 16: S8500 Media Server in a direct-connect configuration
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disc
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A
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TW
570
IP Media
Processor
2302
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A
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TW
570
IP Media
Processor
2302
C
L
A
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TW
570
IP Media
Processor
2302
MCC1 MCC1
EI
Fiber
Connected
MCC1
Avaya S8500 Media Server
68 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
RAM disk
RAM disk is a portion of memory used as a disk partition. Under normal circumstances RAM disk and
the hard disk drive are both used by the S8500. In the event of a disk failure, the S8500 Media Server,
using only RAM disk, will continue to provide call processing for up to 72 hours. Administration, and
backups will be prohibited.
High-level capabilities
The following table presents a subset of high-level capabilities for the S8500 Media Server. For more
detailed system capacity information refer to the Avaya MultiVantage Solutions System Capacities Table
(555-233-605). The Capacities Table can be found on the http://support.avaya.com Web site.
Table 2: High-level capabilities
Capability S8500 Media Server
Call processing feature set Avaya Communication Manager 2.0
Maximum number of stations 2400 (IP or TDM)
Maximum number of trunks 800
Reliability options Simplex
Port-network connectivity IP and direct connect
Supported media gateways G650, G700, G350 (new installs); G600, CMC1, SCC1,
MCC1 (migrations only)
Maximum number of supported
gateways 250
Maximum locations 64 G650 port networks, plus up to 250 G700/G350 Media
Gateways
Survivability options G350 and G700 with S8300 LSP
Number of LSPs in one
configuration Maximum of 50 LSPs
Port networks per IPSI One
Avaya S8500 Media Server
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 69
December 2003
System management
Avaya Integrated Management suite
The Avaya Integrated Management suite offers a comprehensive set of Web-based network and system
management solutions that support the Avaya converged voice solutions. Integrated Management
combines individual applications into five offers:
Standard Management
Standard Management Solutions Plus
MultiService Network Management
Enhanced Converged Management
Advanced Converged Management
For more detailed information on the Avaya Integrated Management suite see:
http://www.avaya.com >Products and Services>Products A-Z
Avaya S8500 Media Server Web interface
The S8500 Media Server uses a media server Web interface to perform a wide variety of functions. This
browser-based tool uses a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for performing server administration tasks such
as:
Backups and restores for customer data
Provides easy access to view current alarms
The ability to perform server maintenance including busy out and release busy out, shutdown, and
status of the S8500 Media Server.
Security commands that will enable and disable the modem, start and stop FTP server, and view
license.
SNMP access to configure trap destinations, stop and start the master agent.
S8500 Media Server configuration information and upgrade access.
The Web interface contains an extensive help system that describes all the Web screens and fields.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
70 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media
Gateway
The Avaya S8700 Media Server uses a standard microprocessor engine with an Intel based processor on a
commercial server. The S8700 Media Server uses high-speed connections to route voice, data, and video
between analog and digital trunks, data lines that are connected to host computers, data-entry terminals,
personal computers, and internet addresses
See Figure 17, S8700 Media Server, on page 70 for an example of the S8700 Media Server.
Figure 17: S8700 Media Server
Detailed description
The S8700 Media Server uses a Redhat Linux platform on an Intel-based server. The S8700 Media Server
is derived from the DEFINITY® processor, has fewer physical components, and provides most of the
same features and functionality with increased capacity.
Configuration information
The S8700 Media Server is available in two configurations:
Voice bearer over IP (IP-Connect): An all-IP configuration.
Voice bearer over Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) or Center Stage Switch (CSS) (Multi-
Connect): In this configuration the bearer paths and control paths are separate. The control
information for port networks travels over either a dedicated, through the Ethernet, switch
(private LAN) or non-dedicated (over customer LAN) control network and terminates on the
S8700 Media Server at one end and an IPSI circuit pack on the other.
S8700 Media Server control complex
The S8700 Media Server configuration uses the following components and software:
Two media servers
An IP Server Interface (IPSI) circuit pack (TN2312BP)
An Avaya Ethernet Switch P133 or P134 or P333 or P334 or customer Ethernet switch
An Avaya 700VA/1500VA online UPS
An Abstract Control Model (ACM) compliant Universal Serial Bus (USB) modem
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Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 71
December 2003
Avaya media gateways
Avaya Communication Manager
For information about Avaya Communication Manager, see the "Overview for Avaya
Communication Manager", 555-233-767.
The following sections describe each of the main components.
S8700 Media Server
Characteristics of the S8700 Media Server:
10/100 Ethernet ports to support IPSI network control links, services access, duplication,
administration and alarming.
An IDE hard disk
An IDE CD-ROM
Support for global power ranging from 100V to 250V
Storage media for the operating system, customer translations, and maintenance software
Support for USB port connectivity for modem
A 128 MB Flash Card for removable media
Support for remote call out alarming from either server
SNMP alarming
The S8700 Media Server must be mounted in an open 19-inch rack that is EIA-310-D compliant.
IPSI Circuit Pack (TN2312BP)
The TN2312BP IP Server Interface (IPSI) provides environmental maintenance and is the only IP server
interface that is supported in the G650. A TN2312BP IPSI placed in a G650 with a carrier address set to
A acts as the serial bus master. (A TN2312BP IPSI can only be placed in a G650 with a carrier address set
to A or B. Only a TN2312BP IPSI in a G650 with a carrier address set to A can function as an serial bus
master).
The TN2312BP IPSI is backward compatible with other media gateways, but provides environmental
maintenance only when used in a G650. The TN2312BP IPSI always provides tone detection, call
classification, tone generation, and clock functions.
When the TN2312BP IPSI is used in an MCC1or SCC1, a TN755D provides the environmental
maintenance.
The TN2312BP IPSI provides maintenance functions for the G650. This includes:
Power supply, cabinet, and ring generator maintenance
External device alarm detection
Emergency transfer control
Customer-provided alarm device control
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
72 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
For configurations where voice bearer is over CSS or ATM, each IPSI typically controls five port
networks by tunneling control messages over the bearer network to PNs that do not have IPSIs. An IPSI
cannot be placed in:
a PN that has a Stratum-3 clock interface
A Survivable Remote Expansion Port Network (SREPN)
To determine the number of IPSI-connected PNs that are recommended to support a S8700 configuration
divide the total number of PNs in the configuration by five and add one. The additional IPSI provides
fault tolerance.
For configurations where voice bearer is over IP, there must be one IPSI in each PN.
A direct connect configuration only supports one IPSI connected PN.
See Figure 18, IPSI faceplate, on page 72 for an example of the IPSI faceplate
Figure 18: IPSI faceplate
For more information on the IP Server Interface, see TN2312BP IP Server Interface on page 204.
Ethernet switch
An Ethernet switch provides the connectivity between the servers and the IPSI circuit packs that reside in
some PNs. For duplex reliability, one Ethernet switch is provided. For high and critical reliability, the
Ethernet switches are duplicated. The S8700 Media Server supports two Ethernet connections to the
Ethernet switch in the control network.
The S8700 Media Server always requires an Avaya (P13X or P33X) Ethernet switch as part of the control
complex. The Avaya Ethernet switch extends Ethernet connectivity to the PN where it connects to an
IPSI. One Ethernet switch is required for duplex reliability. Two are required for high or critical reliability
(voice bearer over CSS or ATM only). If desired, customer-provided non-Avaya Ethernet switches can be
substituted for Avaya Ethernet switches.
Although the S8700 Media Server control network does not have to be a dedicated one, an installation
that uses a dedicated set of Ethernet switches provides simplicity and greater reliability.
See Figure 19, Avaya Ethernet switch, on page 73 for an example of an Avaya Ethernet switch.
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Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 73
December 2003
Figure 19: Avaya Ethernet switch
UPS or power backup
S8700 Media Servers always require power backup. Power backup is required to avoid power problems
and to ensure graceful shutdown of the system processes if the power fails. The Avaya 700-VA UPS
provides approximately 30 minutes of power backup. Combinations of battery extension modules and a
1500-VA UPS provide up to eight hours of power backup. See Avaya UPS’s section for more
information.
The Avaya UPS units use SNMP traps to send an alarm when power fails. Before the batteries are
completely drained, an SNMP trap is sent that initiates a graceful shutdown process of the Linux server,
including the call processing software. When a separate 48V-DC battery string is used, it might be
possible to send an alarm when voltage is below a threshold but shutdown will not be mechanized.
USB modem
Each S8700 Media Server requires a Universal Serial Bus (USB) modem for maintenance access and to
call out an alarm. The modems can share a common phone line if the S8700 Media Servers are co-
located. When the S8700 Media Servers are separated an additional phone line will be required.
Incoming calls are answered by the on-line server. The callers can access the off-line server via a telnet
session. Each modem connects to a USB port on the S8700 Media Server. The USB modems used must
conform to the Communication Device Class (CDC) specification, and usually to the Abstract Control
Model (ACM) sub-class. Any modem that does not comply with the specification will not work with the
driver that the S8700 Media Server provides.
Media gateways
The Avaya G650 Media Gateway is the preferred gateway for new installations of the S8700 Media
Server. For migrations from an existing Avaya solution, and additions to an existing Avaya solution, the
type of gateway that will be supported depends on the configuration. For the voice bearer over CSS or
ATM, the G350, G650, MCC1, SCC1, and G700 media gateways are supported. For the voice bearer
over IP the G350, G650, G600, G700, and CMC1 media gateways are supported.The following section
offers a high-level description of each of the media gateways.
The G650 Media Gateway
The Avaya G650 Media Gateway is a fourteen slot, rack mounted carrier configured for TN format
circuit packs. The G650 is 8U high (14 inches (35.6 centimeters)) and mounts in a standard 19 inch (48.3
centimeters) data rack. The G650 uses one or two 655A power supplies, operating on either AC and DC
input power. Either power supply can provide all the power needed by the G650. When two power
supplies exist, they share the power load. One power supply can operate on AC power and the other on
DC power. The system will always use AC power if available.
See Figure 20, G650 Media Gateway, on page 74 for an example of a stack of G650 Media Gateways
mounted in a data rack.
25
EXPANSION
SLOT 33
FIV
29
37
LNK OPR PWR
COL Tx Rx FC 100M LAG
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19
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Cajun P120
swdcp120 KLC 031902
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
74 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 20: G650 Media Gateway
Figure notes
Number Description
1 & 2 S8700 Media Servers
3 Ethernet switch
4 & 5 UPS units: one for each server
6 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "A"
7 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "B"
8 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "C"
9 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "D"
10 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "E"
1
1
13
12
24
CONSOLE
1
2
1
2
msdlrck3 LAO 081203
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
E
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
D
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
C
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
B
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
A
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 75
December 2003
For more information about the Avaya G650 Media Gateway, see Avaya G650 Media Gateway.
The MCC1 Media Gateway (voice bearer over ATM or CSS only)
The MCC1 Media Gateway can contain up to five carriers. The MCC1 Media Gateway uses circuit
packs. Doors on the front and on the rear of the cabinet protect internal equipment and allow easy access
to circuit packs. The MCC1 Media Gateway can contain the following carriers:
A Port Carrier can that contains one or more of the following:
Port circuit packs
— IPSI
VoIP conversion resources
Service circuit packs
Tone clocks
Expansion Interface (EI) circuit packs
A Switch Node Carrier that contains Switch Node Interface circuit packs that compose the Center
Stage Switch (CSS).
An Expansion Control Carrier that contains service slots and port slots.
See Figure 21, MCC1 Media Gateway, on page 76 for an example of the MCC1 Media Gateway.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
76 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 21: MCC1 Media Gateway
For more information, see the MCC1 Media Gateway.
Figure notes
Number Description
1Carrier in position C
2Carrier in position B
3Carrier in position A
4Fan unit
5Carrier in position D
6Carrier in position E
7Power-distribution unit
lcdfpdui KLC 031202
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 77
December 2003
SCC1 Media Gateway (voice bearer over ATM or CSS only)
The SCC1 Media Gateway consists of a single carrier. Up to four SCC1 Media Gateways can be
connected together in one location to form a PN. The SCC1 Media Gateway provides vertical slots for
circuit packs. Rear cabinet clips connect the cabinets together. A ground plate connects the stacked
cabinets for ground integrity. There are two types of SCC1 Media Gateways:
An Expansion Control Cabinet that contains service slots and port slots.
A Port Cabinet that contains ports and interfaces to an Expansion Control Cabinet.
See Figure 22, Typical SCC1 Media Gateway, on page 77 for an example of the SCC1 Media Gateway.
Figure 22: Typical SCC1 Media Gateway
For more information, see SCC1 Media Gateway on page 150.
CMC1 Media Gateway (voice bearer over IP only)
The CMC1 Media Gateway can be mounted on a wall or on the floor, and uses an AC-only power supply.
The control carrier contains two control slots, one for a processor (not used) and the other for the IPSI
(TN2312BP). Slots 3 to 10 can contain optional port circuit packs and service circuit packs.
See Figure 23, CMC1 Media Gateway, on page 78 for an example of the CMC1 Media Gateway.
Figure notes
Number Description
1Circuit packs
2Power converter
3Air circulation vents
scdfscci KLC 032502
1
2
3
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
78 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 23: CMC1 Media Gateway
For more information on the CMC1 Media Gateway see CMC1 Media Gateway on page 147.
G600 Media Gateway (voice bearer over IP only)
A G600 Media Gateway has the following characteristics:
19 inches wide, 13 inches high, and 21 inches deep
10 universal slots and one power-supply slot
AC-powered only
There are no internal batteries, and internal DC power is not an option. However, external DC
powering or a UPS is supported.
Its circuit packs are inserted and removed from the front of the cabinet.
Cabinet I/O is through the back and through a front cable pass-through slot on the right.
A PN has the following characteristics:
Contains up to 4 G600 Media Gateways
The first G600 is designated "A." Optional second, third, and fourth G600s are designated
"B," "C," and "D" respectively.
Must reside in the same 19-inch data rack due to TDM-cable length
A maximum of 64 port networks
Recommended RJ45 patch panel for cross-connecting to LAN or 110 hardware.
scdflef2 LJK 083100
MAJ
MIN
ON
OFF
AMBERCARDIN USE
REDEMERXFERONEMXFR
AUTO
T
N
2
4
0
2
T
N
2
1
8
2
T
N
2
1
8
2
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 79
December 2003
The Figure 24, G600 Media Gateway, on page 79 for an example of a G600 Media Gateway.
Figure 24: G600 Media Gateway
For more information, see G600 Media Gateway on page 127.
G700 Media Gateway
The G700 Media Gateway is not a PN by itself. The G700 Media Gateway is connected to the S8700
Media Server through the CLAN that resides in the SCC1, MCC1, CMC1, G600, or G650 Media
Gateway. One S8700 Media Server can support a maximum of 250 G700 Media Gateways with up to 10
in one stack. The stack can be mixed with Avaya P330 devices such as the P333T, P333R, and P334.
For more information, see Avaya G700 Media Gateway on page 139.
Reliability
Reliability when sending voice bearer over IP
The following are supported with the S8700 Media Server when sending voice bearer over IP:
Duplex reliability
High reliability
Duplex-Reliability when sending voice bearer over IP
The S8700 Media Server is duplicated. Tone-Clock functionality is provided by the IPSI circuit pack in
each PN. As an all-IP solution, only IP connected port networks are supported.
See Figure 25, Duplex-reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over IP, on page 80 for an
example of a duplex-reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over IP.
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
scdlip60 KLC 031302
12
345678910
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
TN2302
650A
CLK
S
E
R
V
I
C
E
N
E
T
W
O
R
K
TN2312
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
80 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 25: Duplex-reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over IP
112
13 24
CONSOLE
cyms0001 LAO 081203
1
1
1
1 2
2
2
3
4 4
5
7 7
PN 1
8 8
PN 2
8PN
10
IPSI IPSI
9 9
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
9
IPSI
111111
PN 1
8 8
PN 2
8PN
IPSI IPSI
9 9
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
9
IPSI
111111
BB B
AA A
112
13 24
CONSOLE
66
5
2
Figure notes
Number Description of Connection
1 & 2 S8700 Media Server pair. One in a active mode and the other on standby.
3 Duplication Links: The Ethernet connection default Ethernet 2 and the fiber link
4 A dedicated Ethernet connection to a laptop. This connection is active only during on-site
administration or maintenance and the services interface can link to the standby server through a telnet
session.
5 Connection from the servers to the Ethernet switch.
6 Ethernet Switch – A device that provides port multiplication on a LAN by creating more than one
network segment. In an IP-Connect environment, the Ethernet switch should support 802.1 ip/Q,
VLAN and 10-/100-Mbps.
7 Two UPS units
8 Port Network – An optional configuration of Media Gateways that provides increased port capacity.
9 IPSI – A circuit pack that transports control messages over IP. This IPSI circuit pack is used so the
S8700 Media Server can communicate with the PNs.
10 Customer LAN
11 Control Lan Interface (C-LAN) - A circuit pack that provides call control for every IP endpoint that is
connected to the media server using an Avaya media gateway.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 81
December 2003
High-reliability when sending voice bearer over IP
The high-reliability configuration option builds on the duplex reliability option. The high-reliability
duplicates components so that no single point of failure exists in the control network. The high-reliability
configuration consists of the following:
Two S8700 Media Servers
Two IPSI circuit packs in each IPSI-connected port network
Two Ethernet switches
Two UPS units
See Figure 26, High-reliability when sending voice bearer over IP, on page 82 for an example of a high-
reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over IP.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
82 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 26: High-reliability when sending voice bearer over IP
112
13 24
CONSOLE
cyms0001 LAO 081203
1
1
1
1 2
2
2
3
4 4
5
7 7
PN 1
8 8 PN 2 8PN
10
IPSI IPSI
9 9
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
9
IPSI
111111
PN 1
8 8 PN 2 8PN
IPSI IPSI
9 9
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
9
IPSI
111111
BB B
AA A
112
13 24
CONSOLE
66
5
2
Figure notes
Number Description of Connection
1 & 2 S8700 Media Server pair. One in a active mode and the other on standby.
3 Duplication Links: The Ethernet connection default Ethernet 2 and the fiber link
4 A dedicated Ethernet connection to a laptop. This connection is active only during on-site
administration or maintenance and the services interface can link to the standby server through a telnet
session.
5 Connection from the servers to the Ethernet switch.
6 Ethernet Switch – A device that provides port multiplication on a LAN by creating more than one
network segment. In an IP-Connect environment, the Ethernet switch should support 802.1 ip/Q, VLAN
and 10-/100-Mbps.
7 Two UPS units
8 Port Network – An optional configuration of Media Gateways that provides increased port capacity.
9 IPSI – A circuit pack that transports control messages over IP. This IPSI circuit pack is used so the
S8700 Media Server can communicate with the PNs.
10 Customer LAN
11 Control Lan Interface (C-LAN) - A circuit pack that provides call control for every IP endpoint that is
connected to the media server using an Avaya media gateway.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 83
December 2003
Reliability when sending voice bearer over
ATM or CSS
The following are supported with the S8700 Media Server when sending voice bearer over ATM or CSS:
Duplex-reliability
High-reliability
Critical-reliability
Duplex-Reliability when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM
The duplex-reliability option is the most basic option. A duplex-reliability configuration consists of the
following:
Two S8700 Media Servers
One Ethernet switch
One UPS unit for each S8700 Media Server. The use of two UPS units ensures that a single UPS
failure or repair operation will not disable the system.
One IPSI in each IPSI-connected port network.
Voice and data bearer traffic between port networks is carried on a simplex network that is made up of
one Expansion Interface (EI) in each port network. Avaya offers different types of EI circuit packs, one
for CSS, one for ATM. The EIs are cabled with lightguide fiber to either the Center Stage Switch (CSS)
or an Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) switch.
See Figure 27, Duplex-reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM, on page 84
for an example of a duplex-reliability when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
84 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 27: Duplex-reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM
Figure notes
Number Description of the Connection
1The Administration PC can be used to access the S8700 Media Server over the
corporate LAN.
2Corporate LAN.
3Corporate LAN interface: default Ethernet 4— The Ethernet link from the S8700
Media Server to the LAN. Used for administration and can be used for alarming by
way of Simple Network Message Protocol (SNMP) traps.
The Ethernet connection to the corporate LAN in this figure is a non-dedicated
network. IP addresses for the various components of the S8700 Media Server must be
administered with care to prevent conflicts with other equipment that shares the LAN.
4The S8700 Media Servers pair, one server in an active mode and the other server on
standby.
5Duplication links: The Ethernet link, default Ethernet 2, and the fiber link.
112
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cydsmar2 LAO 022503
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1
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2
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6 6
7
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9 9
PN 1
10 PN 2
10 PN
10
12 12 12
IPSI IPSI
11 11
100bT
LINK
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LINK
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LINK
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BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
IPSI
11
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 85
December 2003
High-Reliability when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM
The high-reliability configuration option builds on the duplex reliability option. The high-reliability
duplicates components so that no single point of failure exists in the control network. The high-reliability
configuration consists of the following:
Two S8700 Media Servers
Two IPSI circuit packs in each IPSI-connected port network
Two Ethernet switches
Two UPS units
Voice and data bearer traffic between port networks is carried on a simplex network that is made up of
one Expansion Interface (EI) in each port network. Avaya offers different types of EI circuit packs, one
for CSS, one for ATM. The EIs are cabled with lightguide fiber to either the Center Stage Switch (CSS)
or an Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) switch.
See Figure 28, High-reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM, on page 86
for an example of a high-reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM.
6Services interface: default Ethernet 1-The server’s dedicated Ethernet connection from
the S8700 Media Server to a laptop. This link is active only during on-site
administration or onsite maintenance.
7Network control A interface: default Ethernet 0-The server’s Ethernet connection to
one or two Ethernet switches. This private LAN carries the control signals for the PNs.
8Ethernet switch — at least one Ethernet switch is required to support the S8700 Media
Server’s control network. If many PNs are present, two Ethernet switches may be
daisy-chained together to provide sufficient Ethernet connections to the IPSI boards in
the PNs.
9UPS — Keeps the S8700 Media Servers and Ethernet switches functional during brief
power outages.
10 PN — Provides the telecommunications functions of the S8700 Media Server.
11 IPSI — The IPSI circuit pack carries the control network signals to the PNs and
provides tone clock functionality.
12 Bearer connectivity
Figure notes
Number Description of the Connection
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
86 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 28: High-reliability configuration when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM
Figure notes
Number Description of Connection
1Administration PC — Used to access S8700 Media Server over the corporate
LAN.
2Corporate LAN.
3Corporate LAN interface: default Ethernet 4 —The Ethernet link from the
S8700 Media Server to the LAN. Used for administration and can be used for
alarming by way of the Simple Network Message Protocol (SNMP) traps.
4S8700 Media Server — Two are always present. One in active mode and the
other on standby.
IPSI
PN 1
11
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PN 2
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BBI
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PN
cydsmar1 LAO 022503
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6 6
78
9 9
11
10 10
13
13 13
100bT
LINK
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RCV
12
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 87
December 2003
5Duplication Links: The Ethernet link, default Ethernet 2, and the fiber link.
6Services interface: default Ethernet 1-The server’s dedicated Ethernet
connection from the S8700 Media Server to a Services laptop. This link is
active only during onsite administration or onsite maintenance.
7Network control A interface: default Ethernet 0-The server’s Ethernet
connection to one or two Ethernet switches. This private LAN carries the
control signals for the PNs when possible. Control network A is considered the
primary control network because it connects to the primary IPSI board in a PN.
8Network control B interface: default Ethernet 3-The S8700 Media Server’s
Ethernet connection to a duplicated set of Ethernet switches.
This private LAN carries control signals for the PNs when the primary control
network is unavailable.
Control network B connects to the secondary IPSI board in a PN. When the
problem is resolved, primary control is returned to control network A.
9Ethernet switch — At least one is required to support each control network.
10 UPS — Keeps the S8700 Media Servers and Ethernet switches functional
during brief power outages. Usually, UPS one powers server one and the
Ethernet switch associated with it. UPS two powers server two and the Ethernet
switch associated with it.
11 PN — Provides the telecommunications functions of the S8700 Media Server.
For high reliability, each IPSI-connected PN contains a pair of IPSI circuit
packs. This pair consists of, one primary circuit pack, and a duplicate
secondary circuit pack as a backup.
For critical reliability, the bearer network, among the port networks is also
duplicated. Two EI circuit packs or two ATM circuit packs are present in each
PN instead of just one.
12 IPSI — The IPSI circuit pack is duplicated in every IPSI-connected PN in a
high- or critical-reliability configuration.
The secondary IPSI is connected to control network B. The secondary IPSI
takes over in case of problems with the primary control network. The S8700
Media Server regularly tests the duplicated IPSI to make sure it is ready for
service.
13 Bearer Connectivity
Figure notes
Number Description of Connection
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
88 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Critical-Reliability when sending voice bearer over CSS or ATM
The critical-reliability configuration option is similar to the high-reliability configuration option. In
addition, the critical-reliability configuration duplicates the bearer network channels among the PNs.
Like the high-reliability configuration, the critical-reliability configuration consists of the following:
Two S8700 Media Servers
Two IPSI circuit packs in each IPSI-connected port network
Two Ethernet switches
Two UPS units
Voice and data bearer traffic between port networks is carried on a duplex network that is made up of two
Expansion Interface (EI) in each port network. The EIs are cabled with lightguide fiber to either a
duplicated Center Stage Switch (CSS) or a duplicated Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) switch.
Connectivity
Connectivity for the S8700 Media Server depends on the method by which the voice bearer is being
transmitted.
Connectivity when sending voice bearer over
ATM or CSS
Port Networks
A new configuration consists of the G650 Media Gateways for all port networks. The MCC1 Media
Gateway or the SCC1 Media Gateway are used for migrating configurations, and for configurations
experiencing growth. For migrations from the DEFINITY® Server to the S8700 processor, the MCC1
cabinet that was the Processor Port Network (PPN) will be converted to a PN by replacing the control
carriers with port carriers.
The IPSI extends Ethernet control by connecting the S8700 Media Server processor to the PNs. The IPSI
replaces the TN2182B tone clock in each of the PNs that are connected by an IPSI. Not all PNs require
the IPSI board. One IPSI-connected PN can control up to four other PNs.
CSS Network
The CSS is a connection hub that provides PN communication. A CSS can be used when more then three
port networks are needed. Often the CSS is incorporated into smaller configurations to allow for growth.
The CSS consists of from one to three switch nodes (SN). SNs are composed of one or two switch node
carriers, depending on whether the solution is being duplicated for critical reliability. PN expansion
depends on internal SN-to-SN traffic, according to the following guidelines:
One SN expands from 1 to up to 15 PNs.
Two SNs expands to up to 29 PNs.
Three SNs expands to up to 44 PNs.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 89
December 2003
ATM Network
The Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) switch is a replacement option for the CSS or for the direct-
connect switch. Several Avaya ATM switch types can provide port network connectivity. Non-Avaya
ATM switches that comply with the ATM standards that are set by the European Union can also provide
port network connectivity.
When the voice bearer is sent over ATM, ATM port-network connectivity (ATM-PNC) allows any ATM
switch or ATM network that complies with specified standards and capacities to serve as the means to
connect to the PN. In this type of configuration, the ATM switch or network replaces the CSS. ATM-PNC
is used to connect port networks within a single switch. The (WAN) spare processor is not supported.
Connectivity when sending voice bearer over
IP
Sending the voice bearer over IP uses IP connectivity between PNs. An existing VOIP-ready IP
infrastructure can be used. This solution saves customers the cost of building a separate telephony
network.
S8700 recoverability
In addition to the high reliability of the duplicated S8700 Media Servers, the S8300 Media Server in a
Local Survivable Processor (LSP) configuration and a survivable remote EPN can be used to provide
survivability. Additional recovery capability is embedded in the Communication Manager software that
resides on the S8700 Media Server.
S8300 Media Server in an LSP mode
The LSP is located in the G700 Media Gateway and provides survivability when the S8700 Media Server
is inaccessible. Each S8700 Media Server can have up to 50 LSPs. The LSP has a copy of the S8700
Media Server customer translations. The translations are updated regularly from the S8700 Media Server
using a virtual link through a IP network. Typically, all LSPs are in idle mode, where the LSP is not
processing any calls. When the Media Gateway’s Processor (MGP) or IP endpoints perceive the Avaya
media server to be unreachable, the MGP or IP endpoints will attempt to register with an LSP. The LSP
does not actively take over when the primary controller becomes unreachable, but waits for MGPs and IP
endpoints to register with it. Switchback from the LSP to the primary Avaya media server is a manual
operation requiring a reset 3 command on the LSP.
Power outages
In most cases an Avaya solution can recover from a power outage or other failure instantly, regardless of
the source of the failure. Each PN includes a set of segmented, parallel buses. If one of the paired
segments fails, the other bus segment continues to handle communications. The UPS units supply power
to the control complex.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
90 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Survivable Remote EPN (voice bearer over
CSS only)
The Survivable Remote Expansion Port Network (SREPN) allows either an MCC1 PN or SCC1 PN to
provide service to the customer when connectivity links fail. When the links to the PN are restored and
stable, a logic switch in the SREPN is manually reset and the PN is reconnected to the links from the
switch. The logic switch can either be reset locally at the SREPN or reset remotely by way of a dial-up
connection to the SREPN.
The SREPN must be administered separately, not as a duplicated PN, to be able to recover after a failure.
It does not function as a SREPN without the administration of stations, trunks, and features to support its
operation. SREPN is not compatible with ATM port-network connectivity (ATM-PNC).
An SREPN cannot be an IPSI connected PN.
High-level capabilities
The S8700 Media Server provides a large scale solution with a high number of endpoints. Specifically, it
supports the following high-level capabilities.
The following table gives high-level information about S8700 Media Server capabilities.
Table 3: High-level capabilities
Capability Description
Call processing feature set Communication Manager
Duplication options available Voice bearer over IP: Duplex, and high
Voice bearer over CSS or ATM: Duplex, high,
and critical
Port Network connectivity Voice bearer over IP: IP
Voice bearer over CSS or ATM: Center Stage
Switch (CSS) or ATM, or Direct
Supported Media Gateways Voice bearer over IP: G350, G650, G600, CMC1
and G700
Voice bearer over CSS or ATM: G350, G650,
SCC1, MCC1 and G700
Maximum number of Port Networks (PN) Voice bearer over IP: 64
Voice bearer over CSS or ATM:
44 – Center Stage Switch (CSS)
or
64 – ATM-PNC
Survivability options Voice bearer over IP: LSP
Voice bearer over CSS or ATM: SRP and LSP
LSP options S8300 Media Server in a Local Survivable
Processor (LSP) configuration (maximum of 50)
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 91
December 2003
For more detailed system capacity information refer to the Avaya MultiVantage Solutions System
Capacities Table (555-233-605). The Avaya MultiVantage Solutions System Capacities Table can be
found on the http://support.avaya.com Web site.
BHCC capacity for S8700 Media Server
The following is information about busy-hour call completion (BHCC) capacities for the S8700 Media
Server. The values are based on current available data and may change as more data becomes available.
S8700 Media Server with MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateways light call mix - 100% analog
station-to-station
300,000 BHCC
250 Media Gateways
36,000 - analog stations
8,000 trunks.
S8700 Media Server with MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateways general call mix - analog,
DCP stations, and PRI trunks
220,000 BHCC
250 Media Gateways
36,000 analog and DCP stations
8,000 trunks.
S8700 Media Server with MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateways - IP endpoints and PRI
trunks
100,000 BHCC
250 Media Gateways
12,000 IP endpoints
450 IP endpoints per CLAN board.
Port Networks per IPSI Up to five
Note: A high- or critical-reliability configuration
requires two IPSIs per IPSI-connected PN.
Modem calls Supported
Wideband connections Supported
Table 3: High-level capabilities
Capability Description
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
92 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
S8700 Media Server with MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateways and contact center - analog,
DCP stations, and PRI trunks
"Low" Contact Center Usage - 75,000 BHCC (low = simple vectors, minimal skill level use -
skills-based routing is listed under "High")
"Typical" Contact Center Usage - 40,000 BHCC
"High" Contact Center Usage - 25,000 BHCC (high = pre-routed calls, BSR with many skill
levels, heavily linked vectors, long speed to answer and many different announcements).
S8700 Media Server with MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateways and contact center - IP
endpoints and PRI trunks
"Low" Contact Center Usage - 65,000 BHCC (low = simple vectors, minimal skill level use -
skills-based routing is listed under "High")
"Typical" Contact Center Usage - 35,000 BHCC
"High" Contact Center Usage - 25,000 BHCC (high = pre-routed calls, BSR with many skill
levels, heavily linked vectors, long speed to answer and many different announcements).
S8700 Media Server with G700 Media Gateway (IP endpoints) and MCC1/SCC1/G600
Media Gateways - (DCP stations) general call mix
90% MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway processing and 10% G700 processing - 202,000 BHCC
(198,000 MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway BHCC and 4,000 BHCC G700 Media Gateway).
50% MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway processing and 50% G700 processing - 130,000 BHCC
(110,000 MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway BHCC and 20,000 BHCC G700 Media Gateway).
S8700 Media Server with G700 Media Gateway - IP endpoints and PRI trunks
90% MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway processing and 10% G700 processing - 94,000 BHCC
(90,000 MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway BHCC and 4,000 BHCC G700 Media Gateway).
50% MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway processing and 50% G700 processing - 70,000 BHCC
50,000 MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway BHCC and 20,000 BHCC G700 Media Gateway).
S8700 Media Server with G700 Media Gateway and MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateways -
contact center - low usage
90% MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway processing and 10% G700 processing - 71,000 BHCC
(68,000 MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway BHCC and 3,000 BHCC G700 Media Gateway).
50% MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway processing and 50% G700 processing - 50,000 BHCC
(37,000 MCC1/SCC1/G600 Media Gateway BHCC and 13,000 BHCC G700 Media Gateway).
NOTE:
Any configuration that includes IP Solutions applications such as Road Warrior,
Telecommuter, or H.322 trunking, has an impact on the BHCCs and processor capacity. If
a customer uses these applications in a high traffic solution, it is recommended that the
Avaya Technology and Consulting (ATAC) team be involved to review any potential
impact on traffic.
The information in this table represents the maximum number of calls the S8700 Media Server could
execute, assuming it was unconstrained by other factors such as:
TDM bus limitations
Call duration
Small number of telephones
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 93
December 2003
We assume processor occupancy of 0.90, at which various delay criteria such as cut through is preserved,
and is just at the threshold where call could no longer be processed.
System management
Avaya Integrated Management suite
The Avaya Integrated Management Suite offers a comprehensive set of Web-based network and system
management solutions that support the Avaya converged voice solutions. Integrated Management
combines individual applications into five offers:
Standard Management
Standard Management Solutions Plus
MultiService Network Management
Enhanced Converged Management
Advanced Converged Management
For more detailed information on the Avaya Integrated Management Suite see:
http://www.avaya.com >Products and Services > Products A-Z
S8700 Media Server Web interface
The S8700 Media Server uses a media server Web interface to perform a wide variety of functions. This
browser-based tool uses a Graphical User Interface (GUI) for performing server administration tasks such
as:
Backups and restores for customer data
Provides easy access to view current alarms
The ability to perform server maintenance including busy out and release busy out, shutdown, and
status of the S8700 Media Server.
Security commands that will enable and disable the modem, start and stop FTP server, and view
license.
SNMP access to configure trap destinations, stop and start the master agent.
S8700 Media Server configuration information and upgrade access.
The Web interface contains an extensive help system that describes all the Web screens and fields.
Avaya S8700 Media Server with an Avaya G650 Media Gateway
94 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Adjuncts
This is a partial list of the adjuncts that Avaya provides:
Voice messaging and response such as INTUITY AUDIX.
Call center tools such as Avaya Call Management System, NICE Analyzer, Avaya Call
Recording, Avaya Visual Vectors and Avaya Basic Call Management System Reporting Desktop.
System printer is supported with the use of a terminal server.
Journal printer is supported with the use of a terminal server.
Call Accounting Systems is supported with the use of a terminal server.
Call Detail Recording (CDR) is supported with the use of a terminal server.
ASA is supported with the use of a terminal server.
DEFINITY Network Management (DNM)
DEFINITY Translator ATM Manager (DTA)
DEFINITY Server SI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 95
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DEFINITY Server SI
Overview
Avaya™ Communication Manager on a DEFINITY® Server SI offers a high-level operating system,
open interfaces, and distributed processing. DEFINITY Server SI provides circuit-switched voice
communications and Internet Protocol (IP) telephony including voice and data network integration,
unified messaging, and multimedia conferencing and collaboration. Because DEFINITY Server R is part
of Avaya’s Enterprise Class IP Solutions family, it is designed to work with other Avaya products to
create a complete IP solution.
All major hardware is contained in a multicarrier cabinet (MCC1) that hold up to five carriers or
stackable single-carrier cabinets (SCC1s). The solution enables high-speed connections between analog
and digital trunks, data lines connected to host computers, data-entry terminals, personal computers, and
IP network addresses. See the following figure for an example of a DEFINITY Server SI solution.
Figure 29: DEFINITY Server SI with Communication Manager
DEFINITY
Multimedia
call center
Voice terminal
Attendant
console
Data
terminal
Management
terminal
Voice
messaging
system
Outside private
line data
transmission
equipment
Digital
facilities
Analog
facilities
AUDIX
DEFINITY Wireless
Business System
Voice terminal
with data module
Data terminal
Host
computer
Data
terminals
cydfdgsw LJK 071497
DEFINITY Server SI
96 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Detailed description
The DEFINITY Server SI with Avaya Communication Manager provides a common architecture
platform across all supported line sizes. The Processor Port Network (PPN) is the master controller of the
system. The Expansion Port Network (EPN) contains line ports and trunk ports. The universal port
hardware allows station circuit packs, trunk circuit packs, and service circuit packs to be installed in any
available slot.
DEFINITY Server SI with Communication Manager provides:
Scalable applications for messaging, conferencing, collaboration, call centers, mobility, and
remote users.
Control of operational costs through the use of networking and management solutions
A simple process for adding features. Add a circuit pack and use the graphical user interface
(GUI) to administer it.
Cost-effective and distributed switching arrangements in both LANs and WANs.
Converged network environments through the use of IP and Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
protocols and services
Time Division Multiplex (TDM) transmission and switching infrastructures for both LANs and
WANs. TDM supports analog, digital, and IP endpoints, both trunking and station, and an IP
interface to a LAN or WAN.
Configuration information
The following are main system components:
Avaya Communication Manager. For information about Avaya Communication Manager, see the
Overview for Avaya Communication Manager, 555-233-767.
A Processor Port Network (PPN) with a Switch Processing Element (SPE) and Port Network
(PN).
The 631DA power unit and 631DB power unit for AC power.
The 649A power unit for DC power
The Control Carrier
The DEFINITY Server SI can use the following Media Gateways:
SCC1, including power supplies for AC power or DC power
SCC1 Media Gateway on page 150
MCC1, including power supplies for AC power or DC power
MCC1 Media Gateway on page 159
Circuit Packs
The TN2404 processor
The TN2401 network control and packet interface (NetPkt)
TN768, TN780, or TN2182 tone clock
Each of the main components is described in the following section.
DEFINITY Server SI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 97
December 2003
Processor Port Network and Switch Processing Element
The PPN is a DEFINITY Server SI configuration of carriers that contains the following control complex
SPE of the system and port interfaces. The control complex consists of three circuit packs:
The TN2404 RISC processor
The TN2401 Network controller
The TN2182, TN780 or TN768 tone clock board.
All of the control circuit packs reside in the control carrier within the PPN. Additional optional circuit
packs might be needed such as the TN799DP C-LAN board which provides TCP/IP connectivity and the
TN765 Processor Interface for BX.25 connectivity. For high- and critical-
reliability systems, the TN792 Duplication Interface pack is used.
When a telephone goes off-hook or signals call initiation, the SPE receives a signal from the port circuit
that is connected to the device. The digits of the called number are collected, and the switch is set up to
make a connection between the calling device and the called devices.
The following figure shows a direct-connect system with an SPE in the PPN. Buses route voice and data
calls between external trunks and external lines.
DEFINITY Server SI
98 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Figure 30: Components of a DEFINITY Server SI Configuration
Port Network
The Port Network (PN) consists of the following components:
Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) bus: The TDM bus has 484 time slots, 23 B channels, and 1 D
channel available per bus. The TDM bus runs internally throughout each PN and terminates on
each end. The TDM bus consists of two 8-bit parallel buses, bus A and bus B. Bus A and bus B
carry switched digitized voice and data signals and control signals to all port circuits and between
port circuits and the SPE. The port circuits place digitized voice signals and data signals on a
TDM bus. Bus A and bus B are typically active simultaneously.
Packet bus: The packet bus runs internally throughout each PN and terminates on each end. The
packet bus is an 18-bit parallel bus that carries logical links and control messages from the SPE,
through port circuits, to endpoints such as terminals and adjuncts. The packet bus carries logical
links for both on-switch and off-switch control between some specific port circuits in the system;
for example, D-channels, X.25, and remote management terminals.
PPN
Processor bus
SPE
Processor Memory
Ports
Ports
Ports Ports
Expansion I/O
Expansion I/OExpansion I/OExpansion I/OExpansion I/O
Fiber optic cable
Expansion I/O
Maintenance Maintenance
EPN EPN
Packet
bus TDM
bus
Terminal
Terminal Terminal
External trunks,
lines, and IP
addresses
External
trunks, lines,
and IP
addresses
External
trunks, lines,
and IP
addresses
External
trunks, lines,
and IP
addresses
Network Control/
Packet Interface
Packet
bus Packet
bus
TDM bus TDM bus
cydfcss3 LJK 022299
DEFINITY Server SI
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Port circuits: The port circuits form analog/digital interfaces between the PN and external trunks
and devices that provide links between these devices and the TDM bus and packet bus. Incoming
analog signals are converted to pulse-code modulated (PCM) digital signals and placed on the
TDM bus by port circuits. Port circuits convert outgoing signals from PCM to analog for external
analog devices. All port circuits connect to the TDM bus. Only specific ports connect to the
packet bus.
Interface circuits: Interface circuits are types of port circuits that reside in the PPN and each EPN.
Interface circuits terminate fiber optic cables that connect TDM buses and the packet bus from the
PPN cabinet to the TDM bus and packet bus of each EPN cabinet.
An Expansion Interface (EI) circuit pack also terminates:
Each end of a cable connecting the PPN to an EPN
Each end of a cable that connects an EPN to another EPN
The PN end of a cable connected between a PN carrier and an SN carrier.
A Switch Node Interface (SNI) circuit pack terminates the SN carrier end of a cable that is
connected between an SN carrier and a PN.
Service circuits connect to an external terminal to monitor, maintain, and troubleshoot the system.
Service circuits also provide tone production and detection, call classification, recorded
announcements, and speech synthesis.
Carriers
Carriers hold circuit packs and connect them to power, the TDM bus, and the packet bus. There are five
types:
Control carrier (PPN cabinet only)
Optional duplicated control carrier (PPN cabinet only)
Optional port carrier (PPN and/or EPN cabinets)
Optional expansion control carrier (EPN cabinets only)
Optional switch node carrier (PPN and/or EPN cabinets)
Cabinets
The system cabinets contain the carriers and all other components, including the power supply. A cabinet
contains at least one carrier in an enclosed shelf with vertical slots to hold circuit packs. The circuit packs
fit into connectors that attach to the rear of the slots. There are two cabinet types:
Single-carrier cabinet (SCC1)
Multicarrier cabinet (MCC1)
Single-carrier cabinets
Up to three single-carrier cabinets (SCC1s) can be stacked to form a single PN. Refer to the following
figure.
Single-carrier cabinets come in any of four configurations:
A basic control cabinet that contains a TN2404 processor, tone clock, and a power converter
An expansion control cabinet that contains additional port circuit packs, interfaces to the PPN, a
maintenance interface, and a power converter
A duplicated control cabinet that contains the same equipment as the basic control cabinet
A port cabinet that contains port circuit packs and a power converter
DEFINITY Server SI
100 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Figure 31: Typical single-carrier cabinet (SCC1)
Multicarrier cabinets
A multicarrier cabinet (MCC1) is a 70-in. (178-cm) cabinet that has up to five carriers. See the following
figure for an example of an MCC1. The following are the three types of multicarrier cabinets:
A PPN cabinet that contains the ports, SPE, an interface to an EPN cabinet, and/or a CSS.
An EPN cabinet that contains additional ports, interfaces to the PPN and other EPN cabinets, the
maintenance interface, optional interfaces to other EPN cabinets, a switch node (in an SN in a
CSS-connected system), or an ATM switch.
An auxiliary cabinet that contains that is equipment used for optional, system-related hardware,
such as rack-mounted equipment.
Figure 32: Typical multicarrier cabinet (MCC1)
Air circulatio
n
vents
scdf001 KLC 0605
97
Circuit packs
Power
converter
“C” position carrier
“B” position carrier
“A” position carrier
“F” position fan unit
“D” position carrier
“E” position carrier
Power distribution unit
lcdfpdu6 LJK 083100
DEFINITY Server SI
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Network Control and Packet Interface
The Network control and Packet interface communicates control channel messages between the
processor circuit pack and the distributed network of port circuit packs on the TDM bus. The NetPkt
circuit pack (TN2401) provides eight asynchronous data channels that process and route information
directly from the processor circuit pack to customer-connected equipment.
Options
Expansion Port Network
An Expansion Port Network (EPN) contains additional ports that increase the number of connections to
trunks and lines.
IP Media Processor
The IP Media Processor provides voice over internet protocol (VoIP) audio access to the switch for local
stations and outside trunks. The IP Media Processor provides audio processing for between 32 and 64
voice channels and supports hairpin connections, as well as shuffling of calls between IP direct
connections. The IP Media Processor can perform echo cancellation, silence suppression, FAX relay
service, and DTMF detection. The IP Media Processor can be updated using the firmware download
feature.
DEFINITY IP Solutions
DEFINITY IP Solutions brings together the flexibility of IP networks with the full feature functionality
of Communication Manager. IP Solutions provides:
Investment protection and optimization in IP and PSTN networks.
Full software applications, features, and management capabilities are carried into the IP
environment using Communication Manager.
Enhanced quality of service
Remote workers have full access to Communication Manager features from their PCs.
IP Solutions offers a feature that enables users to specify the quality of voice communications. With the
Quality of Service feature, users can administer and download the Differentiated Services Type-of-
Service value to optimize voice quality. The Quality of Service feature implements buffers in the audio-
processing circuit pack to reduce latency and helps some routers to prioritize audio traffic.
IP Solutions also introduces hairpin and IP-IP direct connections, two features that make voice
communications more efficient. Hairpin connections route the voice channel connecting two IP endpoints
so that the voice goes through the IP Media Processor circuit pack in IP format, thereby bypassing the
TDM bus. IP-IP direct connections route the voice channel connecting two IP endpoints by sending the
voice directly through the LAN or WAN between the two endpoints, instead of carrying a mixed
connection of IP signaling and TDM bus signaling
The following figure shows the trunk connects and line connections available with IP Solutions.
DEFINITY Server SI
102 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Figure 33: IP Solutions
The figure shows IP Solutions supports connectivity for IP trunks, IP softphones, and IP telephones.
DEFINITY IP Solutions is implemented using the TN2302AP, an IP Media Processor circuit pack inside
the switch. The TN2302AP IP Media Processor provides H.323 trunk connections and H.323 voice
processing for IP telephones. The features that use the TN2302AP circuit pack also require the TN799
C-LAN circuit pack.
NOTE:
The IP trunk that is used in R7 and the current TN2302AP H.323 trunks are not
interoperable. The TN2302AP H.323 in trunk mode cannot communicate with an R7 IP
trunk. However, the TN2302AP H.323 trunk can communicate with a TN802B circuit
pack.
Trunks
DEFINITY IP Solutions supports two trunk configurations:
H.323 IP trunk (IP Solutions mode)
IP trunk mode
IP trunks reduce expenses for long distance voice and FAX, facilitating global communications, provide a
full-function network with data and voice convergence, and use available network resources to optimize
investments.
PSTN
LAN/WAN
cydfipsl KLC 091901
Switch
C-LAN
C-LAN
C-LAN
DS1
TN2302
TN2302
TN2302
Switch
Switch
TN2302
TN2302 IP Softphone
or CentreVu IP Agent
Voice Terminal
IP Softphone
with H.323 voice application
H.323
Trunk
IP Trunk
LAN/WAN
DEFINITY Server SI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 103
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H.323 IP Trunk (IP Solutions mode)
The IP Media Processor circuit pack (TN2302AP) supports the H.323 version 2 protocol and operates
with H.323 version 2 endpoints, including stations, trunks, and gateways. An IP Media Processor circuit
pack uses IP connectivity between two DEFINITY or Avaya servers to enable H.323 trunk service using
IP connectivity. H.323 trunk groups can be configured as DEFINITY-specific tie trunks that support:
ISDN trunk features such as DCS+ and QSIG
Generic tie trunks that permit interconnection with H.323 v2-compliant switches from other
vendors
Direct-inward-dial (DID) type of “public” trunks providing access to the switch for unregistered
users.
The TN2302AP requires the TN799 for signaling.
The TN2302AP IP Media Processor is also used for H.323 VoIP applications.
IP Trunk mode
The IP Trunk mode allows trunk groups to be defined as DS1 tie lines between DEFINITY systems over
a customers data network. Each IP Interface circuit pack in IP Trunk mode provides a basic 12-port
package that can be expanded up to 30 ports.
Each TN802 or TN802B circuit pack in IP Trunk mode requires:
A connection to a modem
An incoming line for Avaya remote access
Direct access to the NT server on the hard disk using pcANYWHERE, version 8 or later.
The TN2302AP circuit pack does not require:
A connection to a modem
An incoming line
Access using pcANYWHERE.
A TN799B circuit pack
Connectivity
LAN Gateway
With the optional J58890MA-1List 2 LAN Gateway circuit pack assembly installed, the switch works
with PC/LAN-based communications applications that support the CallVisor Adjunct-Switch Application
Interface (ASAI).
C-LAN
TCP/IP connectivity is provided over Ethernet or Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) to adjuncts such as CMS
or INTUITY™ AUDIX®, and for DCS connectivity. The C-LAN circuit pack (TN799DP) provides a
“bridge” from the TDM bus to the packet bus on a DEFINITY server.
DEFINITY Server SI
104 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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IP Asynchronous Links using C-LAN
The IP Asynchronous Links feature enables the switch to transfer existing asynchronous adjunct
connectivity to an Ethernet network using TCP/IP protocol. IP Asynchronous Links is a simple,
session-layer, proprietary protocol that creates value for the customer in the following ways:
Reduces the cost to connect the switch to various adjuncts
Allows for an open architecture to transport information and increases the speed at which data is
transferred
Allows customers to manage applications from both on site and remote locations
Allows for several system management applications to run on a single PC and thus reducing
hardware requirements
Provides “IP Services” forms to support more flexible administration
Guarantees data delivery through a reliable session-layer protocol
Supports customers’ existing investment in serial hardware through use of Network Terminal
Servers
IP Asynchronous Links supports switch client applications and server applications as described in the
following sections.
Switch Client Applications
Client applications with Asynchronous Links allow you to use TCP/IP to connect adjunct equipment to
the switch via the C-LAN board.
Asynchronous TCP/IP links can be used to connect call detail recording (CDR) devices, property
management systems (PMS) and printers. Maintenance parameters can be set to allow the switch to
report alarms over a TCP/IP link.
A device that does not support a direct TCP/IP connection, but that does support an RS232 interface, can
connect to the C-LAN board through a terminal server or router.
Switch Server Applications
IP Asynchronous Links provides a telnet server to interconnect C-LAN Ethernet clients to system
management applications on the switch via TCP/IP or TCP/IP and RS232 signals. IP Asynchronous
Links supports the following server applications:
System administration terminal (SAT)
Avaya Site Administration (formerly DEFINITY Site Administration, or DSA)
DEFINITY Network Management (DNM)
Proxy Agent
Enterprise Directory Gateway
Server applications send data to the switch, and the telnet server supports 80 kbps data throughput.
Current application screen interactions, and current simultaneous session limits on the switch are also
supported. The telnet server satisfies all current terminal emulation modes for example, 51x, 4410, 4425,
vt220, hp262x, and pctt.
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Access security for system management applications over TCP/IP is provided by the existing Access
Security Gateway (ASG) feature. Through either a local or a remote node or port, users can specify the
remote client IP address and port number from which the switch can accept service requests. ASG must
be enabled on the system-parameters customer-options form. ASG must also be enabled for at least one
customer login. The user can administer a timeout period that ranges from 5 to 999 minutes, but there is
currently no provision for data encryption over the LAN.
Reliability
Duplication is a strategy to create fully redundant systems that are highly reliable. Duplication minimizes
single failure points that can interrupt call processing. Three options are available for system reliability
and duplication:
Standard reliability – does not duplicate the tone clocks, the control carrier, or any inter-PN
connectivity.
High reliability – duplicates the hardware that is associated with the SPE. The Control Carrier is
duplicated, which provides duplicate SPEs and tone clocks. Inter-PN connectivity and EPN tone
clocks are not duplicated. The strategy is to duplicate items that are associated with the SPE so
that a single fault will not cause the loss of the SPE.
Critical reliability – requires the full duplication of the SPE, inter-PN connectivity, and the tone
clocks.
As duplication increases, the maximum number of port carriers and port circuit packs per cabinet
decreases.
BHCCI
The following table shows busy-hour call completion capacities for DEFINITY Server SI.
Type of call DEFINITY Server SI
All analog 20,000
General business 20,000
ISDN 20,000
ACD 20,000
ICM 20,000
OCM 20,000
CTI/ASAI 20,000
Wireless 20,000
IP telephones, non-IP trunks 18,000
DCP telephones, IP trunks 13,500
IP telephones, IP trunks 7,500
DEFINITY Server SI
106 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Adjuncts
The following is a partial list of the adjuncts that Avaya provides:
Voice messaging and response such as INTUITY AUDIX
Call center tools such as Avaya Call Management System, NICE Analyzer, Avaya Call
Recording, Avaya Visual Vectors and Avaya Basic Call Management System Reporting Desktop
System printer
Journal printer
Call Accounting Systems
Call Detail Recording (CDR)
Avaya Site Administration (ASA)
DEFINITY Network Management (DNM)
DEFINITY Translator ATM Manager (DTA)
DEFINITY Server R
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 107
December 2003
DEFINITY Server R
Overview
NOTE:
The UN331C processor server circuit pack used in The DEFINITY Server R will not be
sold after November 3, 2003. The UN331C processor server circuit pack cannot be
upgraded to Avaya Communication Manager 2.0, but upgrades to Avaya Communication
Manager 1.3.x will be sold until November, 2004. Please consult "Upgrades and Additions
for Avaya DEFINITY Server R," 555-233-115, for information about upgrading to
Communication Manager 1.3.
Avaya Communication Manager on a DEFINITY® Server R offers a high-level operating system, open
interfaces, and distributed processing. DEFINITY Server R provides circuit-switched voice
communications and Internet Protocol (IP) telephony including voice and data network integration,
unified messaging, and multimedia conferencing and collaboration. Because DEFINITY Server R is part
of Avaya’s Enterprise Class IP Solutions family, it is designed to work with other Avaya products to
create a complete IP solution.
All major hardware is contained in a multicarrier cabinet (MCC1) that hold up to five carriers or
stackable single-carrier cabinets (SCC1s). The solution enables high-speed connections between analog
and digital trunks, data lines connected to host computers, data-entry terminals, personal computers, and
IP network addresses. See the following figure for an example of a DEFINITY Server R solution.
DEFINITY Server R
108 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 34: DEFINITY Server R
Detailed description
The DEFINITY Server R with Avaya Communication Manager, provides a common architecture
platform across all supported DEFINITY product lines. It gives large customers with multiple locations
the same user and administration interfaces across their enterprise network including international
locations.
DEFINITY Server R provides:
Scalable applications for messaging, conferencing, collaboration, call centers, mobility, and
remote users.
Control of operational costs through the use of networking and management solutions
A simple process for adding features. Add a circuit pack and use the graphical user interface
(GUI) to administer it.
Cost-effective and distributed switching arrangements in both LANs and WANs.
Converged network environments through the use of IP and Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM)
protocols and services.
Time Division Multiplex (TDM) transmission and switching infrastructures for both LANs and
WANs. TDM supports analog, digital, and IP endpoints, both trunking and station, and an IP
interface to a LAN or a WAN.
DEFINITY
Multimedia
call center
Voice terminal
Attendant
console
Data
terminal
Management
terminal
Voice
messaging
system
Outside private
line data
transmission
equipment
Digital
facilities
Analog
facilities
AUDIX
DEFINITY Wireless
Business System
Voice terminal
with data module
Data terminal
Host
computer
Data
terminals
cydfdgsw LJK 071497
DEFINITY Server R
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 109
December 2003
Configuration information
The DEFINITY Server R contains the following main components:
Avaya Communication Manager: For information about Avaya Communication Manager, see the
Overview for Avaya Communication Manager, 555-233-767.
Processor Port Network (PPN) with a Switch Processing Element (SPE) and Port Network (PN).
The 631DA power unit and 631DB power unit for AC power.
The 649A power unit for DC power.
The Control Carrier
The DEFINITY Server R can use the following Media Gateways:
MCC1 Media Gateway- including power supplies for AC power or DC power
MCC1 Media Gateway on page 159
SCC1 Media Gateways- including power supplies for AC power or DC power
SCC1 Media Gateway on page 150
Circuit packs
The UN331C processor
Four TN1650 memory circuit packs
A TN1648 SYSAM
A TN1655 packet interface
A UN332C mass storage system and network control (MSS/NET CONT)
The TN2211 optical drive
The TN1657 disk drive
The TN768, TN780, or TN2182 tone clock
Each of the main components, is described in the following section.
Processor Port Network and Switch Processing Element
The Processor Port Network (PPN) is a DEFINITY configuration of carriers that contains the control
complex SPE of the system and port interfaces. The control complex consists of:
the UN331C processor, four TN1650 memory packs
A TN1648 SYSAM board, a TN1655 packet interface
A UN332C suffix mass storage system and network control board
A TN 2211 optical drive
A TN1657 disk drive
A TN768, TN780 or TN2182 tone clock.
Additional optional circuit packs might be needed such as the UN330B for duplication interface in high-
and critical-reliability systems.
When a device such as a telephone, goes off-hook or signals call initiation, the SPE receives a signal from
the port circuit that is connected to the device. The digits of the called number are collected, and the
switch is set up to make a connection between the calling and the called devices.
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The following figure shows a direct-connect system with an SPE in the PPN. Buses route voice calls and
data calls between external trunks and external lines.
Figure 35: Components of a DEFINITY Server R
Port network
A port network (PN) consists of the following components:
Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) bus: The TDM bus has 484 time slots, 23 B channels, and 1 D
channel available per bus. The TDM bus runs internally throughout each PN and terminates on
each end. The TDM bus consists of two 8-bit parallel buses, bus A and bus B. Bus A and bus B
carry switched digitized voice and data signals and control signals to all port circuits and between
port circuits and the SPE. The port circuits place digitized voice signals and data signals on a
TDM bus. Bus A and bus B are typically active simultaneously.
Packet bus: The packet bus runs internally throughout each PN and terminates on each end. The
packet bus is an 18-bit parallel bus that carries logical links and control messages from the SPE,
through port circuits, to endpoints such as terminals and adjuncts. The packet bus carries logical
links for both on-switch and off-switch control between some specific port circuits in the system;
for example, D-channels, X.25, and remote management terminals.
PPN
Processor bus
SPE
Processor Memory
Ports
Ports
Ports Ports
Expansion I/O
Expansion I/OExpansion I/OExpansion I/OExpansion I/O
Fiber optic cable
Expansion I/O
Maintenance Maintenance
EPN EPN
Packet
bus TDM
bus
Terminal
Terminal Terminal
External trunks,
lines, and IP
addresses
External
trunks, lines,
and IP
addresses
External
trunks, lines,
and IP
addresses
External
trunks, lines,
and IP
addresses
Network Control/
Packet Interface
Packet
bus Packet
bus
TDM bus TDM bus
cydfcss3 LJK 022299
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Port circuits: The port circuits form analog/digital interfaces between the PN and external trunks
and devices that provide links between these devices and the TDM bus and packet bus. Incoming
analog signals are converted to pulse-code modulated (PCM) digital signals and placed on the
TDM bus by port circuits. Port circuits convert outgoing signals from PCM to analog for external
analog devices. All port circuits connect to the TDM bus. Only specific ports connect to the
packet bus.
Interface circuits: Interface circuits are types of port circuits that reside in the PPN and each EPN.
Interface circuits terminate fiber optic cables that connect TDM buses and the packet bus from the
PPN cabinet to the TDM bus and packet bus of each EPN cabinet.
Carriers
Carriers hold circuit packs and connect them to power, the TDM bus, and the packet bus. There are five
types:
Control Carrier (PPN cabinet only)
Optional Duplicated Control Carrier (PPN cabinet only)
Optional port carrier (PPN and/or EPN cabinets)
Optional expansion control carrier (EPN cabinets only)
Optional switch node carrier (PPN and/or EPN cabinets)
Cabinets
The system cabinets contain the carriers and all other components, including the power supply. A cabinet
contains at least 1 carrier in an enclosed shelf with vertical slots to hold circuit packs. The circuit packs fit
into connectors that attach to the rear of the slots. There are two cabinet types:
Single-carrier cabinet (SCC1)
Multicarrier cabinet (MCC1)
Single-carrier cabinets
Up to four single-carrier cabinets (SCC1s) can be stacked to form a single PN.
Single-carrier cabinets come in any of four configurations:
An expansion control cabinet that contains additional port circuit packs, interfaces to the PPN, a
maintenance interface and a power converter
A port cabinet that contains port circuit packs and a power converter
See the following figure for an example of a SCC1.
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Figure 36: Typical single-carrier cabinet (SCC1)
Multicarrier cabinets
A multicarrier cabinet (MCC1) is a 70-inch (178-cm) cabinet that has up to five carriers. The three types
of multicarrier cabinets are as follows:
A PPN cabinet contains the ports, SPE, an interface to an EPN cabinet, or a CSS.
An EPN cabinet contains additional ports, interfaces to the PPN and other EPN cabinets, the
maintenance interface, optional interfaces to other EPN cabinets, a switch node in an SN in a
CSS-connected system, or an ATM switch.
Auxiliary cabinet contains equipment used for optional, system-related hardware, such as rack-
mounted equipment.
See the following figure for an example of a typical MCC1.
Air circulatio
n
vents
scdf001 KLC 0605
97
Circuit packs
Power
converter
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Figure 37: Typical multicarrier cabinet (MCC1)
Expansion port network
An optional expansion port network (EPN) contains additional ports that increase the number of
connections to trunks and lines. An EPN can be configured to provide service to users when the fiber or
T1/E1 link to the main processor fails or is severed, or when the processor or center stage fails. This
service requires that special standby remote-processor equipment be collocated with the EPN to provide
SPE processor capabilities to the EPN.
Avaya MultiVantage applications
Avaya’s MultiVantage applications bring together the flexibility of IP networks with the full feature
functionality of Communication Manager. MultiVantage applications provide:
Investment protection and optimization in IP and PSTN networks.
Full software applications, features, and management capabilities are carried into the IP
environment using Communication Manager.
Enhanced quality of service
Remote workers have full access to Communication Manager features from their PCs.
Avaya’s portfolio of MultiVantage applications enables users to specify the quality of voice
communications. Using the Quality of Service feature, users can administer and download the
Differentiated Services Type-of-Service value to optimize voice quality. The Quality of Service feature
implements buffers in the audio-processing circuit pack to reduce latency and help some routers to
prioritize audio traffic.
MultiVantage applications provide hairpinned and IP-to-IP direct connections to improve the efficiency
of voice communications. Hairpinned connections route the voice channel connecting two IP endpoints
so that the voice goes through the IP Media Processor circuit pack in IP format, thereby bypassing the
“C” position carrier
“B” position carrier
“A” position carrier
“F” position fan unit
“D” position carrier
“E” position carrier
Power distribution unit
lcdfpdu6 LJK 083100
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TDM bus. IP-to-IP direct connections route the voice channel connecting two IP endpoints by sending
the voice directly through the LAN or WAN between the two endpoints, instead of carrying a mixed
connection of IP signaling and TDM-bus signaling.
The following figure shows the trunk connects and line connections available with Avaya’s MultiVantage
applications.
Figure 38: IP solutions
As the The figure shows IP Solutions supports connectivity for IP trunks, IP softphones, and IP
telephones.
DEFINITY IP Solutions is implemented using the TN2302AP, an IP Media Processor circuit pack inside
the switch. The TN2302AP IP Media Processor provides H.323 trunk connections and H.323 voice
processing for IP telephones. The features that use the TN2302AP circuit pack also require the TN799
C-LAN circuit pack.
NOTE:
The IP trunk that is used in R7 and the current TN2302AP H.323 trunks are not
interoperable. The TN2302AP H.323 in trunk mode cannot communicate with an R7 IP
trunk. However, the TN2302AP H.323 trunk can communicate with a TN802B circuit
pack.
PSTN
LAN/WAN
cydfipsl KLC 091901
Switch
C-LAN
C-LAN
C-LAN
DS1
TN2302
TN2302
TN2302
Switch
Switch
TN2302
TN2302 IP Softphone
or CentreVu IP Agent
Voice Terminal
IP Softphone
with H.323 voice application
H.323
Trunk
IP Trunk
LAN/WAN
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Trunks
DEFINITY IP Solutions supports two trunk configurations:
H.323 IP trunk (IP Solutions mode)
IP trunk mode
IP trunks reduce expenses for long distance voice and FAX, facilitating global communications, provide a
full-function network with data and voice convergence, and use available network resources to optimize
investments.
H.323 IP Trunk (IP Solutions mode)
The IP Media Processor circuit pack (TN2302AP) supports the H.323 version 2 protocol and operates
with H.323 version 2 endpoints, including stations, trunks, and gateways. An IP Media Processor circuit
pack uses IP connectivity between two DEFINITY or Avaya servers to enable H.323 trunk service using
IP connectivity. H.323 trunk groups can be configured as DEFINITY-specific tie trunks that support:
ISDN trunk features such as DCS+ and QSIG
Generic tie trunks that permit interconnection with H.323 v2-compliant switches from other
vendors
Direct-inward-dial (DID) type of “public” trunks providing access to the switch for unregistered
users.
The TN2302AP requires the TN799 for signaling.
The TN2302AP IP Media Processor is also used for H.323 VoIP applications.
IP Trunk mode
The IP Trunk mode allows trunk groups to be defined as DS1 tie lines between DEFINITY systems over
a customers data network. Each IP Interface circuit pack in IP Trunk mode provides a basic 12-port
package that can be expanded up to 30 ports.
Each TN802 or TN802B circuit pack in IP Trunk mode requires:
A connection to a modem
An incoming line for Avaya remote access
Direct access to the NT server on the hard disk using pcANYWHERE, version 8 or later.
The TN2302AP circuit pack does not require:
A connection to a modem
An incoming line
Access using pcANYWHERE.
A TN799B circuit pack
Connectivity
The following sections describe connectivity using TCP/IP, CSS and ATM.
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Connectivity using TCP/IP
LAN Gateway With the optional J58890MA-1List 2 LAN Gateway circuit pack assembly installed, the
switch works with PC/LAN-based communications applications that support the CallVisor Adjunct-
Switch Application Interface (ASAI).
C-LAN TCP/IP connectivity is provided over Ethernet or Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) to adjuncts such
as CMS or INTUITY™ AUDIX®, and for DCS connectivity. The C-LAN circuit pack (TN799DP)
provides a “bridge” from the TDM bus to the packet bus on a DEFINITY server.
IP Asynchronous Links using C-LAN The IP Asynchronous Links feature enables the switch to
transfer existing asynchronous adjunct connectivity to an Ethernet network using TCP/IP protocol. IP
Asynchronous Links is a simple, session-layer, proprietary protocol that creates value for the customer in
the following ways:
Reduces the cost to connect the switch to various adjuncts
Allows for an open architecture to transport information and increases the speed at which data is
transferred
Allows customers to manage applications from both on site and remote locations
Allows for several system management applications to run on a single PC and thus reducing
hardware requirements
Provides “IP Services” forms to support more flexible administration
Guarantees data delivery through a reliable session-layer protocol
Supports customers’ existing investment in serial hardware through use of Network Terminal
Servers
IP Asynchronous Links supports switch client applications and server applications as described in the
following sections.
Switch client applications Client applications with Asynchronous Links allow you to use TCP/IP to
connect adjunct equipment to the switch via the C-LAN board.
Asynchronous TCP/IP links can be used to connect call detail recording (CDR) devices, property
management systems (PMS) and printers. Maintenance parameters can be set to allow the switch to
report alarms over a TCP/IP link.
A device that does not support a direct TCP/IP connection, but that does support an RS232 interface, can
connect to the C-LAN board through a terminal server or router.
Switch server applications IP Asynchronous links provide a telnet server to interconnect C-LAN
Ethernet clients to system management applications on the switch via TCP/IP or TCP/IP and RS232
signals. IP Asynchronous Links supports the following server applications:
System administration terminal (SAT)
Avaya Site Administration (formerly DEFINITY Site Administration, or DSA)
DEFINITY Network Management (DNM)
Proxy agent
Enterprise Directory Gateway
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Server applications send data to the switch, and the telnet server supports 80 kbps data throughput.
Current application screen interactions, and current simultaneous session limits on the switch are also
supported. The telnet server satisfies all current terminal emulation modes for example, 51x, 4410, 4425,
vt220, hp262x, and pctt.
Access security for system management applications over TCP/IP is provided by the existing Access
Security Gateway (ASG) feature. Through either a local or a remote node or port, users can specify the
remote client IP address and port number from which the switch can accept service requests. ASG must
be enabled on the system-parameters customer-options form. ASG must also be enabled for at least one
customer login. The user can administer a timeout period that ranges from 5 to 999 minutes, but there is
currently no provision for data encryption over the LAN.
Center stage switch
A Center stage switch (CSS) is optional for three PNs or less in the DEFINITY Server R. The CSS is the
central interface between the PPN and the EPNs. The CSS consists of one, two, or three switch nodes
(SN). One SN can expand the system from 1 EPN to up to 15 EPNs. Two SNs can expand the system to
up to 29 EPNs. Three SNs can expand the system to up to 43 EPNs.
NOTE:
The number of EPNs that can be connected with two or three SNs might be less than the
numbers given, depending on the internal SN-to-SN traffic.
The following figure shows a system with the added CSS to route voice calls and data calls between
external trunks and external lines.
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Figure 39: Components of a CSS-connected system
The following figure shows the CSS that links the PPN to EPNs by the SNI circuit packs in an SN carrier.
An SN acts as a hub to distribute cables and thus reduces the amount of interconnect cabling between the
PPN and the EPNs.
A system that uses a CSS can connect from 3 to 43 PNs. The CSS can consist of up to three SN carriers.
The CSS can also consist of two, four, or six SN duplicated carriers in a critical-reliability system.
Each SN contains from 1 to 16 SNI circuit packs. Each interface uses fiber-optic cable to connect to a PN
or to a SN. One interface always connects to the PPN and one connects to each EPN.
Figure 40: CSS with Switch Nodes (SNs)
PPN
Processor bus
SPE
Processor Memory
Ports
Ports
(Port network)
Expansion I/O
Typical
T1 or E1
EPN
CSS
Packet
bus TDM
bus
Terminal
External
trunks, lines,
and IP
addresses
I/O I/O
EPNEPN
EPNEPN
Packet bus
TDM bus
cydfcnf1 KLC 101501
Fiber optic cable
Ports Ports
Maintenance
Terminal External trunks, lines, and
IP addresses
Expansion I/O
cydfcssn KLC 091901
Switch Node
(1-16 SNIs)
1216
SNI/EI SNI/EI SNI/EI SNI/EI
PPN/EI
EPN/EI EPN/EI EPN/EI
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In a high-reliability system with a duplicated processor, two SNI circuit packs connect to the PPN.
Depending on the chosen configuration this allows up to 15 PNs to connect to one SN, up to 29 PNs to
connect to two SNs, and up to 43 PNs to connect to three SNs.
Connecting with ATM
ATM switch The Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) switch is a replacement option for the CSS.
Several Avaya ATM switch types can provide switch port network connectivity. Non-Avaya ATM
switches that comply with the ATM standards set by the ITU can also provide port network connectivity.
In this configuration, TN2305 multi-mode or TN2306 single-mode ATM circuit packs are installed on the
port networks and connected to the ATM switch with the multi- or single-mode fiber that is specified for
the ATM switch.
NOTE:
The components of an ATM-connected system are similar to those shown in the previous
figure. However, in an ATM-connected system, the CSS is replaced with an ATM switch
or switches and each expansion I/O is replaced with a TN2305 circuit pack or TN2306
circuit pack.
ATM-PNC ATM port network connectivity (ATM-PNC) provides an alternative to the CSS
configurations for connecting the PPN to one or more EPNs. ATM-PNC replaces the CSS in a
DEFINITY Server R network with an ATM switch or network. ATM-PNC is available with all three
reliability options—standard, high, and critical. An ATM-PNC also offers duplication.
ATM-PNC integrates delivery of voice, video, and data via ATM over a converged large-bandwidth
network, thus ATM-PNC provides reduced infrastructure cost and improved network manageability.
ATM-PNC uses standards-based open interfaces that can be provisioned with either new DEFINITY
Server or existing DEFINITY systems.
ATM-CES ATM Circuit-Emulation Service (CES) lets the switch emulate ISDN-PRI trunks on an ATM
facility. These virtual trunks can serve as integrated access, tandem, or tie trunks. ATM-CES trunk
emulation consolidates trunking to maximize port network capacities. For example, the CES interface
can define up to 10 virtual circuits for tie-line connectivity, and consolidates network connectivity that
typically requires multiple circuit packs into one circuit card.
ATM WAN Spare Processors An ATM WAN Spare Processor (WSP) provides a disaster recovery
option for DEFINITY Server R expansion port networks that are deployed over an ATM WAN. An
ATM WSP acts as a PPN in the event of a catastrophic failure in the network. That is, a WSP functions as
a PPN if the main PPN is not functional or is not communicating to one or more of the other EPNs.
DEFINITY Server R is highly reliable, but when DEFINITY Server R overlays a converged network
infrastructure, the reliability and availability depend on the entire infrastructure, not just its own hardware
and software of the switch. ATM WSPs can be placed in a switch, ATM port network configuration to
provide a backup arrangement of PPNs, and thus maintain the availability of the features and functions of
the switch
A WSP continually monitors a connection to the main PPN to determine if the PPN is actively
communicating with the EPNs. From 1 to 15 WSPs can be established in an ATM port network, and each
is given a priority role to avoid its contending with other EPNs for control. Each WSP will become active
if the WSP cannot establish communications with both the main PPN and a WSP of higher priority. The
WSP will wait an administered interval of 5 to 99 minutes and then take control within approximately
15 minutes. Although calls are not preserved while the switch takes place, the WSP enables customers to
be back in service within a reasonable amount of time.
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Returning to normal operation under control of the PPN requires a manual restart sequence. When control
is returned to the PPN, the WSP returns to a standby status. Calls are not preserved during the return to
normal operation; you may therefore want to schedule the return to normal operation for a time when it
will be least disruptive.
NOTE:
ATM WSPs cannot be used for critical reliability switches. It also cannot be used with a
conventional CSS.
Reliability
Duplication is a strategy to create fully redundant systems that are highly reliable. Duplication minimizes
single failure points that can interrupt call processing. Four options are available for system reliability
and duplication:
Standard reliability – does not duplicate the tone clocks, the control carrier, or any inter-PN
connectivity.
High reliability – duplicates the hardware that is associated with the SPE. The Control Carrier is
duplicated, which provides duplicate SPEs and tone clocks. Inter-PN connectivity and EPN tone
clocks are not duplicated. The strategy is to duplicate items that are associated with the SPE so
that a single fault will not cause the loss of the SPE.
Critical reliability – requires the full duplication of the SPE, inter-PN connectivity, and the tone
clocks.
ATM Network Duplication – requires full duplication of the inter-PN connectivity and the tone
clocks.
As duplication increases, the maximum number of port carriers and port circuit packs per cabinet
decreases.
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BHCC
The following table shows busy-hour call-completion (BHCC) capacities:
Adjuncts
The following is a partial list of the adjuncts that Avaya provides:
Voice messaging and response such as INTUITY AUDIX
Call center tools such as Avaya Call Management System, NICE Analyzer, Avaya Call
Recording, Avaya Visual Vectors and Avaya Basic Call Management System Reporting Desktop
System printer
Journal printer
Call Accounting Systems
Call Detail Recording (CDR)
Avaya Site Administration (ASA)
DEFINITY Network Management (DNM)
DEFINITY Translator ATM Manager (DTA)
Type of call DEFINITY Server R
All analog 135,000
General business 100,000
ISDN 40,000
ACD 70,000
ICM 30,000
OCM 44,000
CTI/ASAI 70,000
Wireless 70,000
IP telephones, non-IP trunks 24,000
DCP telephones, IP trunks 18,000
IP telephones, IP trunks 10,000
Media gateways
Avaya G350 Media Gateway
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December 2003
Media gateways
Avaya G350 Media Gateway
The Avaya G350 Media Gateway forms part of Avaya Enterprise Connect, Avaya’s solution for
extending communication capabilities from the headquarters of an organization to all collaborative
branch locations. Avaya Enterprise Connect helps you provide the same high quality services to all
organization members regardless of their location.
The G350 is a high-performance converged telephony and networking device that sits in a small branch
location, providing all infrastructure needs in one box — telephone exchange and data networking. The
G350 is designed for use in a 16-24 user environment but can support up to 40 users. The G350 features a
VoIP engine, WAN router and Power over Ethernet LAN switch and provides full support for legacy
digital and analog telephones.
The G350 integrates seamlessly with Avaya media servers S8700, S8500 and S8300 running Avaya
Communication Manager call processing software to provide the same top quality telephony services to
the small branch office as to the headquarters of the organization. The media server can be located at the
headquarters and serve the G350 remotely.
The G350 can optionally house an internal Avaya S8300 media server as a local survivable processor or
as the main media server for standalone deployment.
In addition to advanced and comprehensive telephony services, the G350 provides full data networking
services, precluding the need for a WAN router or LAN switch.
The G350 is a modular device, adaptable to support different combinations of endpoint devices.
Pluggable media modules provide interfaces for different types of telephones and trunks. A combination
is selected to suit the needs of the branch.
A LAN media module with PoE standard compliant Ethernet ports provides support for IP telephones as
well as all other types of data devices. A range of telephony modules provides full support for legacy
equipment such as analog and digital telephones..
NOTE:
The G350 Media Gateway does not support Call Center. Customers who require Call
Center should purchase the G700 Media Gateway.
Features
The G350 features:
VoIP Media Gateway services
Survivability features for continuous voice services
WAN connectivity
WAN routing
Media gateways
Avaya G350 Media Gateway
124 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Power-over-Ethernet LAN Switching
Support for traditional telephones and trunks.
Deployment modes
The G350 is a modular device with multiple configuration possibilities to meet specific individual
needs. Six slots in the G350 chassis house a customized selection of media modules, which connect
to different types of circuit switched phones, trunks and data devices. One of the slots can house an
internal media server. A major configuration choice is of which type of media server to deploy. The
media server may be a media module or a standalone device.
The G350 can be deployed in one of two basic working modes:
Distributed Avaya Enterprise Connect. In this mode, the G350 is controlled by an
external media server. This may be a standalone media server, such as the S8500 or the
S8700, or a separate media gateway in a standalone configuration. The G350 may also
house an S8300 Media Server module to function as a Local Survivable Processor (LSP),
which can take over control of the G350 if the external media server stops serving the
G350.
Standalone. In this mode, the G350 is controlled by an internally housed S8300 Media
Server module.
Multiple G350s may be deployed in many remote branches of a large organization. Large branches or
main offices may deploy an Avaya G700 Media Gateway, which provides similar functionality to the
G350 for a larger number of users. Up to 250 G350 and G700 Media Gateways may be controlled by a
single external S8700 Media Server.
Physical description
The following figure shows the G350 chassis.
Figure 41: G350 chassis
Media gateways
Avaya G350 Media Gateway
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December 2003
G350 capabilities
The following table outlines the capacities of various G350 services.
Table 4: Ports on the G350 chassis
Port Description
TRK An analog trunk port. Part of an integrated analog media module.
LINE 1, LINE 2 Analog telephone ports of the integrated analog media module. An
analog relay between TRK and LINE 1 provides Emergency
Transfer Relay (ETR) feature.
CC RJ-45 port for ACS (308) contact closure adjunct box.
WAN 1 RJ-45 10/100 Base TX Ethernet port.
LAN 1 RJ-45 Ethernet LAN switch port.
CON Console port for direct connection of CLI console. RJ-45s connector.
USB USB port, not supported in this release.
Table 5: Buttons on the G350
Button Description
RST Reset button. Resets chassis configuration.
ASB Alternate Software Bank button. Reboots the G350 with the software
image in the alternate bank.
Description Capacity* Comments
Media Gateway Limits
Maximum number of G350
Media Gateways controlled
by an external S8300,
S8500, or S8700 Media
Server
250 This number also applies if a combination of Avaya
G700 Media Gateways and G350 Media Gateways
are controlled by the same external media server.
Maximum number of G350
Media Gateways controlled
by a S8300 media server
installed in an external
media gateway.
50
VoIP
Maximum number of IP
telephones 40 Limited by the number of VoIP resources used and
the calling patterns (VoIP to VoIP conferencing,
VoIP to non-VoIP etc.)
Media gateways
Avaya G350 Media Gateway
126 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
For more information about the G350 Media Gateway see 555-245-201, "Overview of the Avaya G350
Media Gateway."
Simultaneous two-way
conversations from IP
phone to legacy telephone
or trunk.
32 – G.711
16 –
G.729a/G723
Simultaneous two-way conversations limited by the
VoIP engine, including call progress tones.
Transcoding from G.711 to
G.729 for IP phones 16 Simultaneous 2-way conversations
Transcoding from TDM
phones to G.729 IP phones 16 Simultaneous 2-way conversations. The quantity of
16 applies to conversations where one end of each
conversation is on a G350 and transcoding occurs
for that endpoint on the G350. If transcoding must
occur on both ends of the conversation, the quantity
of conversations is 10.
Maximum number of PSTN
trunks 17 (analog)
15 (digital)
Miscellaneous
Fax capacity 8 Simultaneous fax transmissions using VoIP
resources
Touch-tone recognition
(TTR) 15
Tone Generation 15
Announcements (VAL) 6 Playback, 1
Record
Description Capacity* Comments
G600 Media Gateway
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December 2003
G600 Media Gateway
The Avaya G600 Media Gateway is used in new installations of the S8700 Media Server and the S8100
Media Server, and in migrations to the S8500 Media Server.The G600 Media Gateway has the following
characteristics:
There is a maximum of 64 port networks when used with the S8700 and the S8500.
A maximum of four G600 Media Gateways can be in each Port Network (PN) with the S8700 and
S8500 media servers. The four G600 Media Gateways must be in one data rack due to TDM cable
length.
The S8100 Media Server can support up to three G600 Media Gateways in a single port network.
A PN consists of a control G600 Media Gateway that is designated A, and second, third, and
fourth optional G600 Media Gateways that are designated as B, C, and D, respectively.
The dimensions of the G600 Media Gateway is 19 inches wide, 13 inches high and 21 inches
deep.
There are 10 universal slots plus one power supply.
Circuit packs are inserted and removed from the front of the cabinet. Cabinet I/O is through the
back and through a front cable pass-through slot.
G600 Media Gateway is AC powered only. There are no internal batteries. DC power is not an
option.
An RJ45 patch panel is recommended for cross-connecting to a LAN or a wall field.
G600 Media Gateway cooling
Cooling for the G600 Media Gateway is provided by three 12-volt DC variable-speed fans that are
integrated into the back of the cabinet. The fans pull air through the front and left sides and up through the
cabinet. Air exits from the back of the cabinet. The 650A Global Power supply controls the speed. The
650A Global Power supply varies the fan input voltage between 8VDC and 14VDC depending on a
temperature sensor that is mounted in the power supply.
The fan assembly includes the three fans, a base plate to which the fans are attached, wiring, and an AMP
connector that plugs into a cable that connects to the backplane. The assembly is easily installed and
removed. You must replace the entire assembly if a fan fails. If a fan fails the following events will take
place:
An alarm through the power supply is detected as a power alarm.
The remaining fans go into high speed.
The red LED on the 650A Global Power supply faceplate lights up.
See the following figure for an example of the G600 Media Gateway.
G600 Media Gateway
128 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 42: G600 Media Gateway
Required circuit packs for a G600 Media
Gateway and an S8700 Media Server
When the G600 Media Gateway is connected to an S8500 Media Server or an S8700 Media Server, the
following circuit packs are required:
IP Server Interface (TN2312BP)
The IP Server Interface (IPSI) provides transport of control messages over IP allowing the media server
to communicate with the PNs. The IPSI is required to provide control network signaling over the
customer’s LAN and WAN. Tone generation, tone detection, global call classification, as well as stratum
4 type clock generation are provided on the IPSI board.
C-LAN (TN799DP)
The C-LAN circuit pack, TN799DP provides call control for every IP endpoints that is connected to the
media server in an IP Connect configuration. A maximum number of 64 C-LANs per configuration is
supported. The number of C-LANs that are required depends on the number of devices that are connected
and the options that the endpoint is using. It might be advantageous to segregate IP voice control traffic
from device control traffic as a safety measure.
To determine the default value for C-LAN socket usage of H.323 tie trunks, you must divide the total
number of H.323 Tie Trunk that use sharing by 31. Each IP endpoint requires the use of some number of
C-LAN sockets, which is the software object that is used to connect a TN799 board to the IP network.
The TN799DP circuit pack supports up to 500 sockets.
The C-LAN differs from an IP Media Processor in that the C-LAN controls the call and the processor
provides the codecs used for the audio on the call.
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
100bT
LINK
TRMT
RCV
scdlip60 KLC 031302
12
345678910
BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
TN2302
650A
CLK
S
E
R
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TN2312
G600 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 129
December 2003
To take advantage of downloadable firmware capability there must be at least one TN799DP C-LAN and
access to the public Internet for firmware downloads to other downloadable circuit packs. Downloads and
instructions are posted to:
http://www.avaya.com/support/
Click on Online Services > Download Software Needed.
IP Media Processor (TN2302AP)
The media server in an IP Connect configuration requires resources on a IP Media Processor
(TN2302AP) circuit pack for bearer communications within the same PN. The TN2302AP is also used
for bearer communications with IP endpoints on both systems. The TN2302AP includes a 10/100 BaseT
Ethernet interface to support H.323 endpoints for IP trunks and H.323 end-points. The TN2302AP can
perform echo cancellation, silence suppression, dual-tone multi-frequency (DTMF) detection, and
conferencing.
The TN2302AP, beginning with vintage 32, supports the following conversion resources for codec for
voice, conversion between codecs, and FAX detection:
G.711 (A- or µ-law, 64 kbps)
G.723.1 (6.3 kbps or 5.3 kbps audio)
G.729A (8 kbps audio)
G.729, G.729B, G.729AB
Required circuit packs for a G600 Media
Gateway and an S8100 Media Server
When the G600 Media Gateway is connected to the S8100 Media Server the following circuit packs are
required:
TN2314 Processor (S8100)
The S8100 Media Server supports voice stations with co-resident voice switching, voice and FAX
messaging and system applications run on a Microsoft Windows 2000 operating system. The
communication between the firmware and the software is done by an Ethernet connection. An Intel
processor Message Link (IML) is the Ethernet control link between the Pentium processor and the
MPC860 processor. The link allows for the message based communication between the two processors.
The S8100 Media Server has the following characteristics:
Processor – The processor is a 500-MHz Pentium III.
RAM – There are two slots for SDRAM memory modules, with a minimum of 256-MB of RAM
and a maximum of 512-MB of RAM.
Front panel ethernet access – Services can access the switch via an RJ45 Ethernet jack on the
circuit pack faceplate.
Hard disk – The circuit pack has a 20-GB hard disk.
G600 Media Gateway
130 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector
The TN744 call classifier and tone detector circuit pack has eight ports of tone detection on the TDM bus.
The TN744 circuit pack does not support call progress tone generation or clocking. The tone detectors are
used in vector prompting, outgoing call management (OCM), and call prompting applications in the
United States and Canada and call classifier options for various countries.The TN744 detects special
intercept tones used in network intercept tone detection in OCM. The TN744 circuit pack also detects
tones when a CO answers a call.
The TN744 circuit pack provides tone generation and detection for R2-MFC DID signaling that is used in
non-United States installations. The TN744 circuit pack also allows gain or loss to be applied to pulse
code modulation (PCM) signals that are received from the bus and supports A-Law and µ-Law
companding. The TN744 circuit pack detects 2025-Hz, 2100-Hz, or 2225-Hz modem answerback tones
and provides normal broadband and wide broadband dial tone detection.
The TN744 circuit pack supports digital signal processing of PCM signals on each port to detect,
recognize, and classify tones and other signals. Generation of signaling tones is also supported for
applications such as R2-MFC, Spain MF, and Russia MF. Gain or loss and conferencing can be applied to
PCM signals received from the TDM bus. Additional support includes DTMF detectors to collect address
digits during dialing, and A-Law and µ-Law companding.
In normal operation, a port on the TN744 circuit pack can serve as an incoming register for Russia MFR
(multi-frequency shuttle register signaling). Use the TN744 with the TN429C analog line central office
trunk for CAMA/E911.
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 131
December 2003
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Overview
The Avaya G650 Media Gateway, is a fourteen slot, rack mounted carrier configured for TN format
circuit packs. The G650 is 8U high (14 inches (35.6 centimeters)) and mounts in standard 19 inch (48.3
centimeters) data racks. The G650 can use one or two 655A power supplies that can have both AC and
DC input power present. Either power supply can provide all the power needed by the G650.
See Figure 43, G650 Media Gateway, on page 131 for an example of the G650 Media Gateway.
Figure 43: G650 Media Gateway
Figure notes
Number Description
1EDS ground jack
2655A power supply
3TN2312BP IP server interface (IPSI)
4TN799DP CLAN
5TN2302 IP media processor
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
2
1
5
3 4
scdlff02 LAO 081203
2
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
132 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Mounting G650s
The G650 can be rack mounted or, in single G650 configurations, table or floor mounted. Multiple G650s
(up to five) can be mounted in a rack and connected by TDM cables to create a G650 stack.
The G650 is mounted in industry standard EIA-310 19 inch open racks. The G650 provides options for
front or mid mounting. Although the G650 can be mounted in a 19 inch (48.3 centimeters) four-post data
rack it does not mount simultaneously to all four posts. When mounted in a four-post rack, the G650 uses
the front mounting position.
Mounting a single G650
A single G650, equipped with feet, can be table or floor mounted. Side-by-side G650s, connected by
TDM cables, are not supported. In a single configuration, the G650 always has an A carrier address.
Mounting multiple G650s
Multiple G650s (up to five) can be mounted in a rack and connected by TDM cables to create a G650
stack. Multiple G650s must be vertically adjacent and their front panels must align in the same vertical
plane. For example, carrier A is always below carrier B, which is always below carrier C, and so on
through carrier E. Note that existing TDM cables used for the G600 cabinets are not compatible with the
G650.
Multiple G650s (up to five) can be mounted in a rack but not connected by TDM cables. In this case each
G650 is defined as a media gateway (a cabinet or port network) and each requires its own interface
hardware (EI, ATM-EI, TN2312BP IPSI). Note that with this configuration, all of the G650s have a
carrier address of A.
Carrier addressing
The carrier position (A through E) must be set on all G650s. The carrier address is set using a small
printed circuit card that is plugged into one of five (A through E) connectors inside the carrier.
See Figure 44, Printed circuit card, on page 133 for an example and location of the printed circuit card.
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 133
December 2003
Figure 44: Printed circuit card
When five G650s in a rack are connected together with TDM cables, the G650 in the bottom position in
the rack has a carrier address of A, and the G650 in the top position in the rack has a carrier address of E.
When the five G650s in a rack are not connected together with TDM cables, each G650 has a carrier
address of A.
Multiple G650s can be rack mounted with some connected by TDM cables, and others not connected by
TDM cables. For example, a customer can request that the G650 in the bottom of the rack not be
connected to another G650. The carrier address of the G650 in the bottom of the rack is A. The customer
can request that the next two G650s in the rack be connected together by a TDM cable. The carrier
address of the lower of these two G650s is A, and the address of the upper G650 is B. And the customer
can request that two additional G650s be placed in the rack and be connected by a TDM cable. The
carrier address of the lower of these two G650s is A and the address of the upper G650 is B. In this
example, the rack has one G650 with an A carrier address, and two G650 stacks with both an A and B
carrier address.
The carrier address of an individual rack mounted, table mounted, or floor mounted G650 is A.
See Figure 45, G650 stack, on page 134 for an example of a G650 stack.
swdlpdle LAO 072403
-48 VDC
-48 VDC
RETURN
E
D
C
B
A
TOP
E
D
C
B
A
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
134 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 45: G650 stack
Figure notes
Number Description
1 & 2 S8700 Media Servers
3 Ethernet switch
4 & 5 UPS units: one for each server
6 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "A"
7 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "B"
8 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "C"
9 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "D"
10 G650 Media Gateway: Carrier position "E"
1
1
13
12
24
CONSOLE
1
2
1
2
msdlrck3 LAO 081203
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
E
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
D
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
C
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
B
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
103 4 56 8 9Power 2711 12 13 Power
114
A
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 135
December 2003
I/O connections
The fourteen slots of the G650 are equipped with twisted pair cables from the backplane to the 25-pair
type D, metal shelled I/O connector panel mounted on the rear of the carrier. The power supply slots (0
and 15) do not provide external I/O connections.
I/O adapters
You can use any existing adapter for input and output if the associated TN circuit pack is supported in the
G650.
Fan assembly
The three-fan unit can operate at two different speeds:
Mid speed for normal cooling
High speed when a temperature threshold is exceeded or a fan failure is detected
655A power supply
The G650 can use one or two 655A power supplies that can have both AC and DC input power present.
Either power supply can provide all the power needed by the G650. When there are two power supplies,
they share the power load. One power supply can operate on AC power and the other on DC power,
although if AC power is available, the system always uses AC power. The 655A power supply is:
The only power supply supported in the G650
Not backward compatible to other carrier types
If you use only one 655A power supply, place it in slot 0. If you are using two power supplies, place them
in slots 0 and 15.
NOTE:
You can insert or remove a redundant power supply and not affect the G650 if the other
655A power supply is operating.
Input power
The 655A power supply is capable of operating on either AC or DC input power, although AC power is
always used if it is available. One power supply can operate on AC power, and the other on DC power.
The power supplies use AC power first and switch to DC power if AC power fails or is not present.
AC power
Commercial AC is the primary input power source. Both slot 0 and slot 15 have dedicated AC input. The
655A power supply can operate on AC input of 90 to 264 VAC at 47 to 63 Hz. The nominal ranges for
AC power are:
100 to 120 VAC at 50 or 60 Hz
200 to 240 VAC at 50 or 60 Hz
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
136 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
DC power
Minus 48VDC power can be supplied simultaneously as backup power. One -48VDC power input point
is provided on the G650 backplane and is distributed through the backplane to each power supply.
655A faceplate LEDs
The five LEDs on the faceplace of the 655A power supply are in a vertical line with the red LED on top.
These five LEDs provide the following status:
Red - This LED:
Lights when there is a failure in either the power supply or the fans. (For a G650 with
redundant power supplies, a failure in the fan assembly results in this LED being lit on
both power supplies.)
Flashes off once per second when the software shuts down the ring voltage output of a
power supply
Yellow - This LED:
Lights when the status of the power supply and fans is OK
Flashes once per second when the software shuts down a single power supply, in a carrier
with operational redundant power supplies
Green - Lights when there is AC power applied to the power supply
Green - Lights when there is DC power applied to the power supply
Green - Lights when the power supply is supplying ringing to the G650
See Figure 46, 655A faceplate LEDS, on page 137 for an example of 655A faceplate LEDs
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 137
December 2003
Figure 46: 655A faceplate LEDS
655A ring generation
The 655A provides either North American ringing (20Hz) or European/International (25Hz) ringing. It
also has a setting to provide no ringing when the customer supplies a ring generator that is external to the
power supply. A TN2202 (French ringing circuit pack) is an example of an external ring generator.
The 655A power supply provides a physical slide switch to select the frequency of the ring generator. The
options are:
20Hz — North American
25Hz — European and international
Other — No ringing output when an external ring generator is used such as the TN2202 French
ringing circuit pack.
You must remove the power supply from the G650 when you change the ringing frequency selection. The
ringing frequency selection switch is on the back of the power supply.
Only one 655A supplies ringing to the G650. The power supply in slot 0 in the G650 with an A carrier
address is the default for ringing. The system uses this default 655A unless it has failed or the software
has commanded it to shut down. When a G650 carrier has redundant power supplies, one supply
automatically supplies ringing if the other power supply fails.
2345
Power
evdlpow2 LAO 081203
CLK
S
E
R
V
I
C
E
N
E
T
W
O
R
K
1
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
1
FAN OR POWER FAIL
FAN AND POWER OK
AC INPUT
DC INPUT
ACTIVE RING
Avaya G650 Media Gateway
138 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
A 655A provides ringing to only one G650 carrier. For example, the 655A power supplies in carrier A
supply ringing to carrier A only, and the power supplies in carrier D supply ringing to carrier D only. If
the ring generation in both of a carriers power supplies fail, no other power supply provides ringing for
the carrier.
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 139
December 2003
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
The G700 Media Gateway is designed to be scalable and offer options. It is functional on its own or with
other G700 Media Gateways. The G700 is also functional in combination with other G700 Media
Gateways and Avaya P330 devices such as the P333T, P333R, and P334.
A maximum of 50 G700 Media Gateways can be supported using the S8300 Media Server. A maximum
of 250 G700 Media Gateways can be supported using the S8700 Media Server or the S8500 Media
Server.
To provide power to IP telephones without additional cables, stack the G700 Media Gateways with the
Avaya P333T-PWR.
The following list describes the basic architecture of the G700 Media Gateway:
Intel i960 controller that hosts all of the base switch-control and management software.
Fits in a EIA-310-D standard 19-inch rack.
Supports 15 ports of tone detection.
Contains four media-module slots.
One Avaya P330 expansion-module slot.
One slot for the Avaya P330 Octaplane stacking fabric.
Can sit on a desktop or be rack-mounted.
Contains an internal motherboard. For more information, see Motherboard.
Standard based 10/100 Ethernet Interface connection types. A wall field or breakout panel is not
required.
Internal power supply that provides low-voltage DC power to the fans, motherboard, and media
modules.
Four internal fans that provide cooling for the internal components.
A LED board that indicates system-level status.
A serial port for command-line access.
A VoIP engine that supports up to 64 G.711 single-channel calls.
Eight-port layer-2 switch.
The G700 Media Gateway has a physical design that is similar to the Avaya stackable switching products.
The following figure shows the G700 Media Gateway with two Avaya P330 switches. The G700 is
shown at the top of the stack.
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
140 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 47: G700 Media Gateway with two Avaya P330 switches
Expansion modules
The G700 Media Gateway is architecturally based on the Avaya P330 switch. Therefore, customers can
use any of the Avaya Expansion Modules with the G700 Media Gateway. Additional Avaya LAN/WAN
expansion modules connect directly to the G700 Media Gateway without requiring additional hardware.
Two expansion modules are available from Avaya:
Avaya X330 WAN Access routing module
Avaya P330 LAN expansion modules
X330 WAN Access routing module
Customers with multiple branch offices need network solutions that are simple flexible and scalable. The
Avaya X330 WAN Access routing module allows customers to deploy a unified, high-performance
LAN/WAN infrastructure in one data stack.
Highlights of the Avaya X330 WAN Access Router
Provides integrated WAN access that can be used with external firewalls or VPN Gateways
Works with the following WAN and routing protocols
ALM
TST
ACT
123456 87
ALM
TST
ACT
123456 87
REMOVE
ALM
TST
ACT
OKTO SHUTDOWN
SERVICES USB 1 USB2
E1/T1 EIA 530A DCE
ALM
TST
ACT
SIG
EISO EMSM EOSI
scdcrck1 KLC 031902
25
EXPANSION
SLOT 33
FIV
29
37
LNK OPRPWR
COL Tx Rx FC 100MLAG
FDX
1
13
5
17
9
21
26
34
30
38
2
14
6
18
10
22
27
35
31
39
3
15
7
19
11
23
28
36
32
40
4
16
8
20
12
24
1
13
2
14
LAG 3
15
4
16
9
21
10
22
LAG 11
23
12
24
CONSOLE
5
17
6
18
LAG 7
19
8
20
Cajun P120
25
EXPANSION
SLOT 33
FIV
29
37
LNK OPRPWR
COL Tx Rx FC 100MLAG
FDX
1
13
5
17
9
21
26
34
30
38
2
14
6
18
10
22
27
35
31
39
3
15
7
19
11
23
28
36
32
40
4
16
8
20
12
24
1
13
2
14
LAG 3
15
4
16
9
21
10
22
LAG 11
23
12
24
CONSOLE
5
17
6
18
LAG 7
19
8
20
Cajun P120
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 141
December 2003
Point-to-Point (PPP) over channeled E1/T1
Frame Relay
Routing Information Protocol (RIP) v1/v2
Single-Area Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)
VRRP Redundancy
Throughput: wire-speed WAN routing
Congestion control
Standard auto-negotiation
Link redundancy
802.1Q/p VLAN and priority
Hot-swappable
Avaya P330 LAN expansion module
Highlights of the Avaya P330 LAN expansion module
Maximum flexibility to the data stack
Standard auto-negotiation
Link Aggregation Group (LAG)
LAG redundancy
Link redundancy
Congestion control
802.1Q/p VLAN and priority
Hot-swappable
CAUTION:
Avaya expansion modules and Octaplane stacking modules are not hot-swappable. The
system must be turned off to before you remove or insert an expansion module.
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
142 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
P330 stacking fabric (Octaplane)
"Octaplane" is a name for an Avaya hardware capability to bundle stackable components using 4-Gbps
communication in each direction. This technology combines separate units into a larger logical switch
using different lengths of cables that are connected to the expansion slots in the rear of the units. These
cables are wired in a ring configuration, providing redundancy to the stack. In the event that a single unit
should fail, the stack integrity is maintained. You can remove, or replace, any single unit without
disrupting operation or performing stack-level reconfiguration.
Power supply
The G700 Media Gateway uses an AC power supply. A power supply located in the G700 Media
Gateway converts AC input power to voltages needed by the system.
Motherboard
The motherboard resides within the G700 Media Gateway. This board controls the following:
The VoIP Engine which performs IP/UDP/RTP processing, echo cancellation, G.711 A-/µ-law,
G.729 and G723.1 encode/decode, FAX relay, silence suppression, jitter buffer management, and
packet-loss concealment. The VoIP Engine supports 64 channels. If more than 64 channels are
needed, a VoIP Media Module is required.
The Gateway Processor complex, which controls all the resources inside the Gateway. The
Gateway Processor functions include the Media Module Manager, Tone-Clock, and H.248
signaling to the Gateway Controller.
Table 6: Octaplane cabling
Cable Description and function Length Length
(metric)
X330SC Short Octaplane cable
(30 cm) Short Octaplane cable – light-colored,
used to connect adjacent switches or
switches separated by one backup
universal power supply (BUPS) unit.
12
inches 30 cm
X330LC Long Octaplane cable
(2 m) Long Octaplane cable – light-colored,
used to connect switches from two
different physical stacks
6 feet 2 m
X330RC Redundant Octaplane
cable (2 m) Redundant cable – black, used to connect
the top and bottom switches of a stack. 6 feet 2 m
X330L-LC Extra Long
Octaplane cable (8 m) Extra-long Octaplane cable – light-
colored, used to connect switches from
two different physical stacks
24 feet 8 m
X330L-RC Long redundant
Octaplane cable (8 m) Long redundant cable – black, used to
connect the top and bottom switches of a
stack.
24 feet 8 m
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 143
December 2003
An Avaya P330 processor complex is based on the Avaya P330 data-switch architecture. This
complex provides an 8-port layer-2 switch function and manages the Expansion and Cascade
modules.
Provides the electrical and physical connectivity for the four media-module slots.
NOTE:
The motherboard cannot be replaced in the field.
For more information about the VoIP Media Module, see MM760 VoIP media module on page 228.
Fans
The G700 Media Gateway contains four 12-volt fans. These fans are monitored and can be reported by
SNMP to a management station.
LEDs
The S8300 Media Server with the G700 Media Gateway uses two types of LEDs:
Media module
System-level
Media module LEDs
Media-module LEDs have the following characteristics:
Each media module has at least three LEDs to indicate module and port status or maintenance and
administration modes.
The location, spacing, and labeling is fixed for all LEDs on every media module.
The LEDs are mounted on the media module’s printed wiring board, and placed so that they show
through an opening.
System-level LEDs
An LED board visually indicates both system and Ethernet-port status by allowing customers to change
between these status-indication modes. The LEDs reside in the board’s oblong fascia panel. In turn, the
LED board resides in the upper-left front of each G700 Media Gateway.
You must remove the LED board when you install or remove either the active or standby S8300 Media
Server. The two components must be installed or removed as a unit.
NOTE:
The LED panel is not the same size as a standard media module. You cannot insert a
media module into the LED board’s slot, or vice versa.
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
144 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Gateway software
Gateway software is responsible for:
Individual media-gateway operations
Terminating H.248 on the G700 Media Gateway
Interacting with maintenance operations.
Maintenance software
An Avaya media server with a G700 Media Gateway has a dual maintenance strategy. Maintenance
software runs on both the G700 Media Gateway’s and the media servers platform for each platform’s
subsystems.
The G700 media gateway’s maintenance software performs its own initialization and motherboard
maintenance, along with internal environmental monitoring. Whereas, after the G700 Media Gateway
registers with the media server, the servers maintenance software tests and initializes the gateway’s
media modules. Although the media gateways maintenance software is aware of its own media modules,
these modules and their associated ports are controlled by the media server. Error logs are also
maintained on the media server.
Connectivity
The G700 Media Gateway connects through a LAN to a TN799DP C-LAN circuit board mounted in a
media gateway. The following figure is an example of G700 Media Gateway connectivity.
Avaya G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 145
December 2003
Figure 48: The G700 Media Gateway connecting to the S8700 Media Server
Media modules
Avaya media modules convert the voice path of the traditional circuits (such as analog trunk, T1/E1, and
DCP) to a TDM bus. The VOIP engine then converts the voice path from the TDM bus to packetized
VoIP (compressed or uncompressed) on an Ethernet connection.
The media modules reside in the G700 Media Gateway and interact with the motherboard and backplane.
Figure notes
Number Description
1Two S8700 Media Servers
2Ethernet switch – Must be Avaya-provided
3Two UPS units – One for each server
4G650 Media Gateway
5Dedicated LAN connectivity to the media gateway’s IPSI board
6IP phones off the customer’s LAN
7Voice Mail – INTUITY™ AUDIX® is shown connected via IP.
8A G700 Media Gateway is connected via the LAN to the C-LAN board located in a
G650 Media Gateway. The S8300 Media Server in an LSP configuration is located
in the G700 Media Gateway. In the event of a loss in communication between the
S8700 and the G700, the LSP will provide a backup for its registered endpoints.
9DCP Phones – Avaya multifunction digital phones
10 Analog connectivity – Including analog telephones, lines, and trunks
11 Ethernet switch (optional)
LAN
CLAN
A
IPSI
IP Media
Processor
1
11
3
A
Voice Mail
cymsrbro LAO 072903
V1
4
5
6
8
9
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Avaya G700 Media Gateway
146 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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There are five media modules:
MM710 T1/E1 – For information, see MM710 T1/E1 media module on page 219.
MM711 Analog – For information, see MM711 Analog media module on page 222.
MM712 DCP – For information, see MM712 DCP media module on page 224.
MM720 BRI – For information, see MM712 DCP media module on page 224.
MM760 VoIP – For information, see MM760 VoIP media module on page 228.
CMC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 147
December 2003
CMC1 Media Gateway
The CMC1 Media Gateway supports the DEFINITY® Server CSI and Avaya S8100, S8700, and S8500
Media Servers. It can be mounted on a wall or on the floor, and uses an AC-only power supply. The
control carrier contains two control slots, one for the processor and the other for the tone clock. Slots 3 to
10 can contain optional port circuit packs and service circuit packs. See the following figure for an
example of the CMC1 Media Gateway.
Figure 49: CMC1 Media Gateway, left side
The following figure shows the connections on the right side of the cabinet. From 1 to 10 25-pair
connectors provide an interface between port circuit packs and the cross-connect field or a cable access
panel.
scdflef2 LJK 083100
MAJ
MIN
ON
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AMBERCARDIN USE
REDEMERXFERONEMXFR
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CMC1 Media Gateway
148 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Figure 50: CMC1 Media Gateway, right side
An S8100 Media Server can support up to three CMC1 Media Gateways. Whereas, a DEFINITY Server
CSI can support up to four. In the CMC1 Media Gateway that contains the server and Tone-Clock circuit
packs, some slots are unavailable for port and service circuit packs. Whereas, in every other connected
CMC1 Media Gateway, every slot is available for a port or service circuit pack.
scdfrf2 KLC 061097
CMC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 149
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Figure 51: Typical vertical installation, front view of the CMC1 Media Gateway
Floor
indf3cmc KLC 110497
A
C
B
SCC1 Media Gateway
150 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
SCC1 Media Gateway
This section describes the SCC1 Media Gateway. Each SCC1 Media Gateway has vertical slots that hold
circuit packs. A blank faceplate covers each unused slot. The following figure shows a typical SCC1
Media Gateway.
Figure 52: Typical SCC1 Media Gateway
A maximum of four SCC1 Media Gateways can be stacked on top of each other. The cabinet positions are
labeled A through D. The position of the basic control cabinet or expansion control cabinet is always
labeled A. Additional port-cabinet positions are labeled B, C, and D, sequentially.
The duplicated control cabinet used for the DEFINITY servers is labeled B. See the following figure for
an example of a stack of SCC1 Media Gateways.
Figure notes
Number Description
1Circuit packs
2Power converter
3Air circulation vents
scdfscci KLC 032502
1
2
3
SCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 151
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Figure 53: Typical SCC1 stack
Figure notes
Number Description
1Port cabinet in the D position
2Port cabinet in the C position
3Port cabinet or duplicated control cabinet in the B position
4Basic control cabinet or expansion control cabinet
5Cabinet clips
lcdfsc1i KLC 012500
1
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3
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5
5
SCC1 Media Gateway
152 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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For DEFINITY Servers:
Each stack of SCC1 Media Gateways requires one basic or expansion control cabinet at the
bottom of the stack.
The maximum number of SCC1 Media Gateway stacks or port networks:
Three for the DEFINITY Server SI
44 for the DEFINITY Server R.
Cabinet clips connect the cabinets together. At the rear of the cabinets, a ground plate connects between
cabinets for ground integrity.
For Avaya Media Servers:
S8500 - SCC1 Media Gateways are supported for migrations only
Maximum number of SCC1 stacks or PNs is 64.
S8700 - SCC1 Media Servers are supported in a multi-connect configuration only
Maximum number of SCC1 stacks or PNs is 64.
The purple- and white-colored circuit packs and slots have been replaced by circuit packs and slots that
are labeled with gray and white rectangles, respectively. A label with a solid gray rectangle indicates a
slot for a port circuit pack. A label with an outlined white rectangle indicates a slot for a control circuit
pack.
Each port slot in a port carrier, an expansion control carrier, or a control carrier attaches to a 25-pair
connector on the carriers rear panel. A cable attaches to each connector and routes to the cross-connect
field.
Blank faceplates cover empty carrier slots, as follows:
158J covers the area to the left of slot 1 in port cabinets (4 in/9.2 cm)
158P (0.75 in/1.9 cm) covers any unused slot.
158N (0.50 in/1.27 cm) is used with the LAN Gateway in DEFINITY AUDIX Release 3 and
CallVisor ASAI installations
158G (0.25 in/0.63 cm) is used with the TN755 or the TN2202 circuit pack
Table 7: Cabinet circuit-pack slots
Type Description Server
Port A port slot is colored purple or labeled with a gray rectangle. A port slot can
accept any purple or gray-labeled circuit pack DEFINITY Server
R, SI, S8700 Media
Server, and S8500
Media Server
Control A control slot is colored white or labeled with a outlined white rectangle. A
port slot can accept any purple or gray-labeled circuit pack. DEFINITY Server
R and SI
Service A service slot is colored purple or labeled with a gray rectangle. A service slot
accepts a special type of circuit pack that does not have an I/O connector DEFINITY Server
R, SI, S8700 Media
Server, and S8500
Media Server
SCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 153
December 2003
In the following figure, a balanced ring generator (BRG) is shown below the power unit slot in certain
carriers. This means that the power unit slot can include a 50-Hz BRG when optioned for France.
Carriers
Basic control cabinet for a DEFINITY Server
SI
The basic control cabinet is in the PN only and is only used by DEFINITY Servers. This cabinet contains
ports, a control complex to perform call processing, and an interface to an optional duplicated control
cabinet. The basic control cabinet also interfaces to an optional Stratum-3 clock.
The basic control cabinet has dedicated white circuit-pack slots that contain specific control circuit packs.
Dual-colored slots can contain any port circuit pack or the designated white circuit packs (such as an
expansion interface or power unit). AC or DC power units supply power to the carrier. The following
figure shows an example of the basic control cabinet.
Figure 54: SCC1 basic control cabinet (front)
The following table describes the connectors in the basic control carrier.
Connector Function
1 to 16 (A1 to A16) 25-pair connectors that provide interfaces between connect port circuit
packs and the cross-connect field or a fiber transceiver
AUX (auxiliary) Provides interfaces for customer alarms, attendant console power,
emergency power-transfer panels, and an internal modem that is used for
remote maintenance.
PI (processor interface) Provides a BX.25 protocol interface for communication between the
circuit pack and external DCE equipment. This connection is only used
with the standard-reliability option.
1 of 2
B
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AUTO
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OVERIDE
S
P
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103577450
Lucent
98DR07125243
TN792 DUPL INTERFACE
C
A
R
D
I
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U
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BBI
LINK
TRMT
RCV
ALARMS
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SCC1 Media Gateway
154 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Duplicated control cabinet for a DEFINITY
Server SI
The optional duplicated control cabinet only resides in the PN for the DEFINITY Servers. A duplicated
control cabinet contains ports and a duplicated control complex.
A duplicated control cabinet has dedicated white-colored circuit-pack slots for designated control circuit
packs. A port circuit-pack slot can contain any port circuit pack.
An AC or DC power supply resides in the right side of the cabinet. The cabinet contains a duplication
interface circuit pack in slot DUPN INTFC. The following figure shows an example of a duplicated
control cabinet.
Figure 55: Duplicated Control Cabinet (Front)
DCE Connects the processor to CDR equipment, a system printer, or an external
modem that is used for remote maintenance. This connector can be used
with any reliability option.
TERMINAL Connects an administration terminal to the processor circuit pack in
standard-reliability systems. The terminal connector always connects to
the processor in the carrier of the terminal.
DOT (duplication
option terminal) Used in a high- or critical-reliability configuration to connect an
administration terminal to the active processor via the duplication
interface slot. The DOT connector can be used to connect to the processor
in another carrier.
Connector Function
2 of 2
B
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AUTO
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OVERIDE
S
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103577450
Lucent
98DR07125243
TN792 DUPL INTERFACE
C
A
R
D
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S
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BBI
LINK
TRMT
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ALARMS
EMER TR
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ON
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SCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 155
December 2003
The following table lists a duplicated control cabinet’s connectors and their functions.
Expansion control cabinet for a DEFINITY
Server SI, DEFINITY Server R, S8700 Media
Server, or S8500 Media Server
The expansion control cabinet contains ports, an interface to a port cabinet, a maintenance interface, and
a tone-clock. The tone-clock, which is replaced by an IPSI, is not needed when using the S8700 Media
Server or the S8500 Media Server in an IPSI-controlled port network.
An expansion control cabinet is the first in an expansion PN stack of SCC1 Media Gateways. An
expansion control cabinet has optional port circuit packs in port slots 2 to 17. An AC or DC power supply
resides in the right side of the cabinet.
Figure 56: Expansion control cabinet
Connector Function
01 to 16 (A01 to A16) 25-pair connectors that provide interfaces between port circuit packs to
the cross-connect field or a fiber transceiver
TERMINAL Can connect to the processor circuit pack in the duplicated control
cabinet in the event the duplication interface circuit pack fails in the
control carrier.
1
5
8
P
1
5
8
P
B
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a
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B
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a
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ccdf11n KLC 032502
T
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7
7
5
T
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2
3
1
2
A
P
T
N
5
7
0
T
N
5
7
0
ALARMS
EMER TR
MAJ
MIN
WRN
ACK
ON
OFF
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Mtce
CLK
S
E
R
V
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E
N
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SCC1 Media Gateway
156 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
The following table describes the connectors of the expansion control cabinet.
Port cabinet for a DEFINITY Server SI,
DEFINITY Server R, S8700 Media Server,
or S8500 Media Server
Port cabinets reside in the PN and in expansion PNs. A port cabinet contains ports and an interface to an
expansion control cabinet. A port cabinet has optional port circuit packs in port slots 1 to 18. In a critical-
reliability system, these can include a Tone-Clock circuit pack in slot 1 and an expansion interface circuit
packs in slots 2 and 3. A neon power unit can be installed in slots 17 and 18.
An AC or DC power supply resides in the right side of each cabinet. The following figure shows an
example of a port cabinet.
Connector Function
1 (A1) Provides a fiber-optic cable interface to an expansion interface (EI) circuit
pack in slot 11 or a copper cable interface for a DS1 Converter.
1 In systems that use ATM-PNC, the fiber connectors for the OC-3/STM-1 interfaces to the ATM switches reside
on the faceplates of the TN2305 circuit pack or the TN2306 circuit pack.
2 to 17 (A2 to A17) 25-pair connectors that provide interface between the port circuit packs and
the cross-connect field or a fiber transceiver.
AUX (auxiliary) Provides interfaces for customer alarms, attendant console power, and
emergency power transfer panels.
TERM (terminal) Connects an administration terminal to the maintenance circuit pack and
used for the DEFINITY Server SI and DEFINITY Server R. This is not used
for the S8700 Media Server or the S8500 Media Server.
SCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 157
December 2003
Figure 57: Port cabinet
The following table describes the connectors to the port cabinet.
Connector Function
2 to 3
(B2 to B3)
An Expansion Interface port that provides an interface for a fiber-optic cable
that runs either to an Expansion Interface circuit pack in another PN or a
Switch Node Interface circuit pack in a center-stage switch. For an ATM
configuration, these slots contain an ATM interface circuit pack, and a fiber-
optic cable connects to an ATM data switch.
1 to 18
(B1 to B18)
25-pair connectors that provide interfaces between the port circuit packs and
the cross-connect field or a fiber transceiver.
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SCC1 Media Gateway
158 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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MCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 159
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MCC1 Media Gateway
An MCC1 Media Gateway can be used as a port network (PN) cabinet. Doors in front of and behind the
MCC1 Media Gateway protect the internal equipment and allow easy access to the circuit packs. Each
MCC1 Media Gateway contains casters. Leveling feet keep the cabinet from rolling. Each lower corner
of a MCC1 Media Gateway can bolt to the floor, if required.
See Figure 58, Typical MCC1 Media Gateway layout, on page 160 for an example of the MCC1 Media
Gateway layout.
MCC1 Media Gateway
160 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 58: Typical MCC1 Media Gateway layout
Figure notes
Number Description
1Carrier in position C
2Carrier in position B
3Carrier in position A
4Fan unit
5Carrier in position D
6Carrier in position E
7Power-distribution unit
lcdfpdui KLC 031202
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
MCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 161
December 2003
Auxiliary cabinet
The auxiliary cabinet contains the hardware to install optional equipment. The cabinet allows carrier, rack
(width: 23 in.; 58.4 cm), and panel types of mounting. An auxiliary cabinet contains the following:
A fuse panel (J58889AB) that distributes -48 VDC to fused cabinet circuits
An AC power receptacle strip that provides switched and unswitched 120-VAC receptacles
A DC connector block for cabinets powered by either an external DC source or by an AC-to-DC
converter that:
Accepts AC power from a switched outlet of an AC power strip
Sends converted DC power onto the required DC connector block
Port network cabinet for DEFINITY Server R or
SI
A port network cabinet contains the following components
For a DEFINITY Server SI:
One to four port carriers (J58890BB)
One control carrier (J58890AH)
One duplicated control carrier (J58890AJ) in a high- or critical-reliability configuration
For a DEFINITY Server R:
One to four port carriers (J58890BB)
One processor carrier (J58890AP) in a high-reliability configuration. Two processor carriers in a
critical-reliability configuration.
Minimum of one switch node (SN) carrier (J58890SA) in a standard- or high-reliability
configuration with a center stage switch (CSS). Minimum of 2 SN carriers in a critical-reliability
configuration.
Port network cabinet for Avaya S8700 Media
Server
One to four port carriers (J58890BB)
In a configuration with Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM), an ATM Interface card
Minimum of one switch node (SN) carrier (J58890SA) in a standard- or high-reliability
configuration with a center stage switch (CSS). Minimum of 2 SN carriers in a critical-reliability
configuration
See Figure 59, Typical PN Cabinet for all server models, on page 162 for an example of a typical PN
cabinet.
MCC1 Media Gateway
162 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 59: Typical PN Cabinet for all server models
Figure notes
Number Description
1Port carrier in position C
2Port, control, or processor carrier in position B
3Control, processor, or expansion control carrier in position A
4Fan units
5Port or switch node (SN) carrier in position D
6Port or SN carrier in position E
7Power-distribution unit
lcdfpdui KLC 031202
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
MCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 163
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Port network cabinet for Avaya S8500 Media
Server
The Avaya S8500 Media Server supports the MCC1 Media Gateway in migrations from a DEFINITY R
simplex configuration. A maximum of three Port Networks are supported in a direct connect
configuration only.
Expansion port network cabinet for DEFINITY
Server R or SI
An expansion port network (EPN) cabinet contains the following carriers:
One to four port carriers (J58890BB)
One expansion control carrier (J58890AF)
Zero, one, or two SN carriers (J58890SA) in CSS-connected R model as required
See Figure 60, MCC1 EPN cabinet, on page 163 for an example of an MCC1 EPN cabinet.
Figure 60: MCC1 EPN cabinet
In a minimal dual-EPN cabinet configuration, the A, B, and C carrier positions are intended for the first
port network in the cabinet. The D and E carrier positions are intended for the second port network in the
cabinet. When a cabinet has two PNs, carrier position E must be used and populated first. Carrier position
D is added and populated second.
4
1
Power
distribution
unit
Port carrier
Port carrier
Port or switch
node carrier
Port or switch
node carrier
Expansion
control carrier
lcdfpdu4 LJK 081999
MCC1 Media Gateway
164 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Carriers
The following table lists the types of carriers that can be installed in the MCC1 Media Gateway with the
DEFINITY Server R, the DEFINITY Server SI, the S8700 Media Server, and the S8500 Media Server.
Each carrier will be described in greater detail later in this section.
.
Control carrier for DEFINITY Server SI
The control carrier is used for a DEFINITY Server SI. This carrier is not used for an S8700 Media Server
or an S8500 Media Server.
See Figure 61, Control carrier (front), on page 165 for an example of a control carrier.
Description Cabinet Server
Control Carrier – Contains the processor circuit packs to
perform call processing and maintenance PN DEFINITY Server SI
Processor Carrier – Contains the processing circuit
packs to perform call processing, maintenance, and
administration. These carriers do not contain port circuit
packs. Two J58890AP carriers are in the PN for high-
and critical-reliability, duplicate processor, systems.
PN DEFINITY Server SI and
DEFINITY Server R
Port Carrier (optional) – Contains the port, service,
Tone-Clock, and EI circuit packs. PN or
EPN DEFINITY Server SI and
DEFINITY Server R
Expansion control carrier – Contains extra port Tone-
Clock, maintenance interface, and EI circuit packs. EPN DEFINITY Server R,
DEFINITY Server SI,
S8700 Media Server, and
S8500 Media Server
Switch node carrier – Contains the SNI circuit packs
that make up the CSS. EPN or
PPN DEFINITY Server R and
S8700 Media Server
Duplicated control carrier (optional) – Contains the
duplicate processor circuit packs to perform call
processing, maintenance, and administration identical to
that of the control carrier. This carrier can also contain
port circuit packs.
PN DEFINITY Server SI
MCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 165
December 2003
Figure 61: Control carrier (front)
The control carrier (J58890AH) has dedicated white-colored circuit pack slots that always contain
specific control circuit packs. Dual-colored slots can contain any port circuit pack or the designated white
circuit pack, such as an EI or power unit. AC or DC power units supply power to the carrier.
The following table describes the connectors in the control carrier.
Connector Function
1 to 9 (A1 to A9) 25-pair connectors provide interfaces between port circuit packs and the
cross-connect field or fiber transceiver.
AUX (Auxiliary) Provide an interface for alarms, attendant console power, emergency
power transfer panels, and an internal modem that is used for remote
maintenance.
Processor interface for
standard-reliability
configurations
Connects directly to the PI circuit pack. Provides a BX.25 protocol
interface for communication between the circuit pack and external DCE
equipment.
Duplication option
terminal Used in high- and critical-reliability systems to connect an
administration terminal to the active processor from the duplication
interface slot position.
Terminal Connects a management terminal to the processor in a standard-
reliability system. In a critical-reliability system, connects a terminal to
the processor in the control carrier.
P1 Provides a position indicator of the carrier, power to fans, and access to
alarm and control circuits
P2 Provides control signals to the carrier
Data communications
equipment Connects the processor to CDR equipment, a system printer, or an
external modem that is used for remote maintenance. This connector can
be used with any reliability option.
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103577450
Lucent
98DR07125243
TN792DUPL INTERFACE
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a
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B
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a
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B
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B
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B
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B
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MCC1 Media Gateway
166 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Duplicated control carrier for DEFINITY
Server SI
A duplicated control carrier (J58890AJ) contains the following colored slots:
Dedicated white-colored circuit-pack slots that always contain specific control circuit packs.
Gray and purple slots can contain port circuit packs.
Dual-colored slots of white, gray, or purple can contain port circuit packs or designated white
circuit packs, such as an expansion interface or power unit.
AC or DC power units reside at each end of a duplicated control carrier.
The following table describes the connectors in a duplicated control carrier.
Processor carrier for DEFINITY Server R or SI
The processor carrier contains only dedicated slots for control circuit packs. A processor carrier does not
contain slots for port circuit packs. The following figure shows an example.
This carrier always contains four memory circuit packs and one Packet Interface circuit pack. AC or DC
power units reside at each end of a processor carrier.
See Figure 62, Processor Carrier, on page 167 for an example of a processor carrier.
Connector Function
1 to 9 (B1 to B9) 25-pair connectors provide interfaces between port circuit packs and the
cross-connect field or fiber transceiver.
Terminal Connects a management terminal to the processor in the duplicated control
carrier
P1 Provides a position indicator of the carrier, and access to alarm and control
circuits
MCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 167
December 2003
Figure 62: Processor Carrier
The following table describes the connectors in a processor carrier.
Expansion Control Carrier for all server
models
The expansion control carrier contains an EI or ATM Interface circuit pack in port slots 1 and 2. An
expansion control carrier is used in a fiber-optic cabling path to another cabinet or the CSS in the same
cabinet. The slots in an expansion control carrier may contain optional port circuit packs.
An expansion control carrier also contains port slots 3 to 19 and AC or DC power units. The Maintenance
and Tone-Clock circuit packs are also shown. An optional neon power unit can be in slot 18 or 19.
Connector Function
Clock (Stratum-3) The stratum-3 clock provides an interface for digital frame timing. (This is
not a time-of-day clock.)
AUX (Auxiliary) The AUX carrier provides an interface for customer alarms, attendant
console power, emergency power-transfer panels, and an internal modem
interface for remote maintenance.
Terminal active Connects a management terminal to the system access and maintenance
(SYSAM) circuit pack in the active processor carrier.
Terminal standby Used only with duplicated processors to connect a management terminal to
the standby processor carrier.
P1 Provides a position indicator of the carrier and access to alarm and control
circuits
P2 Provides control signals to the carrier
ccdfr8ap KLC 081601
Z100A1
blanks
or
631DA1
631DB1
or
649A
T
N
1
6
4
8
T
N
1
6
5
7
T
N
7
8
0
or
T
N
2
1
8
2
T
N
1
6
5
0
T
N
1
6
5
0
T
N
1
6
5
0
T
N
1
6
5
0
Z
1
0
0
C
T
N
1
6
5
5
T
N
2
2
1
1
U
N
3
3
0
U
N
3
3
1
U
N
3
3
2
OVERRIDE
B
SPE
AUTO
A
TN2211 OPTICAL DRIVE
CAUTION: DO NOT REMOVE until shutdown procedure
is completed. OK to remove only when green and yellow
LED’s are off.
B
l
a
n
k
B
l
a
n
k
B
l
a
n
k
B
l
a
n
k
B
l
a
n
k
B
l
a
n
k
MCC1 Media Gateway
168 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
See Figure 63, Expansion Control Carrier (Front), on page 168 for an example of an expansion control
carrier.
Figure 63: Expansion Control Carrier (Front)
The following table describes the connectors of an expansion control carrier.
Connector Function
1 and 2
A1 and A2
Provides a fiber-optic cable interface to an Expansion Interface (EI) circuit
pack in slot 11 or a copper cable interface for a DS1 converter
1 In systems that use ATM-PNC, the fiber connectors for the OC-3/STM-1 interfaces to the ATM switches reside
on the faceplates of the TN2305 or the TN2306 circuit packs.
1 to 19
A1 to A19
25-pair connectors provide interfaces between port circuit packs and the
cross-connect field or fiber transceiver
Auxiliary (AUX) Provides interfaces for customer alarms, attendant console power, and
emergency power transfer panels
TERMINAL Connects a management terminal to the Maintenance circuit pack in an
expansion control carrier
P1 Provides a position indicator of the carrier and access to alarm and control
circuits
P2 Connects ringing voltage from the ring generator to the carrier and produces
control signals
ccdf10af KLC 101601
Z100A1
blanks
or
631DA1
631DB1
or
649A
T
N
2
1
8
2
T
N
7
7
5
T
N
5
7
0
Z
1
0
0
C
T
N
5
7
0
ALARMS
EMER TR
MAJ
MIN
WRN
ACK
ON
OFF
AUTO
MCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 169
December 2003
Port carrier for DEFINITY Server SI or R,
S8700 Media Server, or S8500 Media Server
A port carrier contains the following slots:
Port slot locations 1 to 20 for the port circuit packs. Slot 1 might contain a Tone-Clock circuit
pack when the port carrier is in the B position of an EPN cabinet in a critical-reliability system.
Slot 2 contains an optional EI or ATM Interface circuit pack for a critical-reliability system.
A power unit service slot in which a power unit circuit pack or service circuit pack can be
installed.
AC or DC power units reside at each end of the carrier.
See Figure 64, Port carrier (front), on page 169 for an example of a port carrier.
Figure 64: Port carrier (front)
The following table describes the connectors in the processor carrier.
Connector Function
1 to 20 25-pair connectors that provide interfaces between port circuit packs and the
cross-connect field or fiber transceiver
P1 Provides a position indicator of the carrier and access to alarm and control
circuits
ccdf10bb KLC 101601
Z100A1
blanks
or
631DA1
631DB1
or
649A
T
N
2
1
8
2
T
N
5
7
0
Z
1
0
0
C
T
N
5
7
0
MCC1 Media Gateway
170 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Switch node carrier for DEFINITY Server R or
S8700 Media Server
The switch node carrier (SNC) (J58890SA) can contain:
One or two switch node clocks
Up to 16 Switch Node Interface (SNI) circuit packs
One or two DS1 converter circuit packs
One EI circuit pack
Two AC or DC power units
An AC or DC power unit resides at each end of an SNC. An SNC can be used when connecting from one
to 44 PNs, but must be used when connecting three or more EPNs.
See Figure 65, Switch node carrier (front), on page 170 for an example of a switch node carrier.
Figure 65: Switch node carrier (front)
The following table describes the connectors in a switch node carrier.
Connector Function
1 (E1) EI connector for the cable between the EI circuit pack in slot 1 and the
Switch Node Interface (SNI) circuit pack in slot 2 for a duplicated PN only.
Also used for a DS1 Converter circuit pack in slot 1.
2 to 9 and 13 to 20
(E2 to E19 and E13 to
E20)
SN ports that are fiber-optic cabling interfaces to the SNI circuit packs and
other circuit packs that are connected to SN ports or circuit packs in
expansion PNs.
21 (E21) Interface to connect the DS1 Converter circuit pack to the cross-connect
field and an SNI circuit pack.
P1 Provides the position indicator of the SN carrier and provides access to
alarm circuits and control circuits.
T
N
5
7
0
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
3
T
N
5
7
2
T
N
5
7
2
T
N
1
6
5
4
Service
E
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21
SWITCH NODE INTERFACE
TEST
SWITCH
NODE
CLOCK
SWITCH
NODE
CLOCK
DS1
CONV
5678 92341
SWITCH NODE INTERFACE
631DA1
or
649A
631DA1
or
649A
DS1 CONV
EXPN INTFC
POWER UNIT
Power Unit
Z
1
0
0
C
b
l
a
n
k
Z
1
0
0
C
b
l
a
n
k
Service Port Service
ccdf0005 KLC 081601
MCC1 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 171
December 2003
The purple- and white-colored circuit packs and slots have been replaced by circuit packs and slots that
are labeled with gray and white rectangles, respectively. A label with a solid gray rectangle indicates a
slot for a port circuit pack. A label with an outlined white rectangle indicates a slot for a control circuit
pack. Each port slot attaches to a 50-pin (25-pair) connector on the rear panel of the carrier. A cable
attaches to each connector and is routed to the cross-connect field. Each slot that contains a fiber-optic
interface circuit pack (EI or SNI) uses a fiber-optic transceiver on the rear panel of the carrier.
A current limiter board (CFY1B) plugs into the backplane of the carrier located in the A position. The
board supplies the following:
Emergency transfer logic
Current-limited power
5 VDC to trip the main circuit breaker in an over-temperature condition
The ringing transfer relay
Terminators on the backplane terminate each end of the processor expansion bus.
The following apparatus blank faceplates (with widths) cover unused circuit pack slots in the carriers to
maintain proper air flow:
Z100A1, 0.75 inches (1.9 cm)
Z100C, 0.5 inches (1.27 cm)
Z100D, 0.25 inches (0.64 cm)
Table 8: Carrier circuit pack slots
Type Description Server
Port A port slot is colored purple or labeled with a gray rectangle. A
port slot can accept any purple- or gray-labeled circuit pack. DEFINITY Server
R, SI, and S8700
Media Server
Control A control slot is colored white or labeled with a outlined white
rectangle. A port slot can accept any purple- or gray-labeled
circuit pack.
DEFINITY Server R
and SI
Service A service slot is colored purple or labeled with a gray rectangle. A
service slot accepts special circuit packs that do not have an I/O
connector.
DEFINITY Server
R, SI and S8700
Media Server
Circuit packs and power supplies
1217A AC power supply
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 173
December 2003
Circuit packs and power supplies
1217A AC power supply
A 1217A power supply is used only with an SCC1 Media Gateway. This power supply provides
additional protection to your equipment in the event of an overload. An overload triggers a power-supply
alarm, but the system’s cooling fans continue to run, and the power supply continues to function. This
power supply replaces the WP-51193 L3 and L4-25 and is fully backward compatible.
This power factor-corrected supply accepts 50- or 60-Hz AC input, while auto-ranging between 90- and
264-VAC input. This multiple-output power supply provides regulated DC outputs and AC ringer outputs
that are switch-selectable 20- or 25-Hz AC . The 1217A power supply meets the:
Harmonic-distortion requirements of IEC1000-3-2 (PFC)
Immunity requirements of IEC 1000-4
Safety requirements of IEC 950
Current UL requirements and CSA requirements
The 1217A power supply mounts in a carriers power supply slot. A power cord with a 3-prong plug on
one end connects the supply to a dedicated AC power source.
631DA1 AC power unit
A 631DA1 power unit accepts 60-Hz, 120-VAC input power and provides DC power at +5V and up to
60A for the backplanes of an MCC1 Media Gateway’s carriers.
If AC input power fails, the power unit can convert 144 VDC from optional batteries in an AC power-
distribution unit to +5 VDC. A circuit in the optional battery charger detects the higher equivalent (AC-
or DC-input) voltage and switches in the correct input voltage.
631DB1 AC power unit
A 631DB1 power unit accepts 60-Hz, 120-VAC input power and provides DC power at both:
–48 V at 8 A
–5 V at 6 A
for the backplanes of an MCC1 Media Gateway’s carriers. The DC output of –48 V also drives the
cabinet’s fans.
Circuit packs and power supplies
649A DC power unit
174 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
If AC input power fails, the power unit can convert 144 VDC from optional batteries in an AC power-
distribution unit to +5 VDC. A circuit in the optional battery charger detects the higher equivalent (AC-
or DC-input) voltage and switches in the correct input voltage.
649A DC power unit
A 649A power converter converts a DC input of –48 V into DC outputs of:
–48 V at 10 A
±5 V at 6 A
for an MCC1 Media Gateway. Within a carrier, these outputs are distributed to the circuit packs’ slots.
Only one 649A converter is required per carrier except for SN carriers. SN carriers require two
converters, one on each end. The use of the 649A power unit also allows an increase in the number of
telephones supported by each carrier.
650A AC power unit
This global power factor-corrected supply accepts 47- to 63-Hz AC input, while auto-ranging between
85- and 264-VAC input. While providing 330 Watts of total output, the 650A power unit provides
multiple DC outputs as follows:
+5.1 VDC at 28 A
–5.1 VDC at 1.0 A
–48 VDC at 4.5 A
+8- to +14 VDC at 1.6 A (fan-speed control)
This output (+12 VDC nominal) controls the fans’ speed. The voltage varies with the temperature
of the ambient air at the inlet below the power supply. If this voltage reaches +14 VDC, the
system activates a FANALM signal.
–115 to –150 VDC at 200 mA (neon bus)
The 650A power unit has three switch-selectable outputs for ringing:
20-Hz AC output at 85 V RMS and 80 mA, — centered about –48 VDC at 180 mA
25-Hz AC output at 72 V RMS and 8 to 80 mA, — centered about –48 VDC at 180 mA
Two 50-Hz AC outputs at 28 V RMS (effectively 56 V) and 220 mA, — biased about –48 and
0 VDC at 70 mA balanced
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 175
December 2003
655A power supply
The G650 can use one or two 655A power supplies. Either power supply can provide all the power
needed by the G650. When there are two power supplies, they share the power load. The 655A power
supply is:
The only power supply supported in the G650
Not backward compatible to other carrier types
If one G655A power supply is used it will be located in slot 0 of the G650 Media Gateway. If two G655A
power units are used, they will be located in slots 0 and 15.
NOTE:
You can insert or remove a redundant power supply and not affect the G650 if the other
655A power supply is operating.
Input power
The 655A power supply is capable of operating on either AC or DC input power. AC power is always
used if available. One power supply can operate on AC power, and the other on DC power. The power
supplies use AC power first and switch to DC power if AC power fails or is not present.
AC power
Commercial AC is the primary input power source. Both slot 0 and slot 15 have dedicated AC input. The
655A power supply can operate on AC input of 90- to 264-VAC at 47 to 63 Hz. The nominal ranges for
AC power are:
100- to 120-VAC at 50 or 60 Hz
200- to 240-VAC at 50 or 60 Hz
DC power
Minus 48VDC power can be supplied simultaneously as backup power. One -48VDC power input point
is provided on the G650 backplane and is distributed through the backplane to each power supply.
Serial bus
The 655A power supply interfaces to the serial bus that is implemented on the G650 cabinet backplane.
The 655A responds to commands and queries from the TN2312BP IPSI serial bus master.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
176 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
655A faceplate LEDs
The five LEDs on the faceplate of the 655A power supply are in a vertical line with the red LED on top.
These five LEDs provide the following status:
Red – This LED:
Lights when there is a failure in either the power supply or the fans. (For a G650 with
redundant power supplies, a failure in the fan assembly results in this LED being lit on
both power supplies.)
Flashes off once per second when the software shuts down the ring voltage output of a
power supply
Yellow – This LED:
Lights when the status of the power supply and fans is OK
Flashes once per second when the software shuts down a single power supply, in a carrier
with operational redundant power supplies
Green – Lights when there is AC power applied to the power supply
Green – Lights when there is DC power applied to the power supply
Green – Lights when the power supply is supplying ringing to the G650
655A ring generation
The 655A provides either North American ringing (20 Hz) or European/International (25 Hz) ringing. It
also has a setting to provide no ringing when the customer supplies a ring generator that is external to the
power supply. A TN2202 (French ringing circuit pack) is an example of an external ring generator.
The 655A power supply provides a physical slide switch to select the frequency of the ring generator. The
options are:
20 Hz – North American
25 Hz – European and international
Other – No ringing output when an external ring generator is used such as the TN2202 French
ringing circuit pack.
You must remove the power supply from the G650 when you change the ringing frequency selection.
Only one 655A supplies ringing to the G650. The power supply in slot 0 in the G650 is the default for
ringing. The system uses this default 655A unless it has failed or the software has commanded it to shut
down. When a G650 carrier has redundant power supplies, one supply automatically supplies ringing if
the other power supply fails.
A 655A provides ringing to only one G650 carrier. For example, the 655A power supplies in carrier A
supply ringing only to carrier A, and the power supplies in carrier D supply ringing only to carrier D. If
the ring generation in both of a carriers power supplies fail, no other power supply provides ringing for
the carrier.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 177
December 2003
676C DC power supply
A –48 VDC source supplies power to the DC power supply at up to 25 A. The 676C power supply for the
SCC1 Media Gateway, produces DC outputs of +5, –5, –48, and +12 VDC. The DC outputs are
distributed across the cabinet’s backplane to each circuit pack’s slot. The output value and frequency of
the AC ringing voltage depend on the country of use. The power supply has circuit breakers and
electromagnetic interference (EMI) filtering.
982LS current limiter
The 982LS current limiter connects behind the Processor circuit pack’s slot only in the processor port
network (PPN) of a DEFINITY SI system. The 982LS provides current-limited accessory 48-VDC,
emergency transfer logic, current-limited 5-VDC to trip main circuit breaker if high temperature is
detected, and duplicated 48-VDC to fans in the PPN cabinet.
CFY1B current limiter
The CFY1B current limiter is used only in the DEFINITY R system only.
The CFY1B circuit pack supports the PPN and the MCC1 and SCC1 Media Gateway EPNs. The CFY1B
current limiter connects behind the Maintenance circuit pack’s slot and provides current-limited
accessory 48-VDC, emergency transfer logic, current-limited 5-VDC to trip the main circuit breaker if
high temperature is detected, and duplicated 48-VDC to fans in an EPN cabinet.
ED-1E568 DEFINITY AUDIX R4
For information about ED-1E568 DEFINITY AUDIX R4, see TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice
Mail System (part of ED-1E568) on page 181.
J58890MA-1 Multiapplication Platform for
DEFINITY (MAPD)
The J58890MA-1 is a variation of the MAPD platform that transports ASAI links between a DEFINITY
LAN gateway system and an Ethernet LAN. The J58890MA-1 circuit-pack assembly uses the TN801B
MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface) which is a circuit pack that is built from industry-standard PC
processors, interfaces, buses, and ISA/PCI expansion boards. The J58890MA-1 takes up three adjacent
slots in the carrier. In a CMC1 Media Gateway the J58890MA uses only two slots if placed in slot six or
seven. There are different lists of the J58890MA which is indicated by a number at the end after the dash.
A list represents different hardware configurations of the same board.
The following describes the capabilities of the different lists for the J58890MA:
J58890MA-2 supports CallVisor ASAI and LAN Gateway
J58890MA-10 supports IP trunking
J58890MA-20 supports CallVisor ASAI, Avaya Computer Telephony, and Basic Call
Management System Reporting Desktop
J58890MA-30 supports IP solutions
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
178 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
NAA1 fiber-optic cable adaptor
The NAA1 adapter reroutes fiber-optic cable from the front of an ATM circuit pack to the rear of a CMC1
Media Gateway. While the NAA1 fiber-optic cable adaptor looks like a circuit pack, it is electrically and
optically passive.
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification
(ICLID)
The TN429 Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) circuit pack provides eight ports for direct
inward/outward dialing (DIOD) trunks. Each port provides a 2-wire interface to the central office (CO)
public exchange for incoming calls and outgoing calls. The CO provides caller names and numbers to the
circuit pack, which displays them on digital telephones (DCP and BRI) equipped with a 32- or 40-
character alphanumeric display. In the United States the ICLID supports name and number. In Japan, and
other countries that comply with requirements the ICLID displays the number only.
This ICLID is required for the Japan ANI feature where the calling number passes through to the switch.
An in-band detector/converter may be required. Contact your Avaya representative more information.
The ICLID provides the required CO disconnect functions as well as the interface to CAMA/E911.
TN433 Speech Synthesizer
The TN433 speech synthesizer for Italian provides four ports that retrieve fixed messages for leave word
calling, automatic wake up, and attendant console features for the visually impaired. These fixed
messages include: good morning, time-of-day, and extension number. Each of the ports has touch-tone
detection. The TN433 speech synthesizer has administrable A- and µ-Law companding capabilities.
TN436B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports)
The TN436B Direct Inward Dialing (DID) trunk for Australia provides eight ports for DID. These ports
are independently connected to a public network. Each port is an interface between a 2-wire analog line
from a CO and the 4-wire TDM network in the system. The TN436B DID for Australia has administrable
timers.
TN438B Central Office Trunk (8 ports)
The TN438B CO trunk for Australia provides eight ports for loop-start CO trunks. Each of the eight ports
has tip and ring signal lead. The TN438B can detect 12-kHz and 50-Hz periodic metering pulses from the
CO. Additional features include call still held timing and automatic guard fault-detection circuitry.
TN439 Tie Trunk (4 ports)
The TN439 Tie Trunk circuit pack for Australia and Japan provides four ports for 2-wire tie trunks with
loop disconnect signaling. The TN439 has administrable A- and µ-Law companding and administrable
timers.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 179
December 2003
TN457 Speech Synthesizer
The TN457 speech synthesizer or British English provides four ports that retrieve fixed messages for
leave word calling, automatic wake up, and attendant console features for the visually impaired, that are
spoken with a UK accent. Examples of messages are: good morning, time-of-day, and extension number.
Each of the ports has touch-tone detection. The TN457 has administrable A- and µ-Law companding
capabilities.
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports)
The TN459B DID circuit pack for the United Kingdom provides eight ports for immediate- or wink-start
DID trunks. Each port has tip and ring signal leads. Each port is an interface between a 2-wire analog line
from a CO and the 4-wire TDM network in the system. The TN459B has administrable timers and a
backward busy circuit that complies with signaling requirements.
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1
(32 channels)
The TN464GP circuit pack provides:
Board-level, administrable A- or µ-Law companding
CRC-4 generation and checking (E1 only)
Stratum-3 clock capability
ISDN-PRI T1 or E1 connectivity
Line-out (LO) and line-in (LI) signal leads (unpolarized, balanced pairs)
Support for CO, TIE, DID, and off-premises station (OPS) port types that use robbed-bit signaling
protocol, proprietary bit-oriented signaling (BOS) 24th-channel signaling protocol, or DMI-BOS
24th-channel signaling protocol
Support for Russian incoming ANI
Support for universal, digital, signal level-1equipment in wideband ISDN-PRI applications
Test-jack access to the DS1 or E1 line and support of the 120A integrated channel-service unit
(ICSU) module
Support for the enhanced maintenance capabilities of the ICSU. These circuit packs can
communicate with CONVERSANT®. See TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8
ports) on page 198.
Downloadable firmware
Support for echo cancellation. To enable this capability, the customer must purchase an Echo
Cancellation Software Right-to-Use feature in addition to the hardware.
The echo cancellation capability of the TN464GP is selectable on a per-channel basis. The
TN464GP DS1 interface automatically turns off echo cancellation when it detects a 2100-Hz
phase-reversed tone generated by high-speed modems (56-kbps), but not when it detects a
2100-Hz straight tone generated by low-speed modems (9.6-kbps). Echo cancellation improves a
low-speed data call.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
180 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
The TN464GP DS1 interface is intended for customers who are likely to encounter echo over
circuits that are connected to the public network. The occurrence of echo is higher if the switch is
configured for ATM, IP, or other complex services and interfaces to local service providers who
do not routinely install echo cancellation equipment in all their circuits. A common source of echo
is “hybrid” circuits, where conversions between 2-wire analog and 4-wire digital circuits take
place. The TN464GP DS1 interface cancels echo with delays of up to 96 ms.
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports)
The TN465C CO Trunk circuit pack supports multiple countries.
This circuit pack contains eight analog CO trunk ports, loop-start trunk signaling, 12- and 16-kHz
periodic pulse metering (PPM) detection and counting, administrable timers, battery-reversed signaling,
and multicountry selectable signaling. For more information about a TN465C, contact your Avaya
representative.
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports)
The TN479 analog line circuit pack has 16 ports and supports three ringer loads and three simultaneous
ringing ports. Only one telephone can have an LED message-waiting indicator (neon message-waiting
indicators are not supported). The TN479 supports µ-Law companding.
The following table lists the TN479-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
TN497 Tie Trunk (4 ports)
The TN497 tie trunk circuit pack for Italy has four ports for 2-wire tie trunks with loop disconnect
signaling. Each port can be administered for A- or µ-Law companding, timers, Translatore Giunzione
Unscente (TGU) (outgoing tie), Translatore Giunzione Entrante (TGE) (incoming tie), and Translatore
Giunzione Interno (TGI) (internal tie).
Telephone Wire size (metric
area/diameter) Maximum range
(feet)
500-type 24 AWG (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,000 (914 m)
2500-type 24 AWG (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,000 (914 m)
7100-series 24 AWG (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,000 (914 m)
7101A not supported not supported
7103A not supported not supported
8100-series 24 AWG (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 2,500 (762 m)
9100-series 24 AWG (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 2,500 (762 m)
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 181
December 2003
TN553 Packet Data Line
The TN553 packet data line circuit pack has 12 ports that can connect through a cross-connect field to a
TN726B circuit pack and provides software-administrable connections between the Switch Processing
Element (SPE) and system access ports. Inside the system, the TN553 connects to the packet bus and
converts mode-2 to mode-3 protocol which connects the TN726B circuit pack to the TDM bus for
asynchronous EIA connections to adjuncts.
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire S/T-NT Interface (12
ports)
The TN556D ISDN-BRI circuit pack has 12 ports that connect to ISDN-BRI terminals. Each port on a
TN556 ISDN-BRI circuit pack has TXT, TXR, PXT, and PXR signal leads. Up to eight ports can be used
for Adjunct Switch Application Interface (ASAI) links. Each port operates at 192 kbps and has 2 B
channels and 1 D channel.
The TN556D ISDN-BRI circuit pack has a maximum range of up to 1900 feet (579 m) from the system to
the telephone when connected with 24-AWG (0.20 mm2/0.51 mm) wire, and uses standard ANSI T1.605
protocol. Up to 24 terminals can be connected, where each terminal uses 1 B channel and shares the D
channel. The TN556 also has multipoint support. Capacity for the multipoint support depends on the
protocol. In countries that do not support Service Profile Identifier (SPID) there is a limitation of one BRI
phone per port.
The TN556D ISDN-BRI circuit pack supports A- or µ-Law companding. The TN556D ISDN-BRI circuit
pack also functions as a trunk when connecting to a TE interface, for example a TN2185B in another
switch. It can be used for lines and trunks simultaneously. The TN556D ISDN-BRI circuit pack provides
end-to-end outpulse signaling when the circuit pack is in tie-trunk mode with a TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-
TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports).
TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice Mail System
(part of ED-1E568)
The TN568 circuit pack is a component of the ED-1E568 that supports an DEFINITY AUDIX voice mail
system using an embedded 386EX processor. The DEFINITY AUDIX systems can be interconnected to
create large voice-mail networks that support up to 100,000 subscribers and store up to 100 hours of
messages. Each circuit pack has eight ports available for calls when networking is enabled. Without
networking, 12 ports are available.
The TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX voice mail system takes up two adjacent slots.
The TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX circuit pack includes a writable magneto-optical disk drive for backing
up and upgrading system software and a hard disk for storing messages. The TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX
circuit pack also includes an RS-232 connection for a maintenance and administration terminal, an
Ethernet port (for the Message Manager PC desktop application), an Amphenol connection to the switch,
and an RS-232 port for an external modem that is used for maintenance.
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TN570D Expansion Interface
The TN570 Expansion Interface (EI) is an interface between the TDM bus and packet bus, and fiber-optic
links that interconnect the cabinets. The TN570D circuit pack is used in a port network (PN) between a
PN and another PN in a direct-connect system, and between a PN and an SNI in a switch node carrier in a
CSS-connected system.
The TN570 circuit pack provides control-channel applications and time-slot interchanging between the
PPN and EPNs. It is used when ISDN-BRI and/or ASAI is connected in an EPN.
The TN570 circuit pack carries circuit-switched data, packet-switched data, network control, timing
control, and DS1 control. The TN570 circuit pack also communicates with an EPN’s TN775B
Maintenance circuit pack to send the EPN’s environmental and alarm status to the SPE.
The TN570 circuit pack is replaced by the TN2305 circuit pack or TN2306 circuit pack when an ATM
switch replaces the CSS.
The TN570 circuit pack is used in an EPN that is supported by a Survivable Remote Processor (SRP).
TN572 Switch-Node Clock
The TN572 switch-node clock circuit pack is used in DEFINITY R only.
The TN572 circuit pack distributes the timing signals that synchronize the SN carrier. The TN572 circuit
pack also receives maintenance data.
TN573B Switch-Node Interface for DEFINITY R
The TN573B Switch Node Interface (SNI) routes circuit, packet, and control messages. The TN573B
circuit pack is an interface installed in a SN carrier in a CSS. The TN573B circuit pack terminates a fiber-
optic link from:
A SNI in an SN carrier to an SNI in another SN carrier
An EI in a PPN, and an EI in an EPN.
One TN573B is used per PN and supports the TN574 DS1 converter circuit pack.
The TN573B circuit pack vintage B and higher provides an interface to the single-mode fiber optic
transceiver and supports the TN1654 circuit pack and TN574 DS1 converter circuit pack.
TN577 Packet Gateway
The TN577 packet gateway (PGATE) circuit pack is used in DEFINITY R only.
The TN577 circuit pack provides four RS-423 physical ports for X.25 protocol interfaces between the
system and adjuncts. The PGATE functions as the data communications interface unit providing protocol
conversion between the X.25 protocol and the mode 3 protocol carried across the LAN bus.
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The X.25 protocol (Levels 1 and 2) is terminated and the data is reformatted into the ISDN packet mode
protocol for transport across the LAN bus. Supported adjuncts include AUDIX, CMS, and Message
Server Adjunct (MSA).
The TN577 also supports Distributed Communications System (DCS) by providing X.25 signaling
through:
One of the RS-423 physical ports
Through the system using the TDM bus to the appropriate DS1 or tie trunk circuit pack.
TN725B Speech Synthesizer
The TN725B speech synthesizer supports English and is used in the United States.
The TN725B speech synthesizer circuit pack has four ports that send voice message information to
telephones to activate leave word calling, automatic wake up, voice message retrieval, and Do Not
Disturb features. The ports can detect tones.
TN726B Data Line (8 ports)
The TN726B data line circuit pack has eight serial asynchronous EIA ports with modem interfaces that
are connected through asynchronous data units (ADUs) to EIA ports (such as RS-232) on DTE. The
TN726B circuit pack uses Mode 2 or Mode 3 data transfer protocol. The DTE can be adjuncts and
peripheral equipment such as data terminals, printers, host computers, personal computers (PCs),
graphics and facsimile systems, and call detail acquisition and processing systems (CDAPSs).
With software-administered system access ports, a TN726B circuit pack connects through a cross-
connect field to a TN553 packet data line circuit pack. The TN553 circuit pack then converts mode 2
protocol to mode 3 protocol that transfers the TN726B circuit pack from the packet bus to the TDM bus
for EIA connections.
Each port on a TN726B circuit pack has TXT (terminal, transmit, and tip), TXR (terminal, transmit, and
ring), PXT (port, transmit, and tip), and PXR (port, transmit, and ring) signal leads.
TN735 MET Line (4 ports)
The TN735 MET line circuit pack has four ports that connect to multibutton electronic telephone (MET)
sets. Each port has tip and ring (analog voice) and digital signals to control terminals such as BT, BR, LT
and LR.
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TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8
ports)
The TN744 call classifier and tone detector circuit pack has eight ports of tone detection on the TDM bus.
The TN744 circuit pack does not support call progress tone generation or clocking. The tone detectors are
used in vector prompting, outgoing call management (OCM), and call prompting applications in the
United States and Canada and call classifier options for various countries.The TN744 detects special
intercept tones used in network intercept tone detection in OCM. The TN744 circuit pack also detects
tones when a CO answers a call.
The TN744 circuit pack provides tone generation and detection for R2-MFC DID signaling that is used in
non-United States installations. The TN744 circuit pack also allows gain or loss to be applied to pulse
code modulation (PCM) signals that are received from the bus and supports A- and µ-Law companding.
The TN744 circuit pack detects 2025-, 2100-, or 2225-Hz modem answerback tones and provides normal
broadband and wide broadband dial-tone detection.
The TN744 circuit pack supports digital signal processing of PCM signals on each port to detect,
recognize, and classify tones and other signals. Generation of signaling tones is also supported for
applications such as R2-MFC, Spain MF, and Russia MF. Gain or loss and conferencing can be applied to
PCM signals received from the TDM bus. Additional support includes DTMF detectors to collect address
digits during dialing, and A- and µ-Law companding.
In normal operation, a port on the TN744 circuit pack can serve as an incoming register for Russia MFR
(multifrequency shuttle register signaling). Use the TN744 with the TN429C analog line central office
trunk for CAMA/E911.
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports)
The TN746B analog line circuit pack has 16 ports. Each port supports one telephone. Auxiliary
equipment such as FAX machines, answering machines, modems, and amplifier handsets is supported.
The TN746B circuit pack supports on-premises building wiring with either touch-tone or rotary dialing
and with or without the LED and neon message waiting indicators. The TN746B circuit pack supports
off-premises wiring (out-of-building only with certified protection equipment) with either DTMF dialing
or rotary dialing. LED or neon message waiting indicators are not supported off-premises. The TN746B
circuit pack provides -48 V DC current in the off-hook state. Ringing voltage is -90 V DC.
The TN746B, along with a TN755B neon power unit per carrier or per single-carrier cabinet, supports
on-premises telephones that are equipped with neon message waiting indicators. The TN746B circuit
pack supports three ringer loads, only one telephone can have an LED or neon message waiting indicator.
TN746B supports A- and µ-Law companding and administrable timers. The TN746B supports:
Queue warning-level lights associated with the DDC features and the UCD features
Recorded announcements associated with the Intercept Treatment feature
PagePac paging system for the Loudspeaker Paging feature.
Additional support is provided for external alerting devices associated with the TAAS feature, neon
message waiting indicators, and modems. Secondary lightning protection is provided on the TN746B
circuit pack. The TN746B circuit pack supports up to eight simultaneous ports ringing; four on ports one
through eight, and four on ports 9 through 16.
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Combined conversion of Modem Pooling requires a port on a TN754 and a port on a TN742, TN746B or
TN769 Analog circuit pack for each combined resource that is to be supported.
The following table lists the TN746B-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports)
The TN747B CO trunk circuit pack has eight ports for loop- or ground-start CO, foreign exchange (FX),
and wide area telecommunications service (WATS) trunks. Each port has tip and ring signal leads. A port
can connect to a PagePac paging system. The TN747B supports the abandoned call search feature in
automatic call distribution (ACD) applications (if the CO has this feature). Vintage 12 or greater of the
TN747B circuit pack also provides battery-reversed signaling.
TN750C Recorded Announcement (16
channels)
NOTE:
The TN2501AP circuit pack has replaced the TN750 circuit pack. However, the TN750
circuit pack is still supported.
The TN750 recorded announcement circuit pack records and stores announcements to be played back on
demand as part of a calling feature. The TN750 circuit pack has sampling rates of 16, 32, or 64 kbps. The
TN750 circuit pack records announcement messages from on-premises or off-premises telephones and
can store up to 128 recorded announcements of a maximum of eight minutes total. The TN750 circuit
pack has 16 channels and each can play any announcement. Up to 25 call connections can listen to each
channel.
A total of 10 TN750C circuit packs in a system provides an announcement capacity of 42.6 minutes (at
32 kbps) and 160 ports. In other words, 160 announcements can play simultaneously. The 16 kbps
compression rate, which is adequate for VDN of origin announcements, provides a total capacity of 85.3
minutes. Use of multiple TN750C circuit packs allows a more efficient method of providing many kinds
of announcements and provides improved management of integrated announcements.
Telephone Wire size (AWG) Maximum range
(feet)
500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
2500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
7100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
7101A 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 15,200 (4,633 m)
7103A 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 15,200 (4,633 m)
8100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
9100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
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TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports)
The TN753B DID trunk circuit pack has eight ports used for immediate- or wink-start direct inward
dialing (DID) trunks. Each port has tip and ring signal leads. For the Slovak Republic, vintage 17 (or
greater) is required. The TN753B circuit pack supports A- and µ-Law companding with vintage 17 or
greater.
The TN753B circuit pack is required to support Brazil Block Collect Call.
TN754C DCP Digital Line (4-wire, 8 ports)
The TN754C DCP digital line circuit pack has eight asynchronous, 4-wire DCP ports that can connect to
7400- and 8400-series digital telephones, 302A/B/C attendant consoles, or data modules. The TN754
circuit pack has administrable A- and µ-Law companding.
The following table lists the TN754-supported equipment and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
The TN754 circuit pack provides greater call-handling capacity for high-traffic applications and supports
the group paging feature.
Combined conversion of Modem Pooling requires a port on a TN754 circuit pack and a port on a
TN746B circuit pack or TN769 analog circuit pack for each combined resource that is to be supported.
TN755B Neon Power Unit
The TN755B neon power unit circuit pack is used in with all DEFINITY servers except the DEFINITY
CSI. The TN755B circuit pack produces 150 VDC to operate neon message waiting lights on terminals
that are connected to TN746B analog line circuit packs.
A TN755B circuit pack is required for each carrier where neon message waiting indicators are connected.
This circuit pack and the neon message waiting function are not available on systems that use the
TN2202 ring generator circuit pack for France balanced-ringing.
Table 9: Maximum range of 7400- and 8400-series equipment
Supported equipment Wire sizes (AWG) Maximum range
(feet)
7400 data modules 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 5000 (1524 m)
7400 data modules 26 4000 (1219 m)
7400-series telephones 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3500 (1067 m)
7400-series telephones 26 2200 (670 m)
8400-series data modules 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3500 (1067 m)
8400-series telephones 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3500 (1067 m)
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TN758 Pooled Modem (2 ports)
The TN758 pooled modem circuit pack has two conversion resources ports (such as a trunk data module)
for switched connections between digital data endpoints (data modules) and analog data endpoints
(modems). A TN758 circuit pack is required for each two conversion resources provided with the
integrated type of modem pool. The TN758 circuit pack supports µ-Law companding only.
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports)
The TN760 tie trunk circuit pack has four ports that are used for Type 1 or Type 5 4-wire E & M lead
signaling tie trunks. Trunk types include automatic, immediate-start, wink-start, and delay-dial. Each port
on a TN760 circuit pack has T, R, T1, R1, E, and M signal leads. The TN760 circuit pack provides release
link trunks required for the CAS feature and has administrable A- and µ-Law companding. The TN760
circuit pack supports outgoing, Multilevel Precedence and Preemption (MLPP).
Option switches on each TN760 circuit pack port can select connections to Type 1 E & M standard
unprotected format, Type 1 E & M compatible unprotected format, Type 1 E & M compatible protected
format, and Type 5 simplex format.
For Belgium, the Slovak Republic, the Commonwealth of Independent States, and the Netherlands,
vintage 11 or greater is required.
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports)
The TN762B hybrid line circuit pack has eight ports that connect to multiappearance hybrid analog and
digital telephones. The TN762B can connect to 7300-series telephones, an MDC-9000 cordless
telephones, and an MDW-9000 cordless telephone with separate base station and charging stations.
Each port on a TN762B circuit pack has VT and VR (analog voice), CT, CR, P-, and P+ (digital signals
that control terminals) signal leads.
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports)
The TN763 auxiliary trunk has four ports. Each port has T, R, SZ, SZ1, S, and S1 signal leads. The
TN763D circuit pack is used to access on-premises applications such as music on hold, loudspeaker
paging, code calling, and recorded telephone dictation. The TN763 circuit pack supports external
recorded announcement equipment, and is administrable to select A- or µ-Law companding.
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels)
The TN767 DS1 interface circuit pack provides a DSX1-level physical interface to the DS1 facility and
require a TN464 DS1 interface circuit pack. The TN767 circuit pack has unpolarized line out (LO) and
line in (LI) signal lead pairs.
The TN767 circuit pack supports DS1 rate digital facility connectivity. The circuit pack supports CO, Tie,
DID, and off-premises stations (OPS) port types that use the robbed-bit signaling protocol. This circuit
pack also supports ISDN-PRI connectivity. For these applications, the signaling D channel can connect
from the TN767 circuit pack to the processor interface by a permanent switched call over the TDM bus.
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The TN767 circuit pack is used to communicate with Avaya IVR and to provide the enhanced
maintenance capabilities of the 120A channel-service unit (CSU) and the enhanced integrated channel-
service unit (ICSU).
DS1 tests include loopback tests at the DS1 board edge or the 120A (if used), bit error rate (BER)
loopback tests at the far-end CSU, and BER 1-way DS1 facility tests. Other tests include loopback testing
specifically designed to locate DS1 facility faults.
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports)
The TN769 analog line circuit pack has eight ports, each with tip and ring signal leads. The TN769 circuit
pack supports:
On-premises or off-premises wiring with either touch-tone or rotary dialing and with or without
LED or neon message waiting indicators
Three ringer loads, such as three telephones with one ringer load each
Up to four simultaneous ports ringing
Queue warning-level lights that are associated with the DDC feature and UCD feature
Recorded announcements for the intercept treatment feature
Dictation machines for the recorded telephone dictation access feature
PagePac paging system for the loudspeaker paging feature
External alerting devices for the trunk answer any station (TAAS) feature
Modems
The TN769 circuit pack does not support off-premises message waiting indicators.
The TN769 circuit pack provides secondary lightning protection, and supports µ-Law companding.
Each carrier with neon message indicators requires the TN769 circuit pack, along with a TN755B neon
power circuit pack to support neon message waiting indicators. Only one telephone can have an LED or
neon message waiting indicator.
Combined conversion of Modem Pooling requires a port on a TN754B circuit pack and a port on a
TN746B circuit pack or TN769 analog circuit pack for each combined resource that is to be supported.
The following table lists the TN769-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
Telephone Wire size (AWG) Maximum range
(feet)
500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
2500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
7102-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
7101A 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 15,200 (4,633 m)
7103A 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 15,200 (4,633 m)
8100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 10,000 (3,048 m)
9100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 10,000 (3,048 m)
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TN771DP Maintenance and Test
The TN771DP maintenance test circuit pack performs maintenance functions. These functions include
packet bus reconfiguration that allows diagnosis and correction of recoverable packet bus failures before
the link access procedure on the D channel (LAPD) links fail. LAPD is a link-layer protocol on the
ISDN-BRI and ISDN-PRI data link layer (level 2). LAPD provides data transfer between two devices and
error and flow control on multiple logical links. LAPD swaps spare leads with the malfunctioning leads
to recover packet bus failures involving up to three malfunctioning leads (1 or 2 data or parity leads and
one control lead).
Other maintenance functions include ISDN-PRI testing that originates and terminates loopback tests on
ISDN facilities. The testing provides bit and block error rate information indicating ISDN facility quality.
The TN771DP circuit pack can be updated using the firmware download feature, which requires use of
the TN799 C-LAN circuit pack interface.
A TN771DP circuit pack is required:
Any CSI system that is using a TN2198 BRI circuit pack. Otherwise, a TN771DP circuit pack is
not required.
An SI system PPN that is equipped with packet endpoints (ISDN-BRI lines or trunks, ISDN-PRI
trunks, IP trunks, IP stations, ATM-CES, and ASAI) or is a critical-reliability (or fully duplicated)
system. A critical-reliability system with packet endpoints requires a TN771DP circuit pack in
each EPN. Otherwise, a TN771DP circuit pack is not required.
All R system PPNs. A critical-reliability R system requires a TN771DP circuit pack in each EPN.
An R system with ATM network duplication requires a TN771DP circuit pack in each PPN and
EPN.
All CSI models when using a TN2198 BRI circuit pack
A maximum of one TN771DP circuit pack is allowed in any port network.
A TN771DP circuit pack is never used with the S8100 Media Server.
TN775C Maintenance
The TN775C circuit pack is used in maintenance to monitor power failure signals in an EPN cabinet. The
TN775C circuit pack also monitors the clock, monitors and controls the power supplies and battery
charger, and monitors air flow and high-temperature sensors. The TN775C circuit pack provides two
serial links to communicate with Expansion Interface (EI) circuit packs, and provides an RS-232
interface for connection to an administration terminal. Each circuit pack contains a 3-position switch to
control emergency power transfer.
The TN775C contains a DC-to-DC power converter and is used in maintenance to monitor the processor
in an EPN that is supported by a Survivable Remote Processor (SRP).
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TN780 Tone Clock
The TN780 tone clock circuit pack connects to and monitors an optional external stratum-3 clock for
digital frame timing. The TN780 circuit pack also couples the clock output to local clocks. The TN780
circuit pack supplies master timing to the system and produces the following tones: call-progress tones,
touch tones, answer-back tones, and trunk-transmission test tones. The TN780 circuit pack has 2-MHz,
160-kHz, and 8-kHz clocks. The TN780 circuit pack can transmit the system clock and tones on either
TDM bus A, TDM bus B, or both.
The TN780 circuit pack is administrable to produce five tone plans. For countries outside the United
States six tones can be customized in each plan. The TN780 circuit pack supports A- or µ-Law
companding.
A TN780 circuit pack is never used with the S8100 Media Server.
TN787K Multimedia Interface
The TN787 multimedia interface circuit pack is used in conjunction with the TN788 multimedia voice
conditioner circuit pack to provide service circuit functionality for the Multimedia Call Handling
(MMCH) feature. This feature provides both voice and multimedia data service between multimedia
complex endpoints. Up to six endpoints can conference to a single multimedia call occurrence.
The TN787 circuit pack provides a TDM-bus interface and a DS1 adjunct cable interface. The TN787
circuit pack routes the H.221 multimedia information to the DS1 interface to free more TDM-bus
timeslots. Freeing more timeslots allows the system to carry more audio, video, and data bit streams
between multimedia complex endpoints. The TN787 circuit pack provides support for multiple PNs.
TN788C Multimedia Voice Conditioner
The TN788C multimedia voice conditioner circuit pack is used in conjunction with the TN787F/G
multimedia interface circuit pack to provide service circuit functionality for the MMCH feature. This
feature provides both voice service and multimedia data service between multimedia complex endpoints.
NOTE:
A TN788C V1 circuit pack only supports µ-Law companding. A TN788C V2 or later
supports A- and µ-Law.
The TN788C circuit pack is the audio processor for the Px64 multimedia conference bridge. The
TN788C circuit pack contains eight digital signal processors; four for encoding and four for decoding.
Each encoder/decoder pair is assigned to a Px64 endpoint to process its audio channel. Connection to and
from the endpoint’s audio is by way of a TN787 multimedia interface port. This connection is through the
TDM-bus timeslots.
Each of the eight digital signal processors communicate with the main on-board processor through eight
individual dual-port random access memory (DPRAMs). No read-only memory (ROM) is available on
this circuit pack. The DPRAM is used for program download.
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TN789B Radio Controller
The TN789B radio controller circuit pack is an interface between a switch and two Wireless Fixed Base
(WFB) radio units for the DEFINITY Wireless Business System. The TN789B circuit pack contains a
main processor to handle data line circuit (DLC) and upper medium access (MAC) layers of firmware.
The TN789B circuit pack also contains two lower MAC processors. one processor for each radio
interface. Each radio interface is referred to as an I2 interface.
The I2 link is the connection between the Radio Controller (RC) and the WFB. The RC supports up to
two I2 links, each link consisting of three pairs of twisted-pair cable: the transmit pair, the receive pair,
and the local power pair. The transmit pair transfers WFB control and frame information from the RC to
the WFB. The receive pair transfers status and frame information from the WFB to the RC. If the RC
cannot provide power to the WFB, a third pair (to the WFB) can supply local power. When possible, the
transmit pair and the receive pair provide phantom power from the RC to the WFB.
Each TN789B circuit pack includes a standard TDM-bus interface from a system, two radio interfaces to
two separate radio units, and two synchronization ports. In addition, two RS-232 interfaces provide for a
debug terminal and for setting up the wireless terminal.
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports)
The TN791 is a 16 port analog guest line circuit pack that is used for international offers, United States
and Canada in offer category B only. Each of the 16 ports support one telephone, such as 500 (rotary dial)
and 2500 terminals (DTMF dial). LED and neon message waiting indicators are supported. A separate
power supply is required for neon message indicators.
The TN791 circuit pack supports on-premises wiring with either touch-tone or rotary dialing and with or
without the LED and neon message waiting indicators.
The TN791 circuit pack supports three ringer loads. Only one telephone can have an LED or neon
message waiting indicator. The TN791 supports up to eight simultaneous ports ringing; four on ports one
through eight, and four on ports 9 through 16.
The TN791 circuit pack supports A- and µ-law companding and administrable timers. Secondary
lightning protection is provided. The TN791 circuit pack supports up to eight simultaneous ports ringing.
The following table lists the TN791-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
Telephone Wire size (AWG) Maximum range
(feet)
500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
2500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
6200-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
7100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
7101A 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 15,200 (4,633 m)
7103A 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 15,200 (4,633 m)
8100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
9100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
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TN792 Duplication Interface
In a high- or critical-reliability DEFINITY SI system, a duplication interface copies the contents of
memory from the primary Switch Processing Element (SPE) to a standby SPE, so that the latter can take
over immediately when the former fails. The TN792 duplication interface (DUPINT) uses the Enhanced
M-Bus of the DEFINITY SI TN2404 processor for this memory shadowing function. The Enhanced M-
bus supports 32-bit addressing and data access (vs. 16-bit for the M-bus), so it transfers data faster and
shadows a larger area of memory than the older bus. The M-bus is still supported.
You need two TN792 circuit packs, one for the primary control carrier and one for the standby. You can
replace TN772 duplication interfaces with TN792s, but you must replace them in pairs. A TN772 circuit
pack cannot communicate with a TN792 circuit pack.
A new duplex optical cable connects the TN792 circuit packs. This cable eliminates the additional
electromagnetic emissions that would otherwise result from the doubled data rate on the bus. The optical
cable interface to the new DUPINT is on the front faceplate of the circuit pack.
The TN792 circuit pack is compatible with existing duplication cables.
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports)
The TN793B is a dual coded, analog line 24-port circuit pack that supports Caller ID telephones and
Caller ID devices. Each port supports one telephone, such as 500 (rotary dial) and 2500 telephones
(DTMF dial). Use TN793B Vintage 1 or greater.
The TN793B supports on-premises (in-building) wiring with either touch-tone or rotary dialing and with
or without the LED and neon Message Waiting Indicators. The TN793B circuit pack supports off-
premises wiring with either DTMF or rotary dialing, but LED or neon message waiting indicators are not
supported off-premises.
The TN793B circuit pack, along with a TN755B neon power circuit pack supports on-premise telephones
that are equipped with neon message waiting indicators. The TN793B supports three ringer loads, only
one telephone can have an LED or neon message waiting indicator. The TN793B circuit pack allows a
maximum of 12 simultaneous ports ringing; four on ports 1 through 8, four on ports 9 through 16, and
four on ports 17 through 24.
The TN793B circuit pack supports A- and µ-law companding and administrable timers. The TN793
circuit pack supports queue warning level lights associated with the DDC and the UCD features, recorded
announcements associated with the Intercept Treatment feature, and PagePac paging system for the
Loudspeaker Paging feature. Additional support is provided for external alerting devices that are
associated with the TAAS feature, neon message waiting indicators, and modems The TN793B also
supports secondary lightning protection. The TN793B provides -48 V DC current in the off-hook state.
Ringing voltage is -90 VDC.
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The following table lists the TN793B-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8
ports)
Provides a combination 8-port analog trunk and line circuit pack for the United States, Canada, and other
countries that have the same analog standards. The TN797 circuit pack provides you with the capability
to administer any of the eight ports as a loop start or ground start CO trunk, a CAMA E911 trunk, a wink-
or immediate-start DID trunk, or as an on or off-premises analog line with or without LED Message
Waiting Indication. It does not support ICLID on the analog trunk to the CO, nor Caller ID on the line
side to the telephone.
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface
The TN799DP control LAN (C-LAN) interface provides TCP/IP connectivity over Ethernet or Point to
Point Protocol (PPP) to adjuncts such as Avaya CMS, INTUITY AUDIX, DCS, printers, call detail
recording (CDR), and property management systems (PMS). The C-LAN is required to support the
TN2302AP IP Media Interface for H.323 functionality, and to support ATM interfaces and WAN PNC.
The C-LAN operates at 10 or 100 Mbps and full or half duplex, both of which are administrable. The C-
LAN provides connectionless UDP sockets for IP solutions support. The C-LAN will also support 500
remote sockets, with support for 4-Kbyte UDP sockets. The C-LAN supports variable-length ping and
the traceroute and netstat network testing commands.
The C-LAN circuit pack provides call control for every IP endpoint that is connected to the S8700 Media
Server using the G600 Media Gateway. A maximum number of 64 C-LANs can be used for each
configuration. The number of C-LANs that are required depends on the number of devices that are
connected as well as the options that are being utilized by the endpoint. It might be advantageous to
segregate IP voice control traffic from device control traffic as a safety measure.
To determine the default value for C-LAN socket usage of H.323 Tie Trunks divide the total number of
H.323 Tie Trunk that use sharing by 31. Each IP endpoint requires the use of some number of C-LAN
sockets, which is the software object that is used to connect a C-LAN to the IP Network. The C-LAN
circuit pack supports a maximum of 500 sockets.
Telephone Wire size (AWG) Maximum range
(feet)
500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
2500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
6200-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
7100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
8100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
9100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
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The C-LAN differs from an IP Media Processor in that the C-LAN controls the call and the IP Media
Processor provides the codecs that are used for the audio on the call.
To take download firmware there must be at least one C-LAN and access to the public Internet.
Downloads and instructions have been posted to:
http://www.avaya.com/support/
Click on Online Services and then Download Software needed.
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface)
The TN801 LAN gateway interface is part of the Multiapplication Platform DEFINITY (MAPD). It
allows direct integration of PC-based application into the switch. The TN801 circuit pack works as the
interface for solutions such as CTI, CallVisor and PC/LAN. The TN801 circuit pack provides packet bus
and TDM-bus interfacing, physical mounting for a CPU, external interfaces, and mapping of circuit-
switched connections between the TDM bus and the expansion circuit pack.
TN802B MAPD (IP Interface Assembly)
The TN802 IP interface circuit pack supports voice calls and FAX calls from the switch across a
corporate intranet or the Internet. This circuit pack is still supported, but has been replaced with the
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203. The IP trunking software runs on an embedded PC that runs
Windows NT. The TN802 circuit pack supports IP Solutions including IP trunking and MedPro (H.323)
with IP softphones.
The TN802 IP Interface operates in two modes: IP Trunk and Media Processor (MedPro/H.323). The
TN802 defaults to IP Trunk mode. To use it in MedPro mode, you activate it through administration to
use the H.323 trunking feature related to IP softphones.
TN1648B System Access and Maintenance
(SYSAM)
The TN1648B is an SPE component that is used for maintenance on a DEFINITY R configuration. A
processor in the TN1648B circuit pack runs control routines that connect to maintenance software. The
TN1648B circuit pack has an alarm panel with five LEDs and a toggle switch to manually inhibit
automatic emergency transfer of PPN analog lines.
The TN1648B circuit pack provides two RS-232 interfaces for connection to an administration terminal
and, with duplication, connection to a standby maintenance terminal. The TN1648B circuit pack also
provides a tip and ring port with a built-in modem to allow a remote administration terminal to access the
system.
The TN1648B circuit pack allows connection to the management terminal and connection to and
termination of one end of the processor bus. Other maintenance items include:
PPN alarm monitors and outputs including auxiliary alarms for auxiliary equipment and
environmental monitoring for over-temperature conditions
Power supply sense and control for the carriers
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Emergency transfer control for catastrophic failure. The circuit consists of a 3-position toggle
switch. The switch can be moved into the manual on position, manual off position, or automatic
position.
Non volatile memory that contains the time-of-day clock, the telephone number for the
Initialization and Administration System (INADS), login password, and product identification
Alarm panel information with major, minor, and warning LEDs, an ACKnowledge LED, and an
emergency transfer LED
The TN1648B circuit pack increases the speed of the internal modem and external modem from 2400 bps
to 9600 bps with error control implementation. Appropriate software administration is added to choose
between external modem access to the maintenance port, and direct loop start trunk access. The external
modem access is used in countries that do not support the analog loop signaling protocol supplied by the
internal modem.
For use outside the United States use a cable from the TN1648B that connects directly to an external
modem. When the external modem is selected, the internal modem is disabled. The TN1648B circuit
pack is backward-compatible with the TN1648 circuit pack.
TN1650B Memory
The TN1650B memory circuit pack is used only in the DEFINITY R configurations. The 1650B circuit
pack contains 32 MB of Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) and error detection and correction
circuitry to ensure information integrity. The TN1650B is used for system software, customer
translations, and call-processing maintenance. All new systems are shipped with four memory boards and
a TN1657 disk drive. All upgrades to R10 require a fourth memory board and a TN1657 disk drive V9 or
later.
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and
E1 (32 channels)
The TN1654 converter installs in place of the conventional fiber and supports from one to four T1 or E1
facilities, providing a total of 92 T1 channels, or 120 E1 channels, in each direction between the PPN and
an EPN. This capacity is enough for the EPN to easily support several hundred stations.
The switch architecture provides for EPNs that are remotely located from the PPN. An EPN within five
miles (8 km) of the PPN may be coupled using multimode fiber-optic cable or within 22 miles (35.4 km)
of the PPN using single-mode fiber-optic cable. Connect using a DS1 converter complex when the
distance between the PPN and an EPN exceeds five miles (8 km) for multimode cable, or 22 miles (35.4
km) for single-mode cable, or private right-of-way is unavailable. One DS1 circuit pack is placed on each
end of the DS1 converter complex.
The TN1654 DS1 converter requires a new set of Y-cables to connect to a TN570B Expansion Interface
circuit pack.
TN1655 Packet Interface
The TN1655 packet interface provides the communication path between the SPE and the packet bus in
the PPN for DEFINITY R configurations. The packet bus connects to EI circuit packs in the PPN that
communicate with EPNs and the CSS.
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The TN1655 provides the link access procedure on the D channel (LAPD) for up to 8,192 links at a
sustained rate of 2 Mbps. The link access is the digital multiplexed interface (DMI) mode-3 terminations
of communication links across the packet bus that link to the processor circuit pack. Some data
communication will use the X.25 data phase protocol at level 3.
The TN1655 provides termination for ISDN-BRI and ISDN-PRI signaling links, expansion archangel
links that connect the processor to the expansion archangels on EI circuit packs in each PN, and center
stage control network links that connect the processor with SNI circuit packs in the CSS.
The TN1655 supports firmware downloading. It also provides X.25 termination to the DCS links and to
adjuncts such as CDR and AUDIX.
TN1657 Disk Drive
The TN1657 contains a 180 MB small computer system interface (SCSI) disk drive that is used for the
DEFINITY R configurations. The TN1657 disk drive reduces the time it takes to reboot the system,
stores translations, bootstrap image, and core dumps
TN2138 Central Office Trunk (8 ports)
The TN2138 central office trunk circuit pack provides eight analog loop start CO trunk ports for Italy.
Each port has a tip and ring signal lead. The TN2138 has 50-Hz, 12-kHz, and 16-kHz periodic pulse
metering (PPM).
TN2139 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk(8 ports)
The TN2139 direct inward dialing trunk for Italy provides eight analog direct inward dialing (DID) trunk
ports for analog DID signaling. Each of the eight ports has a tip and ring signal lead.
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports)
The TN2140B tie trunk is used in Hungary and Italy. The TN2140B provides four ports for 4-wire E&M
lead signaling tie trunks. The TN2140 provides continuous E&M signaling and discontinuous E&M
signaling. Administrable A- and µ-Law companding and standard Type 1 and Type 5 signaling is
provided. The TN2140B is required for Hungary.
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports)
The TN2146 provides eight analog DID trunk ports for Belgium and the Netherlands. Each of the eight
ports has tip and ring signal lead. The TN2146 uses four Dual Subscriber Line Audio processing Circuits
(DSLACs). One DSLAC is used for each pair of ports. The circuits are administered to meet trunk
transmission characteristics. The DSLACs can be set to either a resistive or complex balance impedance
in the voice or AC talk path on the trunk interfaces. The DSLACs convert analog signals to digital signals
and vice-versa to match the analog DID trunks to the system’s digital TDM bus. The TN2146 circuit pack
can provide either A-Law or µ-Law companding.
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TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports)
The TN2147 has eight analog CO trunk ports. Each port has tip and ring signal leads. The TN2147 uses
four (1 for each pair of ports) Dual Subscriber Line Audio processing Circuits (DSLACs) to be
administered to meet a given transmission and impedance requirement. The DSLACs convert analog
signals to digital signals and digital signals to analog signals to interface the analog CO trunks to the
system’s digital TDM bus.
The TN2147C provides multicountry signaling based on trunk type of either: loop-start, ground start, or
battery reverse loop-start.
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports)
The TN2181 circuit pack has 16 DCP ports that can connect to 2-wire terminals such as the 6400-, 8400-
, and 9400-series digital telephones and the 302C and 302D attendant console. The maximum range of
the 8400- and 9400-series terminals using 24-AWG (0.5 mm) wire is 3,500 feet (1067 m).
The TN2181 circuit pack supports either A- or µ-Law companding. The TN2181 also supports 8400-
series data modules.
TN2182C Tone Clock, Tone Detector, and Call
Classifier (8 ports)
The TN2182 tone clock integrates the tone generator, tone detection-call classifier, system clock, and
synchronization functions onto one circuit pack for all system-reliability configurations. The TN2182
supports 8 ports for tone detection and allows gain or loss applied to PCM signals received from the bus.
The TN2182 provides stratum-4 enhanced clock accuracy, supports MFC signaling (such as Russia MF),
supports Russia MFR (multifrequency shuttle register signaling), and supports A- and µ-Law
companding.
The TN2182CP provides continuous cadenced and mixed tones, allows administrable setting of tone
frequency and level, detects 2025-Hz, 2100-Hz, or 2225-Hz modem answerback tones, and provides
normal and wide broadband dial-tone detection.
In most configurations, the 2- or 3-circuit pack combination of tone generator, tone detector, and/or call
classifier can be replaced with this one circuit pack to free one or two port slots.
Use the TN2182CP circuit pack with the TN429D analog line central office trunk for CAMA/E911 and
ICLID. A TN2182 is required for the on-board tone detection or for additional tones to support CCRON,
Russian ANI, and others.
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple
countries (16 ports)
See TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports) (International Offers or Offer B only
for US and Canada) on page 202.
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TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports)
The TN2184 is a Direct Inward/Outward Dialing (DIOD) trunk circuit pack used for Germany. The
TN2184 circuit pack contains four port circuits. Each circuit interfaces a 2-wire analog CO trunk with the
TDM switching network of the system. Each port allows incoming calls and outgoing calls to include
addressing information that is being received from the CO for incoming calls and addressing information
that is being sent to the CO for outgoing calls. The TN2184 detects periodic pulse metering (PPM)
signals for call-charge accounting on outgoing calls.
The TN2184 combines the features of both a CO trunk and a DID trunk to provide both outgoing and
incoming calls with addressing information in both directions.
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8
ports)
The TN2185B supports eight 4-wire ISDN BRI line S interfaces. Each interface operates at 192 kbps,
with two B channels (64 kbps) and one D channel (16 kbps). The TN2185B interfaces to the LAN bus
and to the TDM bus to provide the TE side of the BRI interface.
The TN2185B is similar to the TN2198 except that the TN2185B is a 4-wire S-interface instead of a 2-
wire U-interface. Another difference is the function of the SCOTCH/NPE and SAKI are replaced by the
network control element (NCE).
For each port, information communicates over two 64-kbps bearer channels called B1 and B2, and over a
16-kbps channel called the demand channel, or D channel. The D channel is used for signaling. Channels
B1 and B2 can be circuit-switched simultaneously, or either of them may be packet-switched, but not
both at once. The D channel is always packet-switched. The circuit-switched connections have a µ-Law
or A-Law option on a per-board basis, for voice operation and operate as 64-kbps clear channels when in
the data mode. The packet-switched channels support the LAPD protocol. However, the TN2185B does
not terminate on LAPD protocol. The S-interface does not support switching of both B channels together
as a 128-kbps wideband channel.
The TN2185B has a maximum range up to 18,000 feet (5486 m) from the system to the NT1 device. In a
environment with multiple telephones, the B channels are shared only on a per-call basis. For example, if
Channel B2 is for data, then the use of this channel by one telephone excludes the others from having
access to it. When a used device communicates over the D channel to access B1 or B2, that channel is
owned until the call is taken down. The D channel is always shared among the terminals. The TN2185B
circuit pack can be used as an alternative to the TN464 circuit pack or the TN2464 circuit pack.
The ability of outpulse in-band DTMF signals or end-to-end signaling is supported by the TN2185B.
QSIG Call Completion is supported, however, QSIG Supplementary Services are not. ISDN-BRI trunks
can be used as inter-PBX tie lines that use the QSIG peer protocol.
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TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12
ports)
The TN2198 circuit pack allows connection to the ANSI standard 2-wire U-Interface. The 2-wire
interface from the TN2198 connects to an NT1 network interface. The 4-wire interface on the other side
of the NT1 may connect to one or two telephones. The TN2198 does not provide a trunk-side interface.
Unlike the TN2185 circuit pack.
The TN2198 contains 12 ports that interface at the ISDN U reference point. For each port, information
communicates over two 64-kbps bearer channels called B1 and B2, and over a 16-kbps channel called the
demand channel, or D channel. The D channel is used for signaling. Channels B1 and B2 can be circuit-
switched simultaneously. The D channel is always packet-switched. The TN2198 requires a packet
control circuit pack. Each port supports one telephone, such as the 500 rotary dial analog telephone and
2500 DTMF dial telephones.
The D channel supports the LAPD protocol and is consistent with the CCITT Q.920 recommendations
for D-channel signaling.
In an environment with multiple telephones, the B channels are shared only on a per-call basis. For
example, if the B2 channel is used for data, then the use of B2 by one telephone excludes the other
telephones from having access to it. When a device communicates over the D channel to access B1 or B2,
that channel is owned until the call is taken. The D channel is always shared among the telephones. The
TN2198 interfaces with the TDM bus and the packet bus in the switch backplane and terminates with 12
ISDN basic access ports.
The TN2198 has a maximum range of 18,000 feet (5486 m) from the system to the NT1 device and uses
standard protocol ANSI T1.601. The TN2198 has a 160-kbps line rate, that consists of:
Two bearer channels at 64 kbps each
A D channel at 16 kbps
Framing at 12 kbps
Maintenance at 4 kbps
The TN2198 supports a maximum of 24 telephones or data modules.
The TN2198 is not offered as a BRI Tie Trunk.
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports)
The TN2199 central office trunk circuit pack is designed for use in Russia.
The TN2199 is a 4-port, 3-wire, loop-start trunk circuit pack that can be used as:
A DID trunk
A 2-way, 1-way incoming, or 1-way outgoing CO trunk
The TN2199 combines the functionality of a DID trunk and a 1-way outgoing CO trunk (DIOD trunk).
To accomplish MF shuttle signaling, the TN2199 circuit pack must be combined with a TN744D Call
Classifier circuit pack.
The TN2199 circuit pack supports incoming ANI.
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TN2202 Ring Generator
The TN2202 ring generator circuit pack is designed for use in France.
The TN2202 ring generator circuit pack supplies 50-Hz ringing power. The TN2202 supplies balanced
ringing, by a modified backplane, to telephones that connect to the TN2183 multi country analog line
circuit pack when administered for France analog transmission.
The TN2202 plugs into the power unit slot and is required for each carrier that contains analog lines. A 1-
lead modification is required in a carrier backplane that uses the TN2202. This modification is required
for all products made for France. The TN2202 produces two symmetrical voltages (typically 28V RMS)
with respect to ground, and takes –48 VDC, –5 VDC, and ground from the backplane and generates 2 ×
28V RMS with added –48 VDC.
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1
(32 channels)
The TN2207 circuit pack supports digital signal level 1 (DS1) rate (24-channel) and E1 rate (32-channel)
digital facility connectivity. All TN2207 suffixes support CO, Tie, DID, and off-premises station (OPS)
port types that use the following protocols:
Robbed-bit signaling
Proprietary bit-oriented signaling (BOS) 24th-channel signaling
DMI-BOS 24th-channel signaling
The circuit packs also support ISDN-PRI connectivity T1 or E1.
In a 24-channel DS1 mode, a DS1 interface is provided to the DS1 facility. The TN2207 circuit packs
provide board-level administrable A- and µ-Law companding, CRC-4 generation and checking for E1
only, and stratum-3 clock capability.
The TN2207 provides test jack access to the DS1 or E1 line and supports the 120A integrated channel-
service unit (CSU).
All suffixes have line-out (LO) and line-in (LI) signal leads. The line-out and line-in leads are
unpolarized balanced pairs.
The TN2207 has additional hardware to support direct cabling to a TN787 MMI circuit pack.
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports)
The TN2209 tie trunk was designed for use in Russia.
The TN2209 tie trunk has four ports used for Type 1 or Type 5 4-wire E&M lead signaling tie trunks. The
tie trunks can one of four types: automatic, immediate-start, wink-start, and delay-dial. The TN2209
provides an interface between these four frequency signaling tie trunk lines and the switch TDM network.
Based on a TN760D each port has modified E&M signal leads for universal hardware compatibility. The
TN2209 provides release link trunks required for the CAS feature and has administrable A- and µ-Law
companding.
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TN2211 Optical Drive
The TN2211 Optical Drive provides removable storage for the DEFINITY R configurations. The
TN2211 supports software upgrades, translation backups, announcement file backups, core dumps, and
so on. The Optical Drive has several advantages over tape drive technology:
Writing to the optical disk is considerably shorter than writing to tape. A full backup takes
approximately 20 minutes, verses the tape drive takes that takes up to 95 minutes.
Writing to the optical disk is more reliable because of:
Block allocation
The number of accesses to the media
The UN332C MSSNET must be used with the TN2211.
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports)
The TN2214B is designed to be used in the United States, Canada and international countries for offer B
only.
The TN2214 has 24 DCP ports that can connect to 2-wire digital telephones such as 6400-, 8400-, or
9400-series telephones and the 302C and the 302D attendant console.
The TN2214 supports either A- or µ-Law companding.
The following table lists the TN2214B-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
Telephone Wire size (AWG) Maximum range
(feet)
302C/D console 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,500 (1,067 m)
6400-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,500 (1,067 m)
8400-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,500 (1,067 m)
9400-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,500 (1,067 m)
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TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple
Countries (16 ports)
(International Offers or Offer B only for US and
Canada)
The TN2215 and the TN2183 analog line circuit packs are designed for international offers or offer B
only for the United States and Canada.
The TN2215 and the TN2183 provide 16 analog port interfaces. Each port supports one telephone, such
as 500 (rotary dial) and 2500 telephones (DTMF dial) from a tip/ring pair. Each port also sends or
receives signaling to and from a device, such as an analog telephone, answering machine, FAX and loop-
start CO port. The TN2215 and the TN2183 provides rotary digit 1 recall, ground-key recall, and
programmable flash timing. Additional support is provided for selectable ringing patterns, LED message
waiting, and secondary lightning protection.
The TN2215 and TN2183 supports on-premises wiring with either touch-tone or rotary dialing and with
or without the LED message waiting indicators. The TN2215 and TN2183 supports off-premises wiring
with either DTMF or rotary dialing. LED message waiting indicators are not supported off-premises.
Neon message waiting indicators are not supported.
A maximum of six to eight simultaneous ringing ports is allowed depending on the ringing cadence
selected. The TN2215 and the TN2183 supports A- and µ-Law companding and administrable timers.
The TN2215 and the TN2183 also supports balanced ringing. When balanced ringing is configured for
France the TN2202 ring generator circuit pack must be used.
The TN2215 and the TN2183 supports DTMF sending levels appropriate for Avaya IVR.
The TN2215 and the TN2183 is impedance and gain selectable for multiple countries. For more
information, contact your Avaya representative.
The following table lists the TN2215- and TN2183-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring
sizes and ranges.
Telephone Wire size (AWG) Maximum range (feet)
500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
2500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
6200-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657m)
7102A-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,100 (945 m)
8100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657m)
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TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports)
The TN2224 has 24 DCP ports that can connect to 2-wire digital telephones such as the 6400-, 8400-, or
9400-series telephones and the 302C or 302D attendant console.
The TN2224 circuit pack supports either A-Law or µ-Law companding.
The following table lists the TN2224-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
TN2242 Digital Trunk
The TN2242 digital trunk circuit pack supports versions of channel-associated signaling and ISDN-PRI
signaling that are peculiar to the TTC private networking environment used in Japan. It supports the
special line-coding and framing used on 2.048-Mbps Japanese trunks. The TN2242 connects the switch
with other vendor equipment and with other DEFINITY switches via the TDM device that is commonly
used throughout Japan for this purpose.
TN2301 Logic Switch
The TN2301 logic switch is used with the DEFINITY R only. The TN2301 provides service to the
customer when the link to the main processor fails or is severed, or when the processor or Center Stage
Switch (CSS) fails. The TN2301 Survivable Remote Switch (SRS) circuit pack connects the EPN links
(fiber or T1/E1) to the appropriate PPN for call processing. It does this under control of the TN775C
Maintenance circuit pack which monitors the health of the expansion interface TN570B.
The TN2301 logic switch circuit pack is not used in an ATM-PNC.
TN2302AP IP Media Processor
The TN2302AP provides VoIP audio access to the switch for local stations and for outside trunks. The
TN2302AP can perform echo cancellation, silence suppression, FAX relay service, and DTMF detection.
The TN2302AP is the H.323 audio platform, includes a 10/100 BaseT Ethernet interface, supports the
T.30 and T.38 standards for FAX transmission, and is firmware downloadable.
The TN2302AP provides audio processing for between 32 and 64 voice channels, depending on the
CODECs in use. The TN2302AP supports hairpin connections and shuffling of calls between TDM
connections and IP-to-IP direct connections.
Telephone Wire size (AWG) Maximum range (feet)
302C/D console 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,500 (1,067 m)
6400-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,500 (1,067 m)
8400-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,500 (1,067 m)
9400-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 3,500 (1,067 m)
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TN2305B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network
Interface for multimode fiber
The TN2305 provides an ATM-based replacement for the TN570D Expansion Interface. The interface
uses OC-3c or STM-1 155-Mbps multimode fiber. The TN2305 supports both trunk and port-network
connectivity. As a trunk, the TN2305 uses Circuit Emulation Service (CES) to emulate up to eight ISDN-
PRI trunks on an ATM facility. As a port-network expansion interface, the TN2305 connects port
networks to an ATM switch that provides port-network connectivity. The TN2305 provides echo
cancellation.
The TN2305 does not support hybrid port networks that use both ATM and CSS simultaneously.
TN2305s must connect all port networks through the ATM switch. Direct connect EPNs are not
supported. Category B offers are not supported.
TN2306B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network
Interface for single-mode fiber
The TN2306 circuit pack has the same features as the TN2305B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network
Interface for multimode fiber but supports single-mode fiber. The TN2306B is not available with
Category B offers.
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports)
The TN2308 uses eight ports for immediate- or wink-start direct inward dialing (DID) trunks for Brazil.
Each port has tip and ring signal leads.
The switch requires the TN2308 to support Brazil Block Collect Call. The TN2308 transmission
characteristics comply with Brazilian telecom standards for PBXs.
TN2312BP IP Server Interface
The TN2312BP IP Server Interface (IPSI) provides environmental maintenance and is the only IP server
interface that is supported in the G650. A TN2312BP IPSI placed in a G650 with a carrier address set to
A acts as the serial bus master. (A TN2312BP IPSI can only be placed in a G650 with a carrier address set
to A or B. Only a TN2312BP IPSI in a G650 with a carrier address set to A can function as an serial bus
master).
The TN2312BP IPSI is backward compatible with other media gateways, but provides environmental
maintenance only when used in a G650. The TN2312BP IPSI always provides tone detection, call
classification, tone generation, and clock functions.
When the TN2312BP IPSI is used in an MCC1or SCC1, a TN755D provides the environmental
maintenance.
The TN2312BP IPSI provides environmental maintenance for the G650. This includes:
Power supply, cabinet, and ring generator maintenance
External device alarm detection
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
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Emergency transfer control
Customer-provided alarm device control
The TN2312BP IPSI and the 655A power supply provide the following information to the G650:
Environment maintenance
Inlet temperature – Inlet temperature of the G650 (sensor is in the 655A power supply)
Exhaust temperature – G650 carrier exhaust air sensor
Hot Spot temperature status – 655A power supply sensor
— Voltage
+5VDC
-5VDC
-48VDC
Fan Control – The speed at which the fans are operating:
Undrindicates that the fan voltage is under 12VDC.
Mid (normal) – indicates that the fan voltage is +12VDC.
High – indicates that the fan voltage is +14VDC.
Over – indicates that the fan voltage is above 14 to 15VDC.
Fan Alarm – Detection of a blocked or failed fan
Ring Status – OK, overload, shorted, or failed
Ring Control – Active, standby, disabled, off (shorted or failed)
Ringer Setting – 20Hz, 25Hz, or other
Ring Detection – Reports if the power supply detects ring on the backplane ring leads
Input Power – Indicates the type of power present and in use, AC or DC
External device alarm detection
The external device alarm detection uses two external leads. External devices such as an
uninterruptible power supply (UPS) or voice messaging system can use these leads to generate
alarms using the Avaya Communication Manager alarm reporting capability. Ground potential on
either of these leads results in an alarm being generated. You can administer the alarm level
(major, minor, or warning), product ID, alternate name, and alarm description for each lead.
Emergency transfer control
Emergency transfer control provides -48VDC to operate an external emergency transfer panel.
The Communication Manager controls the state of the emergency transfer. (Note that, in the past,
hardware boards or alarm panels provided a 3-position physical switch to control emergency
transfer.)
You can use the following Communication Manager SAT commands for emergency transfer:
set emergency-transfer on|off|auto – Use this to set emergency transfer to on (not in
emergency transfer), off (in emergency transfer), or auto (emergency transfer is controlled
by Communication Manager).
status cabinet nn – Use this to verify the current setting of emergency transfer.
When the emergency transfer is set to other than auto an alarm is generated.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
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Customer-provided alarm device (CPAD) control
CPAD provides a contact closure across a pair of external leads that can be used to control a
customer-provided alarm device or an alarm indicator. The level of alarm (major, minor, warning,
or none) that causes a contact closure can be administered system wide. When the alarm level
matches the alarm level that was administered, the TN2312BP IPSI closes this contact for all
G650s with a carrier address set to A. When the TN2312BP IPSI is in emergency transfer, this
contact is closed to activate the CPAD.
Tone Detection / Call Classification
The TN2312BP IPSI provides eight ports of tone detection and call classification. The
TN2312AP IPSI provides the same.
Tone/Clock functions
The TN2312BP generates tones and provides clock functions for the port network in which it is
placed. This functionality is equivalent to the TN2182B Tone/Clock circuit pack.
I/O adapters
The TN2312BP IPSI requires a new adapter that provides for the alarm input, CPAD, and emergency
transfer leads. This adapter, like the existing TN2312AP IPSI adapter, also allows the IPSI Ethernet
connection to be made to the back of the IPSI slot.
Compatibility
The TN2312BP IPSI can replace the TN2312AP IPSI in the SCC1, MCC1, CMC1, and G600. However,
the TN2312PB IPSI acts only as a tone clock for these media gateways. It does not provide
environmental maintenance.
When the TN2312BP is installed in a CMC1 or G600 media gateway with Communication Manager 2.0
cabinet environment maintenance is provided by monitoring of the AuxSig backplane lead. This lead
sends an alarm if a failure is detected in either the power supply or fan assembly. The CMC1 and G600
are only supported in an IP connect configuration with Communication Manager 2.0.
See the following table for IPSI and media gateway compatibility.
Media
Gateway Communication
Manager 1.x Communication
Manager 2.0 DEFINITY
R10
Environmental
maintenance provided
by:
SCC1 Yes Yes Yes TN775D
MCC1 Yes Yes Yes TN775D
CMC1 Yes Monitoring the AuxSig
backplane lead
G600 Yes Monitoring the AuxSig
backplane lead
G650 Yes TN2312BP IPSI
Circuit packs and power supplies
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Number of IPSI circuit packs per
configuration
For configurations where voice bearer is over CSS or ATM, each IPSI typically controls five port
networks by tunneling control messages over the bearer network to PNs that do not have IPSIs. An IPSI
cannot be placed in:
A PN that has a Stratum-3 clock interface
A remote PN that is using a DS1 converter
A Survivable Remote Expansion Port Network (SREPN)
To determine the number of IPSI-connected PNs that are recommended to support a S8700 configuration
divide the total number of PNs in the configuration by five and add one. The additional IPSI provides
fault tolerance.
For example, if you have 20 PNs, divide 20 by 5 to get 4, then add 1. You need a minimum of five IPSIs
to support the 20 PNs.
For configurations where voice bearer is over IP, there must be one IPSI in each PN.
A direct connect configuration only supports one IPSI connected PN.
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels)
The TN2313AP DS1 port board interfaces a DS1 trunk to the switch backplane via port slots that are
standard for DEFINITY products. The TN2313AP is compatible with previous 24-channel DS1 circuit
packs, including the TN464F (V19 and below), the TN2464 (V19 and below), and the TN767E DS1,
except that it does not provide for packet adjunct capabilities. The TN2313AP supports a variety of
applications, including networking of DEFINITY switches, international trunk types, video
teleconferencing, and wideband data transmission.
The TN2313AP DS1 interface can be configured as 24 channels at 1.544 Mbps. The TN2313 can supply
two 8-kHz reference signals to the switch backplane for optional use by the tone clock board in
synchronizing the system clock to the received line clock.
The TN2313AP is firmware downloadable.
TN2314 S8100 Media Server
The S8100 Media Server supports voice stations with co-resident voice switching, voice and FAX
messaging and system applications run on a Microsoft Windows 2000 operating system. The
communication between the firmware and the software is done by an Ethernet connection. An Intel
processor Message Link (IML) is the Ethernet control link between the Pentium processor and the
MPC860 processor. The link allows for the message-based communication between the two processors.
The S8100 Media Server has the following characteristics:
Processor – The processor is a 500-MHz Pentium III.
RAM – There are two slots for SDRAM memory modules, with a minimum of 256-MB of RAM
and a maximum of 512-MB of RAM.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
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Front panel ethernet access – Services can access the switch via an RJ45 Ethernet jack on the
circuit pack faceplate.
Hard disk – The circuit pack has a 20-GB hard disk.
TN2401 Network Control/Packet Interface
for SI
The TN2401 network control and packet interface is used with DEFINITY SI only.
The TN2401 Net/Pkt interface circuit pack provides the network control interface (NETCON), the packet
interface (PACCON), and, if BX.25 connectivity is not required, the processor interface (PI). The
TN2401 provides eight asynchronous data channels. The TN2401 does not include modems. The
TN2401 is required for the SI model to save translations to the 5-volt ATA flash memory card.
TN2401/TN2400 Network Packet Interface
complex assembly for SI upgrades
The TN2401/TN2400 network packet interface complex provides:
A network control interface (NETCON)
A packet interface (PACCON)
A processor interface (PI) if BX.25 connectivity is not required
Eight asynchronous data channels
The TN2401/TN2400 does not include modems.
The TN2401/TN2400 is required for the SI model to save translations to the 5-volt ATA flash memory
card.
The TN2401/TN2400 complex and the TN2404 processor is required for the following upgrades:
A G1 or G3iV1 MCC1 with a TN773 Processor
An SI system with a TN786B Processor when reusing the existing control carrier cabinet
An SI system with a TN790 or 790B Processor. Any R5 or R6 system will have the old control
carrier backplane and will require the TN2401/TN2400. For R7 and R8 systems, it is possible to
have the old control carrier backplane or the new control carrier backplane. The backplane type
must be verified before the upgrade order is placed so that the right characteristic selection can be
made. If the type of carrier is not known, a visual inspection of the R7 or R8 system will be
required. The old backplane is being used if the system has a TN794/TN2400 in the Network
Control and Packet Control Slots. If nothing is in the Packet Control Slot the new backplane
exists.
TN2402 Processor
The TN2402 processor platform runs at 25 MHz. The TN2402 includes a 32-bit RISC CPU complex and
a maintenance processor complex that provides serial communications and maintenance functions for
DEFINITY CSI. In addition, the TN2402 also terminates ISDN LAPD signaling over the TDM bus from
PRI and BRI trunk circuit packs.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 209
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The RISC CPU complex provides four to 32 MB of Flash PROM. The DRAM is provided via one
SIMM. The TN2402 contains 32 MB of DRAM. The flash is not interleaved. The TN2402 processor
does not provide X.25 communications or a duplication option. The TN2402 does not contain an on-
board modem. Instead, an external modem must be connected to the RS-232E port that was previously
used for the internal modem.
The TN2402 is required for the CSI model to save translations to the 5-Volt ATA flash memory card.
TN2404 Processor
The TN2404 processor circuit pack has 32 MB of DRAM memory and flash memory. The TN2404
processor for DEFINITY SI is designed to handle errors that are associated with the EM-BUS and must
be used with the C-LAN (TN799) and the Net/Pkt (TN2401) in DEFINITY SI configurations.
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo
Cancellation,T1/E1
The TN2464BP DS1 circuit pack is designed for international use in both category A and category B. The
TN2464BP has echo cancellation circuitry and firmware download capability. The TN2464BP supports
T1 (24-channel) and E1 (32-channel) digital facilities. In ISDN-PRI applications, the ISDN D channel
connects the TN1655 Packet Interface via the LAN bus. The TN2464BP has the same functionality as the
TN464GP, which is for US and Canada offers only.
The TN2464BP circuit pack provides:
Test jack access to the T1/E1 line
Board-level administrable A-/µ-Law companding
CRC-4 generation and checking (E1 only)
Stratum-3 clock capability
Support for the 120A channel service unit module
CO, TIE, DID, off-premises station (OPS) port types that use robbed-bit signaling protocol,
proprietary bit-oriented signaling (BOS) 24th-channel signaling protocol, or DMI-BOS 24th-
channel signaling protocol
Unpolarized, balanced-pair, line-out (LO) and line-in (LI) signal leads
Support for Russian incoming ANI
Support for the enhanced maintenance capabilities of the enhanced integrated channel service unit
(ICSU)
Support for Avaya IVR
Channel-associated signaling protocols for many countries (for details, contact your Avaya
representative)
The TN2464BP can be updated using the firmware download feature, which requires use of the TN799
C-LAN interface.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
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TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN
(VAL)
The TN2501AP is an integrated announcement circuit pack that:
Offers up to 1 hour of announcement storage capacity
Provides shorter backup and restore times
Is firmware downloadable
Plays announcements over the TDM bus, similar to the TN750C circuit pack
Has 33 ports, including
One dedicated telephone access port for recording and playing back announcements using
port number 1
One Ethernet port using port number 33
31 playback ports using ports 2 through 32
Uses a 10-/100-Mbps ethernet interface to allow portability of announcements and firmware files
over LAN
Uses announcement files that are in ".wav" format (CCITT A- and µ-law, 8 kHz, 8-bit mono)
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports)
The TN2793B is a dual coded, analog line 24-port circuit pack. Each port supports one telephone, such as
the rotary dial 500 telephone and the DTMF dial 2500 telephones.
The TN2793B supports on-premises wiring with either touch-tone or rotary dialing and with or without
the LED and neon message waiting indicators. The TN2793B supports off-premises wiring with either
DTMF dialing or rotary dialing. LED or neon message waiting indicators are not supported off-premises.
Along with a TN755B neon power unit per carrier or per single-carrier cabinet, the TN2793B supports
telephones equipped with neon message waiting indicators (on-premises use only). The TN2793B
supports three ringer loads, only one telephone can have an LED or neon message waiting indicator. The
TN2793B allows a maximum of 12 simultaneous ports ringing; four on ports 1 through 8, four on ports 9
through 16, and four on ports 17 through 24.
The TN2793B supports A- and µ-law companding and administrable timers. The TN2793B supports
queue warning level lights associated with the DDC and the UCD features, recorded announcements
associated with the Intercept Treatment feature, and PagePac paging system for the Loudspeaker Paging
feature. Additional support is provided for external alerting devices associated with the TAAS feature,
neon message waiting indicators, and modems. The TN2793B also supports secondary lightning
protection. The TN2793B provides -48 VDC current in the off-hook state and -90 VDC ringing voltage.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
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The following table lists the TN2793B-supported telephones and shows each of their wiring sizes and
ranges.
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter
The TNCCSC-1 circuit pack converts ISDN-PRI to a DASS interface. DASS is a 2-Mbps interface that
uses a 75-Ohm coaxial transmission facility. One TNCCSC-1 circuit pack can support up to two TN464
DS1 interface circuit packs. A Y-cable and an 888B 75-Ohm coaxial adapter connect to the public
network facility.
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter
The TNCCSC-2 circuit pack converts ISDN-PRI to a DPNSS interface. DPNSS is a 2-Mbps interface
that uses a 75-Ohm coaxial transmission facility. One TNCCSC-2 circuit pack can support up to two
TN464 DS1 interface circuit packs. A Y-cable connects to the public network facility.
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter
The TNCCSC-3 circuit pack is the same as the TNCSSC-2 circuit pack with a 120-Ohm twisted pair
interface.
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter
The TN-C7 Provides a gateway interface between the TN464 circuit pack and the public signaling
network. The TN-C7 integrates DASS, DPNSS and SS7 into a single board type. The TN-C7 supports
international service provider call center customers. It is not designed for operation in the US or Canada.
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer
The TN-CIN Provides QSIG and private networking transparency on demand across a switched network.
The TN-CIN integrates up to three G.728 LD-CELP voice or FAX circuits, six CAFT voice or FAX and
two data circuits over a single separate digital link. The three or six voice or FAX circuits are presented as
a G.703 E1 data stream that uses either QSIG peer-to-peer or channel-associated signaling.
All voice or FAX circuits support low bit rate voice compression at 8 to 16 kbps when they use CAFT, or
at 16 kbps when they use LD-CELP. LD-CELP voice compression supports FAX at V.29 (7200 bps).
Telephone Wire size (AWG) Maximum range (feet)
500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
2500-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
6200-type 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
7102A-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 20,000 (6,096 m)
8100-series 24 (0.2 mm2/0.5 mm) 12,000 (3,657 m)
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
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CAFT voice compression supports FAX at V.27ter (4800 bps). The Composite port supports V.11 and
V.35 at speeds up to 128 kbps.
The TN-CIN features an on-demand voice networking mode for use with time-based communications
links like ISDN. A high-speed data port using V.24 or V.11 or V.35 at up to 115.2 kbps synchronous or
V.24 at up to 115.2 kbps asynchronous, that incorporates dynamic bandwidth allocation (variable data
clocking) is available for data applications. A low-speed V.24 data port of up to 96 kbps synchronous or
57.6 kbps asynchronous is available for data applications.
UN330B Duplication Interface
The UN330B duplication interface is used for the DEFINITY R configurations only.
In a high- or critical-reliability system with two SPEs, one UN330B resides in each SPE and connects to
the other UN330B. The UN330Bs provide control and communication paths between the SPEs to keep
the standby SPE ready to assume control if the active SPE fails. The UN330Bs select active/ standby
mode for the two SPEs, shadow (copy) the active SPE memory writes into the standby SPE memory, and
support inter-SPE communications.
The duplication channel is a bidirectional high-speed path between the 2 SPEs. When memory
shadowing is active, all shadowed memory writes on the active processor’s bus are sent across the link
and written into the memory of the standby processor. Standby memory writes are not sent to the active
processor.
UN331C Processor
The UN331C processor circuit pack is used in the DEFINITY R configurations only.
The UN331C controls the system and executes stored programs that perform call-processing activity and
maintenance. The UN331C is a RISC that is designed around a MIPS R3000A CPU that operates at 33
MHz. It employs 32-bit address and data buses to obtain and execute instructions at a rate approaching
one instruction per clock cycle. The 256-Kbyte instruction cache with burst-mode refill and 256-Kbyte
data cache are key to the performance of the processor. A read and write buffer chip tailors the UN331C
to the call-processing environment.
Peripheral devices residing on the UN331C are positioned outside the CPU cache structure and interface
to the CPU through the read/write buffers. These peripherals include:
512 Kbytes of ROM for the monitor
Counters and timers
UARTs
Control, status and error registers
Logic for bus arbitration and the Bus Time-Out feature
The UN331C interfaces to the 32-bit multiplexed address/data processor bus (PM-Bus) and the 32-bit
processor expansion bus (PX-Bus). The PM-Bus is for all processor write operations and single-word (4-
byte) read operations. Multiple-word or burst reads are performed using the PM-Bus to transfer the
address to main memory. The words of the burst are then returned using both the PM-Bus and PX-Bus.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
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UN332C Mass Storage/Network Control for R
The UN332 provides an interface between the UN331C processor and the SCSI bus for access to the
mass storage system (MSS) such as a disk drive. The UN332 also provides TDM network control for the
PPN, and terminates one end of the processor-multiplexed bus.
The UN332C allows the interface of the switch to the TN2211 optic disk drive. The UN332C circuit pack
includes the SCSI Host Adapter, the ArchAngel, and the tone clock switching logic.
Circuit packs and power supplies
655A power supply
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Media modules
MM312 DCP media module
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Media modules
MM312 DCP media module
The Avaya MM312 Media Module provides 24 Digital Communications Protocol (DCP) ports with RJ-
45 jacks. The MM312 supports simultaneous operation of all 24 ports. Each port can be connected to a 2-
wire DCP telephone.The MM312 does not support 4-wire DCP telephones.
NOTE:
The MM312 is not supported in the G700 Media Gateway.
MM314 LAN media module
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MM314 LAN media module
The Avaya MM314 Media Module provides:
24 Ethernet 10/100 Base-T Ethernet access ports with inline Power over Ethernet (PoE).
One Gigabit Ethernet Small Form-Factor Pluggables (SFP) GigaBit Interface Converter (GBIC)
slot which supports any of the following SFP GBICs: 1000-SX, 1000-LX, 1000-ELX or 1000-
TX.
NOTE:
The MM314 is not supported in the G700 Media Gateway.
The MM314 supports 48V DC inline power provided over standard category 5 UTP cables (up to 100-m
range) on each PoE port.
The MM314 features:
Priority power budgeting with configurable priorities
Automatic load detection on ports
Automatic device discovery
Enable/disable port powering option
Port monitoring
Automatic recovery from overload shutdown
Automatic recovery from no-load shutdown
See the following figure for an example of the MM314.
MM340 E1/T1 media module
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MM340 E1/T1 media module
The Avaya MM340 Media Module provides one WAN access port for the connection of an E1 or T1
WAN.
NOTE:
The MM340 is not supported in the G700 Media Gateway.
See the following figure for an example of the MM340.
MM342 USP WAN media module
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MM342 USP WAN media module
The Avaya MM342 Media Module provides one USP WAN access port. MM342 supports the following
WAN protocols:
V.35/ RS449
X.21
For these connections, one of the following cables is necessary:
Avaya Serial Cable DTE V.35 (USP to V.35)
Avaya Serial Cable DTE X.21 (USP to X.21)
NOTE:
The MM324 is not supported in the G700 Media Gateway.
MM710 T1/E1 media module
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MM710 T1/E1 media module
The Avaya MM710 Media Module terminates a T1/E1 connection. The MM710 has a built-in Channel
Service Unit (CSU) so that an external CSU is not necessary. See the following figure for an example of
the MM710.
Figure 66: Avaya MM710 T1/E1 Media Module
NOTE:
The MM710 is supported in both the G700 and G350 Media Gateways.
Highlights of the MM710:
Software selectable T1 or E1 operation
An integrated CSU
Both A-law (E1) and µ-law (T1) gain control and echo cancellation ability
D4, ESF, or CEPT framing
ISDN PRI capability (23B + D or 30B + D)
AMI, ZCS, B8ZS (T1) or HDB3 (E1) line coding
Trunk signaling to support US and international CO or tie trunks
Echo cancellation in either direction
Fractional T1 support
An OIC DB 25-pin interface
A Bantam loopback jack that is used for testing of T1 or E1 circuits.
The MM710 supports the universal DS1 that conforms to the ANSI T1.403 1.544 Mbps T1 standard and
to the ITU-T G.703 2.048 Mbps E1 standard.
NOTE:
The MM710 does not support Code Mark Inversion line coding used in Japan.
Echo cancellation
The MM710 can cancel echoes in either direction for any DS0. The MM710 can cancel echoes with tail-
end delays up to 96 milliseconds. It is compatible with either A- or µ-law code.
E1/T1 EIA 530A DCE
ALM
TST
ACT
SIG
EISO EMSM EOSI
mmdc710 KLC 020402
MM710 T1/E1 media module
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CSU function
The CSU functionality built into the MM710 has the following capabilities:
Capable of long-haul or short-haul transmission
Can receive signals as low as -36 dB
Can compensate for distances up to 655 feet in short-haul operation
Attenuation up to -22.5 dB can be programmed when driving repeaters for long-haul
transmission.
Loopback/BERT functions
The loopback/BERT functionality in the MM710 has the following characteristics:
Provides a passive loopback for the far-end in an un-powered state
Can be set up for line or payload loopbacks.
Supports incoming and outgoing ESF FDL requests
Can generate and respond to in-band loop up and loop down codes per ANSI-T1.403
Supports the generation and detection of test patterns as well as injection of bit errors for Bit Error
Rate Testing
E1 impedance
By itself, the MM710 can be configured for balanced 120-ohm E1 operation. An external balun is
required for 75-ohm unbalanced operation.
Bantam jacks
Six bantam jacks on the faceplate provide access to the incoming and outgoing T1 signals or E1 signals:
SM permits passive monitoring of the incoming line.
EM permits passive monitoring of the outgoing line.
SO permits intrusive monitoring of the incoming signal from the network. When used, the SO
jack breaks the connection of that signal to the framer.
EI permits injection of a signal towards the framer. When used, the EI jack isolates the network
Rx signal.
SI permits injection of a signal towards the network. When used, the SI jack isolates the framer
Tx signal from going out to the network.
EO permits intrusive monitoring of the signal from the framer. When used, the EO jack breaks the
connection of that signal to the network jack, RJ48C.
LEDs
Four LEDs are supported on the faceplate. These include the three standard Media Module LEDs and the
SIG LED that indicates the MM710 Media Module is receiving a valid signal
MM710 T1/E1 media module
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DB 25 DCE connector
This connector can be used to connect a DSU (data service unit) in a future release.
Loopback jack
When your order a MM710, Avaya recommends that you include the optional 700A loop back jack. With
the loop back jack installed you can loop back the T1 up to the network facility without a dispatch. If the
MM710 is sold with an Avaya Service Agreement, the jack must be ordered and installed to save time
and money on service calls.
The jack is typically used for CO trunk installations. The jack is inserted as close to the network or telco
T1 facility as possible. When the jack is activated from the G700 Media Gateway, it sets up loopbacks in
both directions. The G700 Media Gateway can then send and receive a test pattern to verify the function
of the MM710 and T1 cable up to the network T1 facility. In normal operation, the jack passes the T1
signals through undisturbed in both directions.
MM711 Analog media module
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MM711 Analog media module
The Avaya MM711 Media Module provides analog trunk and telephone features and functionality. See
the following figure for an example of the MM711.
Figure 67: Avaya™ MM711 Analog Media Module
NOTE:
The MM711 is supported in both the G700 and G350 Media Gateways.
The MM711 provides the administrator with the capability to configure any of the eight ports of this
analog circuit pack as:
A loop start or a ground start central office trunk
Loop current 18-120mA
A wink start or a immediate start Analog Direct Inward Dialing (DID) trunk
A 2-wire analog Outgoing CAMA E911 trunk, for connectivity to the PSTN
MF signaling is supported for CAMA ports
Analog, tip/ring devices such as single-line telephones with or without LED message waiting
indication
The MM711 also supports:
Three ringer loads (ringer equivalency number) for up to 2000 feet for all eight ports
Up to eight simultaneously-ringing ports
NOTE:
The media gateway achieves this number of ports by staggering the ringing and pauses
between two sets of up to four ports.
If more than four ports
Type 1 and Type 2 Caller ID
Ring voltage generation for a variety of international frequencies and cadences
A hard-wired ground wire is added for each IROB-to-earth ground
External interfaces: CO trunk side
The following requirements apply to the external interfaces on the CO trunk side:
mmdc711 KLC 022702
ALM
TST
ACT
123456 87
MM711 Analog media module
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The tip and ring default input impedance is 600 ohms. The default impedance can be configured
to accommodate other tip and ring impedances such as 900 ohms used in Brazil and the complex
impedance that is used in the European Union.
A hard-wired ground wire is added for each IROB-to-earth ground.
The MM711 supports DTMF, MF, and Pulsing.
The MM711 supports R2MFC address signaling, and provides -48 VDC for ports that are set up
as DID.
CO trunk acceptable loop range is 18-60 mA
The MM711 supports DIOD for Japan.
The following trunk types are supported:
Loop start and ground start CO trunks
DID
CAMA
Caller ID
The MM711 supports ICLID on analog CO loop-start trunks for all supported countries that require this
feature. It supports Type 1 CID devices, and firmware signaling requirements are implemented on a per-
port basis. The firmware supports these formats:
Single Data Message Format (SDMF)
Multiple Data Message Format (MDMF)
Caller ID generation on Line Ports
The MM711 accommodates on-hook transmission, necessary to receive caller ID signals.
On an ICLID administered trunk, absence of ICLID information or error in transmission of ICLID
information will not prevent the call from being terminated, with the exception of Japan.
Analog line interface requirements
The MM711 provides pass through for FAX signals.
The MM711 supports analog telephone sets with:
An impedance range of Rs: 215 to 300 ohms; Rp: 750 to 1000 ohms; Cp: 115 to 220pF
A ringing frequency range of 20 Hz, 25 Hz, or 50 Hz
A DC current range of 20 to 60 mA
A hook flash range of 90 to 1000 ms
Companding
MM711 allows for A- or µ-law selection at installation. This is a software-selectable capability that
applies to every port on the MM711.
MM712 DCP media module
224 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
MM712 DCP media module
The Avaya MM712 Media Module allows connectivity of up to eight 2-wire Digital Communications
Protocol (DCP) voice terminals. See the following figure for an example of the MM712.
Figure 68: Avaya™ MM712 DCP Media Module
NOTE:
The MM712 is supported in both the G700 and G350 Media Gateways.
Hardware interface
Signal timing specifications for the MM712 support TDM Bus Timing in receive and transmit modes.
The G700 Media Gateway supplies only +5 VDC and –48 VDC to the MM712 Media Module. Any other
required voltages must be derived on the module.
Loop range secondary protection is provided on the MM712. The MM712 is also self-protecting from an
over current condition on a tip and ring interface.
mmdc712 KLC 022702
ALM
TST
ACT
123456 87
MM714 Analog media module
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 225
December 2003
MM714 Analog media module
The Avaya MM714 Media Module provides four analog telephone ports and four analog trunk ports.
NOTE:
The MM714 is not supported in the G700 Media Gateway.
See the following figure for an example of the MM714.
MM720 BRI media module
226 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
MM720 BRI media module
The Avaya MM720 Media Module contains eight ports that interface to the central office at the ISDN T
reference point. Information is communicated in two ways:
Over two 64-kbps channels called B1 and B2
Can be circuit-switched simultaneously
Over a 16-kbps channel called the D channel
Used for signaling
Occupies one time slot for all eight D channels
The circuit-switched connections have an A- or µ-law option for voice operation. The circuit-
switched connections operate as 64-kbps clear channels when in the data mode.
NOTE:
The MM720 is supported in both the G350 and the G700 Media Gateways.
The MM720 does not support the following:
BRI stations
Combining both B channels together to form a 128-kbps channel
See the following figure for an example of the MM720.
MM722 BRI media module
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 227
December 2003
MM722 BRI media module
The Avaya MM722 Media Module provides two 4-wire S/T ISDN BRI (Basic Rate Interface) 2B+D
access ports with RJ-45 jacks. Each port interfaces to the central office at the ISDN T reference point.
Information is communicated in the same manner as for the MM720.
NOTE:
The MM722 is not supported in the G700 Media Gateway.
MM760 VoIP media module
228 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
MM760 VoIP media module
The Avaya MM760 Media Module is a clone of the motherboard VoIP engine. The MM760 provides an
additional 64 VoIP channels with G.711 compression.
NOTE:
The MM760 is not supported in the G350 Media Gateway.
See the following figure for an example of a MM760.
Figure 69: Avaya™ MM760 VoIP Media Module
The capacity of the MM760 is 64 G.711 TDM/IP simultaneous calls, or 32 compression codec, G.729 or
G.723, TDM/IP simultaneous calls. These call types can be mixed on the same resource. In other words,
the simultaneous call capacity of the resource is 64 G.711 Equivalent Calls.
NOTE:
Customers who want an essentially non-blocking system must add an additional MM760
Media Module if they use more than two MM710 Media Modules in a single chassis. The
additional MM760 provides an additional 64 channels.
Ethernet interface
The MM760 must have its own Ethernet address. The MM760 requires a 10/100 Base T Ethernet
interface to support H.323 endpoints for DEFINITY® IP trunks and stations from another G700 Media
Gateway.
Voice compression
The MM760 supports on-board resources for compression and decompression of voice for G.711 (A- and
µ-law), G.729 and 729B, and G.723 (5.3K and 6.3K).
The VoIP engine supports the following functionality:
RTP and RTCP interfaces
Dynamic jitter buffers
DTMF detection
Hybrid echo cancellation
Silence suppression
Comfort noise generation
Packet loss concealment
mmdc760 KLC 022702
ALM
TST
ACT
Optional components
Optional components for an S8100 Media Server
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 229
December 2003
Optional components
Optional components for an S8100 Media Server
Media gateways
G600 Media Gateway on page 127
CMC1 Media Gateway on page 147
Circuit packs
Power circuit packs
650A AC power unit on page 174
Line circuit packs
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports) on page 180
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire S/T-NT Interface (12 ports) on page 181
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports) on page 184
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports) on page 187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports) on page 188
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports) on page 191
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 192
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8 ports) on page 193
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports) on page 197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple countries (16 ports) on page 197
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 198
TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12 ports) on page 199
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 201
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports) (International Offers or Offer B
only for US and Canada) on page 202
TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 203
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 210
Optional components
Optional components for an S8100 Media Server
230 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Trunk circuit packs
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) on page 178
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 179
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1 (32 channels) on page 179
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 180
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 185
TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 186
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 187
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports) on page 187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) on page 187
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 195
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 196
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 196
TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 197
TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports) on page 198
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports) on page 199
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 200
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 200
TN2242 Digital Trunk on page 203
TN2305B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for multimode fiber on page 204
TN2306B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for single-mode fiber on page 204
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 204
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels) on page 207
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation,T1/E1 on page 209
Control circuit packs
TN771DP Maintenance and Test on page 189
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface on page 193
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) on page 184
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN2314 S8100 Media Server on page 207
Service circuit packs
TN433 Speech Synthesizer on page 178
TN725B Speech Synthesizer on page 183
TN788C Multimedia Voice Conditioner on page 190
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
Optional components
Optional components for an S8100 Media Server
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 231
December 2003
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter on page 211
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer on page 211
Application circuit packs
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL) on page 210
Port circuit packs
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN789B Radio Controller on page 191
Adapters
NAA1 fiber-optic cable adaptor on page 178
Avaya telephones
IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone on page 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone on page 261
Avaya 4612 IP telephone on page 262
Avaya 4620 IP telephone on page 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone on page 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone on page 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone on page 267
Digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone on page 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone on page 268
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone on page 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone on page 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone on page 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone on page 271
Optional components
Optional components for an S8100 Media Server
232 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Soundstation speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing speakerphone on page 285
Analog phones
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals on page 276
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone on page 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone on page 278
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephones
Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone on page 279
Wireless
Avaya TransTalk 9040 on page 279
Consoles
Avaya 302D attendant console on page 274
Avaya Softconsole on page 275
Optional components: S8300 Media Server with a G700 Media Gateway
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 233
December 2003
Optional components: S8300 Media Server with a G700
Media Gateway
Media gateways
Avaya G700 Media Gateway on page 139
Media modules for a G700 Media Gateway
MM710 T1/E1 media module on page 219
MM711 Analog media module on page 222
MM712 DCP media module on page 224
MM760 VoIP media module on page 228
MM720 BRI media module on page 226
Avaya telephones
IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone on page 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone on page 261
Avaya 4612 IP telephone on page 262
Avaya 4620 IP telephone on page 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone on page 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone on page 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone on page 267
Digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone on page 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone on page 268
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone on page 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone on page 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone on page 271
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone on page 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone on page 273
Optional components: S8300 Media Server with a G700 Media Gateway
234 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Avaya Callmaster VI (606A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya 302D attendant console on page 274
Analog telephones
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone on page 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone on page 278
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals on page 276
Wireless telephone
Avaya TransTalk 9040 on page 279
Speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone on page 283
Optional components: S8500
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 235
December 2003
Optional components: S8500
Media gateways
Avaya G650 Media Gateway on page 131
G600 Media Gateway on page 127
Avaya G700 Media Gateway on page 139
Avaya G350 Media Gateway on page 123
CMC1 Media Gateway on page 147
MCC1 Media Gateway on page 159
SCC1 Media Gateway on page 150
Circuit packs
Power
655A power supply on page 175
1217A AC power supply on page 173
649A DC power unit on page 174
676C DC power supply on page 177
TN755B Neon Power Unit on page 186
CFY1B current limiter on page 177
TN2202 Ring Generator on page 200
Line circuit packs
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports) on page 180
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire S/T-NT Interface (12 ports) on page 181
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports) on page 184
TN754C DCP Digital Line (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 186
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports) on page 187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports) on page 188
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports) on page 191
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 192
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8 ports) on page 193
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports) on page 197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple countries (16 ports) on page 197
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 198
TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12 ports) on page 199
Optional components: S8500
236 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 201
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports) (International Offers or Offer B
only for US and Canada) on page 202
TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 203
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 210
Trunk circuit packs
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) on page 178
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 179
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1 (32 channels) on page 179
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 180
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 185
TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 186
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 187
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports) on page 187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) on page 187
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 195
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 196
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 196
TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 197
TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports) on page 198
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports) on page 199
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 200
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 200
TN2242 Digital Trunk on page 203
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 204
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels) on page 207
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation,T1/E1 on page 209
Control circuit packs
TN570D Expansion Interface on page 182
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) on page 184
TN771DP Maintenance and Test on page 189
TN775C Maintenance on page 189
TN780 Tone Clock on page 190
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface on page 193
TN2182C Tone Clock, Tone Detector, and Call Classifier (8 ports) on page 197
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
Optional components: S8500
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 237
December 2003
TN2312BP IP Server Interface on page 204
Service circuit packs
TN433 Speech Synthesizer on page 178
TN725B Speech Synthesizer on page 183
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) on page 184
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter on page 211
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer on page 211
Application circuit packs
TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice Mail System (part of ED-1E568) on page 181
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface) on page 194
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL) on page 210
Port circuit packs
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN789B Radio Controller on page 191
Avaya telephones
IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone on page 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone on page 261
Avaya 4612 IP telephone on page 262
Avaya 4620 IP telephone on page 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone on page 264
The 4620SW IP telephone has the same feature set as the 4620 with the addition of the following:
on page 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone on page 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone on page 267
Optional components: S8500
238 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone on page 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone on page 268
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone on page 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone on page 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone on page 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone on page 271
SoundStation speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing speakerphone on page 285
Analog telephones
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals on page 276
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone on page 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone on page 278
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephone
Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone on page 279
Wireless telephone
Avaya TransTalk 9040 on page 279
Consoles
Avaya 302D attendant console on page 274
Avaya Softconsole on page 275
Optional components for an S8700 Media Server in an IP Connect configuration
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 239
December 2003
Optional components for an S8700 Media Server in
an IP Connect configuration
Media gateways
G600 Media Gateway on page 127
Avaya G700 Media Gateway on page 139
Circuit packs
Line circuit packs
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports) on page 180
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire S/T-NT Interface (12 ports) on page 181
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports) on page 184
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports) on page 187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports) on page 188
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports) on page 191
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 192
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8 ports) on page 193
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports) on page 197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple countries (16 ports) on page 197
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 198
TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12 ports) on page 199
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 201
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports) (International Offers or Offer B
only for US and Canada) on page 202
TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 203
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 210
Trunk circuit packs
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) on page 178
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 179
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1 (32 channels) on page 179
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 180
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 185
TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 186
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 187
Optional components for an S8700 Media Server in an IP Connect configuration
240 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports) on page 187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) on page 187
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 195
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 196
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 196
TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 197
TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports) on page 198
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports) on page 199
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 200
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 200
TN2242 Digital Trunk on page 203
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 204
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels) on page 207
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation,T1/E1 on page 209
Control circuit packs
TN771DP Maintenance and Test on page 189
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface on page 193
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN2312BP IP Server Interface on page 204
Service circuit packs
TN433 Speech Synthesizer on page 178
TN725B Speech Synthesizer on page 183
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) on page 184
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter on page 211
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer on page 211
Application circuit packs
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface) on page 194
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL) on page 210
Port circuit packs
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN789B Radio Controller on page 191
Optional components for an S8700 Media Server in an IP Connect configuration
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 241
December 2003
Avaya telephones
IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone on page 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone on page 261
Avaya 4612 IP telephone on page 262
Avaya 4620 IP telephone on page 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone on page 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone on page 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone on page 267
Digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone on page 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone on page 268
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone on page 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone on page 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone on page 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone on page 271
SoundStation speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing speakerphone on page 285
Analog telephones
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals on page 276
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone on page 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone on page 278
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephone
Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone on page 279
Wireless telephone
Avaya TransTalk 9040 on page 279
Optional components for an S8700 Media Server in an IP Connect configuration
242 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Consoles
Avaya 302D attendant console on page 274
Avaya Softconsole on page 275
Optional components: S8700 – Voice Bearer Over CSS or ATM
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 243
December 2003
Optional components: S8700 – Voice Bearer Over CSS
or ATM
Media gateways
Avaya G650 Media Gateway on page 131
Avaya G350 Media Gateway on page 123
Avaya G700 Media Gateway on page 139
SCC1 Media Gateway on page 150
MCC1 Media Gateway on page 159
Circuit packs
Power
655A power supply on page 175
1217A AC power supply on page 173
649A DC power unit on page 174
676C DC power supply on page 177
TN755B Neon Power Unit on page 186
CFY1B current limiter on page 177
TN2202 Ring Generator on page 200
Line circuit packs
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports) on page 180
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire S/T-NT Interface (12 ports) on page 181
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports) on page 184
TN754C DCP Digital Line (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 186
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports) on page 187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports) on page 188
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports) on page 191
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 192
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8 ports) on page 193
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports) on page 197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple countries (16 ports) on page 197
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 198
TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12 ports) on page 199
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 201
Optional components: S8700 – Voice Bearer Over CSS or ATM
244 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports) (International Offers or Offer B
only for US and Canada) on page 202
TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 203
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 210
Trunk circuit packs
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) on page 178
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 179
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1 (32 channels) on page 179
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 180
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 185
TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 186
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 187
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports) on page 187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) on page 187
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 195
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 196
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 196
TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 197
TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports) on page 198
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports) on page 199
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 200
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 200
TN2242 Digital Trunk on page 203
TN2305B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for multimode fiber on page 204
TN2306B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for single-mode fiber on page 204
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 204
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels) on page 207
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation,T1/E1 on page 209
Control circuit packs
TN570D Expansion Interface on page 182
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) on page 184
TN771DP Maintenance and Test on page 189
TN775C Maintenance on page 189
TN780 Tone Clock on page 190
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface on page 193
TN2182C Tone Clock, Tone Detector, and Call Classifier (8 ports) on page 197
Optional components: S8700 – Voice Bearer Over CSS or ATM
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 245
December 2003
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN2312BP IP Server Interface on page 204
Service circuit packs
TN433 Speech Synthesizer on page 178
TN725B Speech Synthesizer on page 183
TN787K Multimedia Interface on page 190
TN788C Multimedia Voice Conditioner on page 190
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter on page 211
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer on page 211
Application circuit packs
TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice Mail System (part of ED-1E568) on page 181
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface) on page 194
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL) on page 210
Port circuit packs
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN789B Radio Controller on page 191
Avaya telephones
IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone on page 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4612 IP telephone on page 262
Avaya 4620 IP telephone on page 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone on page 264
Avaya 4624 IP telephone on page 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone on page 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone on page 267
Optional components: S8700 – Voice Bearer Over CSS or ATM
246 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone on page 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone on page 268
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone on page 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya Callmaster VI (606A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone on page 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone on page 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone on page 271
SoundStation speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing speakerphone on page 285
Analog telephones
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals on page 276
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone on page 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone on page 278
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephones
Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone on page 279
Wireless telephone
Avaya TransTalk 9040 on page 279
Consoles
Avaya 302D attendant console on page 274
Avaya Softconsole on page 275
Optional components for DEFINITY Server CSI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 247
December 2003
Optional components for DEFINITY Server CSI
Media gateways
CMC1 Media Gateway on page 147
Circuit packs for DEFINITY Server CSI
Power circuit packs
650A AC power unit on page 174
Line circuit packs
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports) on page 180
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports) on page 184
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports) on page 187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports) on page 188
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports) on page 191
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 192
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8 ports) on page 193
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports) on page 197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple countries (16 ports) on page 197
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 198
TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12 ports) on page 199
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 201
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports) (International Offers or Offer B
only for US and Canada) on page 202
TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 203
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 210
Trunk circuit packs
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) on page 178
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 179
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1 (32 channels) on page 179
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 180
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 185
TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 186
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 187
Optional components for DEFINITY Server CSI
248 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports) on page 187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) on page 187
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 195
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 196
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 196
TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 197
TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports) on page 198
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports) on page 199
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 200
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 200
TN2242 Digital Trunk on page 203
TN2305B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for multimode fiber on page 204
TN2306B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for single-mode fiber on page 204
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 204
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels) on page 207
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation,T1/E1 on page 209
Control circuit packs
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) on page 184
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface on page 193
TN2182C Tone Clock, Tone Detector, and Call Classifier (8 ports) on page 197
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN2402 Processor on page 208
Service circuit packs
TN433 Speech Synthesizer on page 178
TN725B Speech Synthesizer on page 183
TN788C Multimedia Voice Conditioner on page 190
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter on page 211
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer on page 211
Application circuit packs
TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice Mail System (part of ED-1E568) on page 181
Optional components for DEFINITY Server CSI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 249
December 2003
TN750C Recorded Announcement (16 channels) on page 185
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface) on page 194
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL) on page 210
Port circuit packs
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN789B Radio Controller on page 191
Adapter
NAA1 fiber-optic cable adaptor on page 178
Avaya telephones for DEFINITY Server CSI
IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone on page 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone on page 261
Avaya 4612 IP telephone on page 262
Avaya 4620 IP telephone on page 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone on page 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone on page 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone on page 267
Digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone on page 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone on page 268
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone on page 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya Callmaster VI (606A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone on page 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone on page 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone on page 271
Optional components for DEFINITY Server CSI
250 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
SoundStation speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing speakerphone on page 285
Analog telephones
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals on page 276
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone on page 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone on page 278
Explosive Atmosphere telephones
Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone on page 279
Wireless telephone
Avaya TransTalk 9040 on page 279
Consoles
Avaya 302D attendant console on page 274
Avaya Softconsole on page 275
Optional components for DEFINITY Server SI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 251
December 2003
Optional components for DEFINITY Server SI
Media gateways
SCC1 Media Gateway on page 150
MCC1 Media Gateway on page 159
Circuit packs for DEFINITY Server SI
Power Circuit Packs
1217A AC power supply on page 173
631DA1 AC power unit on page 173
631DB1 AC power unit on page 173
649A DC power unit on page 174
676C DC power supply on page 177
982LS current limiter on page 177
TN755B Neon Power Unit on page 186
CFY1B current limiter on page 177
TN2202 Ring Generator on page 200
Line Circuit Packs
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports) on page 180
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire S/T-NT Interface (12 ports) on page 181
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports) on page 184
TN754C DCP Digital Line (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 186
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports) on page 187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports) on page 188
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports) on page 191
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 192
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8 ports) on page 193
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports) on page 197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple countries (16 ports) on page 197
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 198
TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12 ports) on page 199
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 201
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports) (International Offers or Offer B
only for US and Canada) on page 202
Optional components for DEFINITY Server SI
252 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 203
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 210
Trunk Circuit Packs
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) on page 178
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 179
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1 (32 channels) on page 179
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 180
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 185
TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 186
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 187
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports) on page 187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) on page 187
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 195
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 196
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 196
TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 197
TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports) on page 198
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports) on page 199
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 200
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 200
TN2242 Digital Trunk on page 203
TN2305B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for multimode fiber on page 204
TN2306B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for single-mode fiber on page 204
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 204
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels) on page 207
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation,T1/E1 on page 209
Control Circuit Packs
TN570D Expansion Interface on page 182
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) on page 184
TN771DP Maintenance and Test on page 189
TN775C Maintenance on page 189
TN780 Tone Clock on page 190
TN792 Duplication Interface on page 192
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface on page 193
TN2182C Tone Clock, Tone Detector, and Call Classifier (8 ports) on page 197
Optional components for DEFINITY Server SI
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 253
December 2003
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN2401 Network Control/Packet Interface for SI on page 208
TN2404 Processor on page 209
Service Circuit Packs
TN433 Speech Synthesizer on page 178
TN725B Speech Synthesizer on page 183
TN787K Multimedia Interface on page 190
TN788C Multimedia Voice Conditioner on page 190
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter on page 211
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer on page 211
Application Circuit Packs
TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice Mail System (part of ED-1E568) on page 181
TN750C Recorded Announcement (16 channels) on page 185
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface) on page 194
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL) on page 210
Port Circuit Packs
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN789B Radio Controller on page 191
Avaya telephones for DEFINITY
Server SI
IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone on page 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone on page 261
Avaya 4612 IP telephone on page 262
Avaya 4620 IP telephone on page 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone on page 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone on page 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone on page 267
Optional components for DEFINITY Server SI
254 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone on page 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone on page 268
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone on page 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone on page 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone on page 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone on page 271
Soundstation speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing speakerphone on page 285
Analog phones
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals on page 276
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone on page 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone on page 278
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephones
Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone on page 279
Wireless
Avaya TransTalk 9040 on page 279
Consoles
Avaya 302D attendant console on page 274
Avaya Softconsole on page 275
Optional components for DEFINITY Server R
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 255
December 2003
Optional components for DEFINITY Server R
Media gateways
SCC1 Media Gateway on page 150
MCC1 Media Gateway on page 159
Circuit packs
Power circuit packs
1217A AC power supply on page 173
631DA1 AC power unit on page 173
631DB1 AC power unit on page 173
649A DC power unit on page 174
676C DC power supply on page 177
TN755B Neon Power Unit on page 186
CFY1B current limiter on page 177
TN2202 Ring Generator on page 200
Line circuit packs
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports) on page 180
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire S/T-NT Interface (12 ports) on page 181
TN726B Data Line (8 ports) on page 183
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports) on page 184
TN754C DCP Digital Line (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 186
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports) on page 187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports) on page 188
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports) on page 191
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 192
TN797 Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8 ports) on page 193
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports) on page 197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for multiple countries (16 ports) on page 197
TN2185B ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire, 8 ports) on page 198
TN2198B ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire, 12 ports) on page 199
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 201
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16 ports) (International Offers or Offer B
only for US and Canada) on page 202
Optional components for DEFINITY Server R
256 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports) on page 203
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports) on page 210
Trunk circuit packs
TN429D Incoming Call Line Identification (ICLID) on page 178
TN459B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 179
TN464GP DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) or E1 (32 channels) on page 179
TN465C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 180
TN747B Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 185
TN753B Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 186
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 187
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports) on page 187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) on page 187
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 195
TN2140B Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 196
TN2146 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 196
TN2147C Central Office Trunk (8 ports) on page 197
TN2184 DIOD Trunk (4 ports) on page 198
TN2199 Central Office Trunk (3-wire, 4 ports) on page 199
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channels) and E1 (32 channels) on page 200
TN2209 Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports) on page 200
TN2242 Digital Trunk on page 203
TN2305B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for multimode fiber on page 204
TN2306B ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for single-mode fiber on page 204
TN2308 Direct Inward Dialing Trunk (8 ports) on page 204
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24 channels) on page 207
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation,T1/E1 on page 209
Control circuit packs
TN570D Expansion Interface on page 182
TN572 Switch-Node Clock on page 182
TN573B Switch-Node Interface for DEFINITY R on page 182
TN771DP Maintenance and Test on page 189
TN744E Call Classifier and Tone Detector (8 ports) on page 184
TN775C Maintenance on page 189
TN780 Tone Clock on page 190
TN799DP Control LAN (C-LAN) Interface on page 193
TN1648B System Access and Maintenance (SYSAM) on page 194
Optional components for DEFINITY Server R
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 257
December 2003
TN1650B Memory on page 195
TN1655 Packet Interface on page 195
TN1657 Disk Drive on page 196
TN2182C Tone Clock, Tone Detector, and Call Classifier (8 ports) on page 197
TN2211 Optical Drive on page 201
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
UN330B Duplication Interface on page 212
UN331C Processor on page 212
UN332C Mass Storage/Network Control for R on page 213
Service circuit packs
TN433 Speech Synthesizer on page 178
TN725B Speech Synthesizer on page 183
TN787K Multimedia Interface on page 190
TN788C Multimedia Voice Conditioner on page 190
TNCCSC-1 PRI to DASS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-2 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TNCCSC-3 PRI to DPNSS Converter on page 211
TN-C7 PRI to SS7 Converter on page 211
TN-CIN Voice, FAX and Data Multiplexer on page 211
Application circuit packs
TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice Mail System (part of ED-1E568) on page 181
TN750C Recorded Announcement (16 channels) on page 185
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface) on page 194
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL) on page 210
Port circuit packs
TN577 Packet Gateway on page 182
TN2302AP IP Media Processor on page 203
TN789B Radio Controller on page 191
Avaya telephones
IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone on page 259
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone on page 260
Avaya 4606 IP telephone on page 260
Optional components for DEFINITY Server R
258 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone on page 261
Avaya 4612 IP telephone on page 262
Avaya 4620 IP telephone on page 263
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone on page 264
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone on page 266
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone on page 267
Digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone on page 267
Avaya 2420 digital telephone on page 268
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone on page 272
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya Callmaster VI (606A) digital telephone on page 273
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones on page 268
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone on page 269
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone on page 270
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone on page 271
Soundstation speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation speakerphone on page 283
3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing speakerphone on page 285
Analog phones
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals on page 276
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone on page 277
Avaya 6219 analog telephone on page 278
Avaya Explosive Atmosphere telephones
Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone on page 279
Wireless
Avaya TransTalk 9040 on page 279
Consoles
Avaya 302D attendant console on page 274
Avaya Softconsole on page 275
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 259
December 2003
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
Avaya IP telephones
Avaya 4602 IP telephone
The Avaya 4602 is an entry-level IP telephone with 2 call appearances.
The following are characteristics of an Avaya 4602 IP telephone:
2 × 24-character display
2 call appearances
Ready to be sold and used world wide
Fixed button for voice mail retrieval
1-way speaker
Seven fixed feature buttons that include the following:
— Speaker
—Mute
—Hold
—Transfer
— Conference
—Drop
—Redial
Supports power over Ethernet
Supports Quality-of-Service features including RTCP and RSVP’
Wall or desk mount
10/100Base-T Ethernet network connection with RJ-45 interface
Integrated Ethernet repeater hub for optional PC connection
Supports G.711, G.729A, and G.729B audio voice coders
Supports H.323 V2
IP address assignment using DHCP or statically configured
Downloadable firmware for future upgrades
Native support that provides the user with the capability to administer and maintain the 4602 IP
telephone
12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the button labeled five for the visually impaired
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
260 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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FCC and CISPR Class B
Message waiting light (LED)
Hearing aid compatible
Adjustable volume control
Available in dark gray
Avaya 4602SW IP telephone
The 4602SW IP telephone has the same feature set as the 4602 with the addition of a built-in Ethernet
switch instead of the hub.
Avaya 4606 IP telephone
The 4606 IP telephone is a fully Internet-capable set supporting Internet Protocol (IP) standards,
providing extensive telephone features and functionality in both the handset and speakerphone.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 4606 IP telephone:
Six programmable appearance or feature buttons with dual red and green LEDs
Four fixed feature buttons that include: the speaker button, the mute button, the hold button, the
volume button
Three fixed feature buttons under display which include: the conference button, the transfer
button, and the redial button
2-line by 16-character LCD display
Full duplex speakerphone with echo cancellation
10/100Base-T Ethernet network connection with RJ-45 interface
Integrated Ethernet repeater hub for optional PC connection
Supports G.711, G.729A, and G.729B audio voice coders
Supports H.323 V2
IP address assignment using DHCP or statically configured
Infrared port to support IR dialing and other applications
Downloadable firmware for future upgrades
Supports CTI applications from the Avaya Softphone, and is CTI ready for other applications
Supports power over Ethernet
Supports Quality of Service features including RTCP and RSVP
Hearing aid compatible
12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the button labeled five for the visually impaired
Message waiting light (LED)
Integrated RJ-11 headset jack for direct connection of headset
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker, and ringer
Eight personalized ringing options
K-style handset with 9-foot modular cord
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 261
December 2003
14-foot modular line cord
Available in black or white
Optional available components:
12-foot modular handset cord
25-foot modular line cord
Base stand (15-degree angle)
Avaya headsets
Amplifier handset
Noisy environment handset
Push-to-talk handset
Avaya 4610SW IP telephone
The Avaya 4610SW IP telephone provides advanced feature functionality with an intuitive and
innovative user interface. The Avaya 4610SW provides telephony, speed dial, call log, and Web browsing
functionality. It uses both the resident and thin-client approach. Many of the 4610SWs applications
"reside" in the telephone itself, while "thin-client" applications, such as the Directory application that is
invoked through the telephone’s Web browser, reside outside the 4610SW.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 4610SW IP telephone:
High-end feature set
Medium screen graphic display (80 × 132 pixel, 4 grayscale)
Advanced user interface that supports 48 speed dialing buttons, 45 call log entries, and up to six
redial buttons on display
Avaya Call Processing label editing
Speed Dial entry editing
EU24 label-button editing
User screen options
Call log
WML browser capability
Full-duplex speakerphone with echo cancellation
10/100Base-T Ethernet network connection with RJ-45 interface
Integrated Ethernet switch for optional PC connection
Supports G.711, G.729A, and G.729B audio voice coders
Supports H.323 V2
IP address assignment using DHCP or statically configured
Infrared port to support IR dialing and other applications
Downloadable firmware for future upgrades
24 call appearance or feature buttons with downloadable labels
Adjustable desk stand
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
262 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Global icons
Hearing aid compatible
12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the button labeled five for the visually impaired
Message waiting light (LED)
Adjustable volume control
Supports CTI applications from the Avaya Softphone and is CTI-ready for other applications
Supports power over Ethernet
Supports Quality of Service features including RTCP and RSVP
FCC and CISPR Class B
Can display network audio quality information during calls
Native support that will give the customer the ability to administer and maintain the telephone
Four softkeys, located under the display, that enhance the user interface
Available in dark gray.
Avaya 4612 IP telephone
The 4612 IP telephone is a fully Internet-capable set supporting IP standards, providing extensive
telephone features and functionality in both the handset and speakerphone.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 4612 IP telephone:
12 Programmable appearance or feature buttons with dual red and green LEDs
Eight fixed feature buttons which include: the speaker button, the mute button, the hold button,
the transfer button, the conference button, the redial button, and the volume control button
Softkeys that reside under the display for the browser user interface
2-line by 24-character LCD display
Full duplex speakerphone with echo cancellation
10/100 Base-T Ethernet network connection with RJ-45 interface
Integrated Ethernet repeater hub for optional PC connection
G.711, G.729A, and G.729B audio voice coders
H.323 V2
IP address assignment using DHCP or statically configured.
Infrared port to support IR dialing and other applications
Supports CTI applications from the Avaya Softphone and is CTI ready for other applications
Supports power over Ethernet
Supports Quality of service features including RTCP and RSVP
Supports external 30A Switched Hub adapter
Downloadable firmware for future upgrades
Hearing aid compatible
A 12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the button labeled five for the visually
impaired.
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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December 2003
A message waiting light (LED)
An integrated RJ-11 headset jack for direct connection of headset
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker, and ringer.
Eight personalized ringing options
K-style handset with 9-foot modular cord
14-foot modular line cord
Available in black or white
Optional available components:
12-foot modular handset cord
25-foot modular line cord
Base stand (15-degree angle)
Avaya headsets
Amplifier handset
Noisy environment handset
Push-to-talk handset
Avaya 4620 IP telephone
Avaya 4620 IP telephone provides advanced feature functionality with an intuitive and innovative user
interface. The Avaya 4620 can provide telephony, speed dial, call log, and Web browsing functionality.
The Avaya 4620 can use either the resident or thin-client approach. With the resident or thick-client
software installed, the Avaya 4620 holds the complete software for all the applications. The Avaya server
handles the call control. With thin-client software installed, a Avaya server still handles call control. A
separate application server in conjunction with Communication Manager controls most of the display.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 4620 IP telephone:
High-end feature set
Large screen graphic display (168-by-132 pixel 4-grayscale)
Advanced user interface, supporting 108 speed dialing buttons, 90 call log entries and up to six
redail buttons on the display
Avaya Call Processing label editing
Speed Dial entry editing
EU24 label-button editing
User screen options
Local call log and speed dial productivity applications
WML browser capability
Full duplex speakerphone with echo cancellation
10/100Base-T Ethernet network connection with RJ-45 interface
Integrated Ethernet switch for optional PC connection
Supports G.711, G.729A, and G.729B audio voice coders
H.323 V2
Telephones and speakerphones
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IP address assignment using DHCP or statically configured
Infrared port to support IR dialing and other applications
Downloadable firmware for future upgrades
24 call appearance or feature buttons with downloadable labels
Integrated Ethernet switch
Adjustable desk stand
Function key expansion unit jack to support optional 24 button feature expansion unit (EU24)
Global Icons
Hearing aid compatible
A 12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the button labeled five for the visually
impaired.
A message waiting light (LED)
Adjustable volume control
Supports CTI applications from the Avaya Softphone and is CTI ready for other applications
Supports power over Ethernet
Supports Quality of Service features including RTCP and RSVP
FCC and CISPR Class B
Can display network audio quality information during calls
Native support that will give the customer the capability to administer and maintain the 4620 IP
telephone
Four softkeys that reside under the display to enhance the user interface
Available in dark gray.
Avaya 4620SW IP telephone
The 4620SW IP telephone has the same feature set as the 4620 with the addition of the following:
Support of multi-byte fonts
Available in white.
Avaya 4624 IP telephone
The 4624 IP telephone is a fully Internet-capable set supporting IP standards, providing extensive
telephone features and functionality.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 4624 IP telephone:
24 Programmable appearance or feature buttons with dual red and green LEDs
Eight fixed feature buttons which include: the speaker button, the mute button, the hold button,
the transfer button, the conference button, the redial button, and volume control button
Four fixed navigation buttons which include: the menu button, the exit button, the previous and
next buttons
Four softkeys that reside under the display
Telephones and speakerphones
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Full duplex speakerphone with echo cancellation
10/100 Base-T Ethernet network connection with RJ-45 interface
Integrated ethernet repeater hub for optional PC connection
G.711, G.729A, and G.729B audio voice coders
H.323 V2
Supports CTI applications from the Avaya Softphone and is CTI ready for other applications
Supports power over Ethernet
Supports Quality of Service features including RTCP and RSVP
Supports external 30A Switched Hub adapter
IP Address assignment using DHCP or statically configured
Infrared port to support IR dialing and other applications
Downloadable firmware for future upgrades
Hearing aid compatible
12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the number five for the visually impaired
Message waiting light (LED)
Integrated RJ-11 headset jack for direct connection of headset
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker, and ringer
Eight personalized ringing options
K-style handset with 9-foot modular cord
14-foot modular line cord
Available in black or white
Optional available components:
12-foot modular handset cord
25-foot modular line cord
Base stand (15-degree angle)
Avaya headsets
Amplifier handset
Noisy environment handset
Push-to-talk handset
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone
The Avaya 4630 Screenphone is a fully Internet-capable IP appliance that supports IP standards. The
Avaya 4630 IP Screenphone provides a user-friendly window into IP enabled applications, a full suite of
Communication Manager features, Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) directory, and
INTUITY™ AUDIX® voice mail features. Up to seven telephony related applications are provided
through a unique user interface, developed with ease-of-use and minimal touch access in mind.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 4630 Screenphone:
1/4 VGA color touch-screen display with user screen options
Five fixed feature buttons which include: the speaker button, the mute button, the hold button, the
headset button, and the volume control button
Full duplex speakerphone with echo cancellation
120 total speed dial buttons organized into groups for easier access
100 total entries in the call log of incoming and outgoing calls
Up to eight redial buttons can be presented on the display
10/100 Base-T Ethernet network connection with RJ-45 interface
Directory access to corporate telephone directory information on a LDAP server
Voice mail access to Web based voice mail messaging capabilities of UCCs Avaya Web
Messaging
User-costomizable stock ticker
Access to Web-based information, including support for downloading Java applets
G.711, G.729A, and G.729B audio voice coders
H.323 V2
IP address assignment using DHCP or statically configured
Infrared port to support IR dialing and other applications
Supports CTI applications from the Avaya Softphone and is CTI ready to other applications
Supports power over Ethernet
Supports Quality of Service features including RTCP and RSVP
Supports external 30A Switched Hub adapter
Can display network audio quality information during calls
Downloadable firmware for future upgrades
Hearing aid compatible
12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the number five for the visually impaired
Message waiting light (LED)
Integrated RJ-11 headset jack for direct connection of headset
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker, and ringer
K-style handset with 9-foot modular cord
14-foot modular line cord
Available in black or white
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Optional available components:
12-foot modular handset cord
25-foot modular line cord
Base stand
Avaya headsets
Amplifier handset
Noisy environment handset
Push-to-talk handset
Avaya 4630SW IP telephone
The 4630SW IP telephone has the same feature set as the 4630 with the addition of a built-in Ethernet
switch and compliance with FCC and CISPR Class B.
Avaya digital telephones
Avaya 2402 Digital Telephone
The Avaya 2402 is a low-cost, low function, 2-wire digital telephone. The 2402 can be aliased as a 6402
telephone.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 2402 telephone:
2 line × 24 character LCD
2 call appearance buttons
Handset and 12-button dialpad
Wall mountable
Display of downloaded extension number
Highly visible message-waiting indicator
Message button for expedited access to voice mail
Conference, transfer, drop, hold, and redial buttons
Built-in one-way speaker with group listen operation
Speaker, feature, and mute buttons, each with LED indicators
Feature button allows access, by way of the dialpad, to 12 Communication Manager features that
do not require indicators
Volume up or down buttons for handset, speaker, and ringer
Electronically stored part ID and serial number for use with Automatic Customer Telephone
Rearrangement
9-foot phone cord and 14-foot gray, modular line cord
Stand included
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Avaya 2420 digital telephone
The Avaya 2420 is a 2-wire digital telephone. The display of the Avaya 2420 consists of a monochrome
liquid crystal display (LCD) which is 29 characters wide by 7 lines tall. Display characters are defined by
a 5-column by 8-row matrix of dots which is used to support 5- × 7-dot European or Katakana characters.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 2420 telephone:
7-line × 29 character LCD
Handset and 12-button dialpad
Adjustable viewing angle
Wall mountable
Eight general purpose buttons to access up to 24 system call appearance or features
Downloaded call appearance or feature button labels
Four local softkey feature buttons
Exit, previous, and next buttons for display navigation
Highly visible message waiting indicator
Message button for expedited access to voice mail
Conference, transfer, drop, hold, and redial buttons
Headset jack that is separate from the handset jack
Built-in speakerphone with group listen operation
Speaker, headset, mute buttons, each with LED indicators
Volume up or down buttons for handset, headset, speakerphone and ringer
100 Entry Call Log (total incoming answered, incoming unanswered, and outgoing calls)
Downloadable firmware for future upgrades
Automatic Gain Control on all audio interfaces
Electronically stored part ID and serial number for use with Automatic Customer Telephone
Rearrangement
Optional 24 button feature key expansion unit
Optional analog interface application module
Native support that allows users the capability to administer and maintain the 2420 using the
associated Feature Expansion Module
Avaya 6402 and 6402D digital telephones
The Avaya 6402 and 6402D are single-line digital telephones. The difference between the Avaya 6402
and the 6402D is the Avaya 6402D is equipped with a 2-line by 24-character display.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 6402 telephone:
Built-in group listening speaker
Six Fixed buttons which include: the speaker button, the feature button, the hold button, the redial
button, the transfer button, and the conference button
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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The feature button allows access by way of the dialpad, to 12 Communication Manager features
that do not require indicators or display messages.
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker, and ringer.
2-wire connectivity through a digital line circuit packs.
Internal self test for the LEDs.
Choice of eight ringing patterns.
Can be used with or without the stand.
Desk or wall mountable.
Matching 9-foot (2.7-m) handset cord and a 7-foot (2.1-m) modular line cord.
Available in dark gray and white.
No Adjunct jack interface for external speakerphones or headset modules
Headsets must be connected through the handset.
Avaya 6408D+ digital telephone
The 6408D+ is a digital telephone with eight buttons.
The following are characteristics of the 6408D+ telephone:
2-line by 24-character LCD display showing time and date when the telephone is in an idle status
Tiltable display with three viewing angles.
Eight call appearance and feature buttons with dual LEDs (two color buttons).
Built-in 2-way speakerphone which can also be optioned as a 1-way group listening speaker.
Six fixed buttons which include: the speaker button, the mute button, the hold button, the redial
button, the transfer button, and the conference button.
NOTE:
Drop must be administered on a softkey.
Twelve system features can be administered on softkeys associated with the display.
Four buttons to access softkey features such as: the menu button, the exit button, the previous
button, and the next button
When the headset feature is administered, it is no longer necessary to take handset off hook to
answer a call.
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker, and ringer.
Message Waiting Light (LED)
2-wire connectivity through 2-wire Digital line circuit packs only.
Accepts download from Communication Manager of voice and touchtone transmission
parameters as required by each country
Internal self test to determine if LEDs light
Choice of eight ringing patterns
Line powered
Can be used with or without stand.
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Desk or wall mountable
Matching 9-foot (2.7-m) handset cord and a 7-foot (2.1-m) modular line cord.
Available in dark gray and white.
Avaya 6416D+M digital telephone
The Avaya 6416D+M telephone is a multi-appearance digital telephone with 16 call appearances or
feature buttons.
The Avaya 6416D+M comes equipped with a modular plug that allows you to install a 100A tip and ring
module to the desktop stand on the telephone for increased set functionality. The 100A tip and ring
module provides a connection to adjuncts such as answering machines, FAX machines, modems, analog
speakerphones, and hearing impaired TDD machines.
A XM24 expansion module can be connected to any Avaya 6416D+M telephone to expand the number of
buttons you can use. However, when the expansion module is connected you must connect an auxiliary
power supply to the telephone. An 1151B1 local power supply or an 1151B2 local power supply with
battery holdover is recommended.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 6416D+M telephone:
24 Call appearance or feature buttons with dual LEDs
10 fixed features buttons which include: the speaker button, the mute button, the conference
button, the transfer button, the hold button, the redial button, the menu button, the exit button, the
previous button, and the next button
12 assignable soft key features associated with the display
A built-in two-way programmable speakerphone can be optioned by user on an individual call
basis for group listening
Headset jack for direct connection of headset
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker, and ringer
12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar for the visually impaired
Message waiting light (LED)
Eight personalized ringing options
K-style handset with 9-foot modular cord
14-foot modular line cord
Pull-out feature reference card tray
Can be wall or desk mounted
International portability
Downloadable transmission parameters
Available in gray or white
Meets Class B requirements for use in residential locations
Optional available components:
12-foot modular handset cord
25-foot modular line cord
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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HIC-1 headset interface cord
Headset modular base unit M12LUCM
Avaya headset
Amplifier handset
Noisy environment handset
The approximate dimensions of the 6416D+M are:
Width = 10.35 inches (26.35 cm)
Depth (front to back) = 8.5 inches (21.59 cm)
Height (with deskstand and handset in place) = 4.75 inches (12.07 cm)
Avaya 6424D+M digital telephone
The Avaya 6424D+M telephone is a multi-appearance digital telephone with 24 call appearances and
feature buttons.
The Avaya 6424D+M comes equipped with a modular plug that allows you to install a 100A tip and ring
module to the desktop stand on the telephone for increased set functionality. Through the 100A tip and
ring module you can connect adjuncts such as, answering machines, FAX machines, modems, analog
speakerphones, and hearing impaired TDD machines.
A XM24 expansion module can be connected to any Avaya 6416D+M telephone to expand the number of
buttons you can use. However, when the expansion module is connected you must connect an auxiliary
power supply to the telephone. An 1151B1 local power supply or an 1151B2 local power supply with
battery holdover is recommended.
The following are characteristics of the 6424D+M telephone:
2-line × 24-character LCD display showing time and date when the telephone is in an idle status.
A tiltable display with three viewing angles.
A 24 call appearance and feature buttons with dual LEDs
Built-in 2-way speakerphone which can also be optioned as 1-way group listening speaker
Six fixed feature buttons which include: the speaker button, the mute button, the hold button, the
redial button, the transfer button, and the conference buttons.
Twelve system features that can be administered on the softkeys associated with the display.
Four buttons to access softkey features such as menu, exit, previous, and next.
Only one next button that is used with the softkeys and the directory function.
A ribbon connector under the telephone to connect optional modules that fit into the stand.
Headset jack under telephone, next to handset jack, for direct connection of headset.
When the headset feature is administered, it is not necessary to take handset off hook to
answer telephone when using a headset.
When using headset via headset feature button, handset becomes listen-only for
monitoring until headset button turned off.
No adjunct jack interface for external S201/S203 speakerphone adjuncts or headset adjuncts
Telephones and speakerphones
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When system administrator provides the user with permission, a user may add, remove or
rearrange the certain features on their call appearance and feature buttons.
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker and ringer.
Message waiting light
Supports optional XM24 expansion module that allows for an additional 24 call appearance and
feature buttons with dual LEDs.
2-wire connectivity through 2-wire digital line circuit packs only
Internal self test
Choice of eight ringing patterns
Can be used with or without stand when the 100A Analog Interface module not in stand.
Desk or wall mountable. If 100A Analog Interface Module is connected, the telephone can not be
wall mounted.
Available in dark gray and white.
Meets Class B requirements for use in residential location.
The Avaya 6424D+M telephone is powered from the system it is connected to. Adjunct station or closet
power is necessary only when connecting an XM24 expansion module or the 100A Analog Interface
Module. If both modules are connected to the 6424D+M, only one power supply is necessary. The
6424D+M will continue to work if the auxiliary power is interrupted, but the modules will not work.
Avaya Callmaster IV (603F) digital telephone
The Avaya Callmaster IV is engineered to support applications involving the Automatic Call Distribution
(ACD) feature. The ergonomic design of the Avaya Callmaster IV enables agents to handle large volumes
of calls more quickly and efficiently. VuStats, a display of agent and call center statistics on the Avaya
Callmaster IV, provides agents with real-time information.
The Avaya Callmaster IV will work in either a 4-wire or 2-wire environment. The Avaya Callmaster IV
can automatically detect whether it is plugged into a 2-wire or 4-wire circuit. This detection provides for
an easy transition to either the 2-wire or 4-wire environment, as well as reduced wiring expenses and
installation change adjustments.
The Avaya Callmaster IV includes as standard a built-in Recorder Interface Module (RIM) that supports
both 2-wire and 4-wire connections to agent recording equipment.
The Avaya Callmaster IV meets FCC and CISPR Class B requirements allowing the telephone to be used
in home office environments with a DEFINITY® Extender.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya Callmaster IV:
Six rubber-domed administrable call appearance or flexible feature buttons
15 rubber-domed administrable flexible feature buttons
Eight fixed feature buttons such as: the conference button, the transfer button, the drop button, the
hold button, the mute button, the volume button, the release button, and the login button
80-character alphanumeric LCD display
12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the number five for the visually impaired
Message waiting light (LED)
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Recorder interface module
Adjunct jack for speakerphone
Dual headset jacks
Eight personalized ringing options
Receiver and ringer volume control
Stand for desk
International portability
Amplifier handset
Avaya Callmaster V (607A) digital telephone
The Avaya Callmaster V has been specially designed to support applications involving the ACD feature.
The ergonomic design of the Avaya Callmaster V enables agents to handle large volumes of calls more
quickly and efficiently. VuStats display of agent and call center statistics on the Avaya Callmaster V
provides agents with real-time information.
The Avaya Callmaster V has the same look and feel of the 6400-series telephones. There are two
significant additional features that maximize the value of this telephone in a Call Center environment:
2 built-in headset jacks
Built-in Recorder Interface Module (RIM) with Warning Tone. The RIM will support
recording of both the agent’s and callers voice on a voice activated analog tape recorder. A soft
beep warning tone is repeated every 13.5 seconds to notify the agent and calling party that the call
is being recorded. The warning tone may be de-activated by the user.
The Avaya Callmaster V meets FCC and CISPR Class B requirements allowing the telephone to be used
in home office environments with a DEFINITY Extender.
The following are characteristics of the Callmaster V telephone:
16 dual-LED call appearance or feature buttons
An adjustable 48-character liquid crystal display
10 fixed feature buttons such as: the speaker button, the mute button, the conference button, the
transfer button, the hold button, the redial button, the menu button, the exit button, the previous
button, and the next button
12 assignable soft key features associated with the display
One-way listen-only speaker for group listening, dialing while the handset in place, or hands free
listening
Adjustable volume control for the handset, speaker, and ringer
Works in a 2-wire environment
Avaya Callmaster VI (606A) digital telephone
The Callmaster VI is a small digital voice telephone used with the application software running on a PC.
Powered from the PBX, the Callmaster VI connects to the PC by way of a standard EIA or TIA-574 serial
port interface.
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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The following are the characteristics of the Avaya Callmaster VI:
Two headset input jacks, both usable at the same time
Optional headset with custom cable
Message waiting indicator
Five pre-set buttons:
Headset on and off
Mute
Two call appearances
Release
Three administrable feature buttons
Voice announcement recording feature:
Up to six announcements that are 9.6 seconds in length
Announcements can be played automatically for incoming calls
FCC and CISPR Class B
Avaya attendant consoles
Avaya 302D attendant console
The Avaya 302D Attendant Console is a 2-wire unit with an optional 26C expansion module. The Avaya
302D cannot be used in a 4-wire environment.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 302D attendant console:
Comes in three colors: dark gray, black and white
Power is required from the desktop or the telephone closet
All 302D Attendant Consoles are desk mounted only.
Supports optional 26C Selector Console:
Has 20 Hundreds group buttons and 100 Tens group buttons. Each Hundreds group button
is assigned the first digit or first two digits of each group of 100 extension (room)
numbers.The Tens group buttons are automatically assigned a tens and ones digit. The
buttons can be used for 3- or 4-digit extensions.
For an example of 4-digit extensions, if you have rooms numbered from 7000 to 7099,
you can have a Hundreds button labeled “70” and a tens group button labeled "01."
Pressing "70", then "01", dials extension 7001 with only two button presses.
Has busy or idle status display for each button
The display is 1 × 40 and supports Katakana, Roman and Euro font Character set. Label
Languages are Japanese, English, French, Dutch, Spanish Latin America, Italian, German,
Canadian French, Brazilian Portuguese. Two labels are included with each 302D console.
Handset/Headset connection is moved to the front and is a single modular plug. For headset an
H1C or M12L is Optional.
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Service observing must be done through the Communication Manager via the feature of Service
Observing. An optional Training-Y connector can be used in conjunction with headset connection
for desktop listen only supervisor support.
Avaya Softconsole
Avaya Softconsole is a software attendant console solution. Avaya Softconsole is available for industry
standard IP and Avaya Digital Communications Protocol (DCP). IP connectivity is available in both
Voice over IP configuration (road warrior) and dual connection (telecommuter) for toll quality audio.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya Softconsole:
Busy Lamp Fields (BLF), directory and display windows may all be on the same screen and the
same time.
Flexible screen arrangement for the attendant that is saved from session to session.
Application window scales intelligently from a minimum useful size to full screen. Useful
information is added to the display as the attendant increases the window size.
On request line status such as on and off-hook displayed for the selected entry in the directory
window.
Queue status display
Feature buttons offered as tools in multiple tool bars with pop-up, full word, tool tip displays for
each.
32-bit Application
Maximum of 100 directories
Ability to generate e-mail to users at the click of a tool bar button or keyboard command
Step-by-step wizard for both installation and initial administration with help and warning text
presented with each step.
Targeted to reduce service call volumes for installation assistance.
MasterDirectory Data Manager
MasterDirectory Data Manager is included as part of Avaya Softconsole. It is a database application that
is specifically designed for directory data management. It serves as an information management
tool–importing and consolidating directory information from voice and data systems, and exporting it to
directory-enabled applications. MasterDirectory can import/export and transfer data via standards-based
protocols, including the following:
ODBC – Open Data Base Connectivity
LDAP – Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
FTP – File Transfer Protocol
SMTP – Simple Mail Transfer Protocol
CSV – text delimited files
Using these protocols MasterDirectory can:
Extract data from multiple sources
Apply filters and business logic to consolidate data
Populate directory services and databases for use by applications
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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For example, MasterDirectory can collect information from multiple Avaya Media Servers, consolidate
the data with Human Resource databases, and send the processed data to an LDAP directory service used
by phone attendant applications, Internet white and yellow pages, and other applications.
Avaya analog telephones
Avaya 2500 and 2554 analog terminals
The Avaya 2500 and the Avaya 2554-series telephones are made up of several analog telephones that are
basically the same but are equipped with small different attributes. These models include:
2500 MMGN desk model telephone
2500 MMGL desk model telephone
2500 YMGL desk model telephone
2500 YMGP desk model telephone
2500 MMGM desk model telephone
2554 MMGN wall model telephone
2554 MMGM wall model telephone
2554 YMGP wall model telephone
2554 YMGM wall model telephone
All Avaya 2500 and 2554 telephones are single appearance analog telephones with conventional touch-
tone dialing. The 2500 MMGL, 2500 MMGM and 2554 MMGM telephones have NO feature buttons.
The 2500 YMGL, 2500 YMGM, 2554 YMGP, and 2554 YMGM telephones are equipped with a flash
button, a message waiting light, a redail button, a hold button and a mute button. All six of these
telephone models provide access to features through the use of the * or # dial pad keys and the
appropriate feature access codes.
The following are physical features of the Avaya 2500 and Avaya 2554 telephones:
The 2500 MMGN and 2554 MMGN telephones are manufactured without Positive Disconnect
and without a FLASH button. The 2500 YMGP and 2554 YMGP have Positive Disconnect
permanently enabled. When the FLASH button is depressed, access is provided to switch
features. When the switchhook is depressed, the call is automatically disconnected and a dial tone
is provided for a completely new call. Older models have a Positive Disconnect switch on the
bottom of the telephone with two positions: ON and OFF:
The ON position hangs up the telephone for approximately two seconds, even if the
switchhook depression is less.This prevents inadvertent switchhook flashes.To initiate
switchhook flash in this mode, press the FLASH button.
In the OFF position, the switchhook will function normally
K-type handset
All of the 2500-series telephones are equipped with a 12-button touch-tone dial pad.
All of the 2500-series telephones contain two jacks. The handset cord jack is on the left side of the
telephone. The line cord jack is on the right rear of the set.
All of the 2554-series telephones have one jack and one mounting cord. The handset cord jack is
on the bottom of the telephone. The line cord is on the rear of the telephone to plug into the wall
outlet.
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Two cords are supplied with all four of these 2500-series model telephones: a coiled 6-foot
modular handset cord and a 7-foot modular line cord. Optional longer cords are available: a 12-
foot handset cord, and 14-foot and 25-foot line cords. Two cords are supplied with 2554-series
model telephones: a coiled 6-foot modular handset cord and a permanently attached 4-inch
modular mounting cord. An optional longer 12-foot handset cord is available.
All of the 2500-series telephones have an electronic tone ringer. There is a 3-position ringer
volume control located on the bottom of the 2500 telephone and the side of the 2554 telephone.
The 2500 MMGL, 2500 MMGM, 2500 YMGP, and 2500 YMGM telephones can only be desk-
mounted. They cannot be wall-mounted. The 2554 MMGL, 2554 MMGM and 2554 YMGP
telephones are wall-mounted telephones. They cannot be desk-mounted.
All of the 2500-series telephones are available in black or misty cream.
All of the Avaya 2500- and 2554-series telephones are powered by the tip and ring leads. The
telephones do not require any external power supply.
All of the Avaya 2500- and 2554-series telephones can be used as an emergency station during
power failure transfer conditions. The 2554 sets can ONLY be used as a Power Failure set in a
Loop Start environment; the 2500 sets can be used as a Power Failure set in either a Loop Start or
a Ground Start environment. Use in a Ground Start environment required the optional Modular
Ground Start button.
These 2500 and 2554 telephones are FCC-registered.
Avaya 6211 Analog Telephone
The Avaya 6211 telephone is a single line analog telephone.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 6211 telephone:
7-foot modular line cord
Handset volume control
Ringer volume control
Message waiting light
Flash button
Set hold button with LED Indicator
Last number re-dial button
A 12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the number five for the visually impaired
Positive disconnect via switchhook
Can be desk or wall mounted
RJ-11 data jack
FCC approved for emergency power failure transfers
Line powered
Available in gray or white
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Optional available components:
A 12-foot handset cord
A 14-foot line cord
A 25-foot line cords
Avaya headsets
Avaya 6219 analog telephone
The Avaya 6219 telephone is a single line analog telephone.
The following are characteristics of the Avaya 6219 telephone:
A 7-foot modular line cord
Handset volume control
Ringer volume control
Message waiting light
Flash button
Set hold button with LED Indicator
Last number redial button
A 12-button touch-tone dial pad with raised bar on the number five for the visually impaired
Positive disconnect via switchhook
Desk and wall mounting available
RJ-11 Data jack
FCC approved for emergency power failure transfers
Line powered
Available in gray or white
Ten repertory dialing buttons
Personalized ringing
Optional available components:
2-foot handset cord
14- and 25-foot modular line cords
Avaya headsets
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Avaya 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephone
Explosive Atmosphere telephones are listed by Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. (UL) for the following
explosive atmosphere classifications and conditions:
Class I explosive gas or vapors, group B, C, and D
Class II combustible dusts, group E, F, and G
They are not to be installed in locations where acetylene gas may become present in the atmosphere.
The following are characteristics of the 2520B Explosive Atmosphere telephones:
Comes with a 4-foot handset cord
9-foot cord can be ordered as an option
Standard 12-button touch-tone dialpad with a raised bar on button labeled five for the visually
impaired
No handset volume control, in compliance with the FCC Waiver
Designed for wall mounting
Available in black only
Avaya wireless telephones
Avaya TransTalk 9040
The Avaya TransTalk 9040 is a small wireless telephone with a full feature set, and alphanumeric display
give users complete control of their wireless communications.
The following are characteristics of the TransTalk 9040:
A 1 × 16 alphanumeric display shows internal calling party information and the external called
number.
The backlit display includes three rows for line or intercom terminations and one-button
feature access.
Icons such as out-of-range, low battery, and message waiting are visible on the display.
Weighs just eight ounces
Dimensions are 6" × 2" × 1"
A maximum of 12 virtual button appearances for lines, intercoms, and features.
Redial button: fixed redial for busy numbers.
Replaceable Antenna: customers can replace their own antennas in case of breakage.
Headset Option: works with the Supra (over-the-head) or Radium (over-the-ear) mobility
headsets. Can be used with the wireless headset for the MDW 9000 and MDW 9010 with an
adaptor. New 2.5-mm jack makes connecting a headset to the 9040 easier than ever. Backlit
display: for easier use in poorly lit areas such as warehouses and manufacturing plants.
Telephones and speakerphones
Avaya telephones
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Vibrator Alert: for times when a ringing telephone would be intrusive (standard on all Pocket
Phones).
Field registration: If a handset becomes needs to be replaced, only the handset needs to be
returned (i.e. the corresponding Radio Module does not have to be shipped back with the
handset). When a new handset is received, the user or technician simply registers it with the
appropriate Dual Radio Module (DRM).
The following are the characteristics of the battery charge
Batteries charge fully in 1.5 hours
Batteries are discharged and recharged, which eliminates the memory effect that reduces battery
life (spare is automatically reconditioned; handset battery is reconditioned in the cradle if
manually selected)
Users get 3.5 hours of talk time, and over 22 hours of standby time
Users can continue to screen calls because the upright position keeps the display clearly visible
An optional extended-use battery, will provide up to eight hours of talk time and 72 hours of
standby time.
Power for Avaya IP telephones
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Power for Avaya IP telephones
Power for Avaya 4602 and Avaya 4620 IP
telephones
An Avaya 4602 or an Avaya 4620 IP telephone is powered through the RJ45 jack that resides on the
telephone. There are two methods of powering the telephone through the RJ45 jack:
Centralized power provided by an Avaya P333T-PWR switch or an 1152A1 mid-span power-
distribution unit. If the Avaya P333T-PWR switch is used the Gen-1 IP phone adapter is required.
Local power using the 1151B1 or 1151B2 power supply
Power for Avaya 4606, 4612, and 4624 IP
telephones
There are two generations of Avaya 4606, 4612, and 4624 IP telephones. Power for the three models
depends on the generation of the telephone. First generation (Gen-1) IP telephones support power over
pins 7 & 8 or by the barrel connector beneath the phone. The second generation (Gen-2) IP telephones
adhere to the current IEEE Draft 802.3af specifications and will accept power on either the data pairs or
the spare pairs. The Gen-2 telephones add power over Ethernet to the Gen-1 power capabilities.
There are two ways to identify the generation of an Avaya IP telephone:
Label identification – The product label beneath an IP telephone contains a 12-character (US
only), or 16-character (international) model number or apparatus code. The model number
indicates the generation by either a 01A (Gen-1) or 02A (Gen-2) identifier attached to the number
of the phone.
Display identification – The model for an IP telephone can be retrieved via the display after the
telephone has been powered up.
There are three methods to power an Avaya 4606, 4612, or 4624 IP telephone:
Centralized power (power over Ethernet) provided by the Avaya P333T-PWR switch for new
installations. The 1152A1 mid-span power-distribution unit is used for Avaya configurations that
use the DEFINITY R, SI, or CSI Media Servers.
The Gen-1 IP Phone adapter is required for every Gen-1 IP telephone in a centralized
power environment.
Local power refers to a configuration where power is supplied at an immediate location to an IP
telephone. Local power requires a 120- to 240-VAC outlet located within six feet of the IP
telephone.
Legacy power is the least preferred method for powering an IP telephone.
Within the US and Canada, legacy power is provided via the AUX power supply of the IP
telephone and a barrel connector. The barrel connects to a jack on the bottom of the IP
telephone. The 1151A1 or 1151A2 power supplies with split cords are an alternative
method of power.
Internationally, legacy power is provided by the 1151A1 or 1151A2 power supply with the
required split cords. A 30A switch can also be used with the 1151A1 or 1151A2 local
power supply. In this configuration two special cords are required.
Power for Avaya IP telephones
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A 1145B bulk power supply can also provide power over pins 7 and 8 utilizing a special
cord.
Power for Avaya 4630 IP telephones
An Avaya 4630 IP telephone must be powered locally using the barrel connector beneath the telephone.
The power supply for an Avaya 4630 is provided with the telephone.
SoundPoint and SoundStation speakerphones
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SoundPoint and SoundStation speakerphones
3127 SoundPoint Speakerphone
The SoundPoint speakerphone adjunct connects to a telephone and provides high quality
audioconferencing for desktop environments. The Analog version plugs into any standard analog phone
jack. The DCP version plugs into the adjunct port of the 7400-, 7500-, 8400-, and 8500-series terminals.
The full-duplex operation eliminates the clipping of speech and the de-reverberation technology helps to
reduce the hollow, “bottom of the well” sound associated with common speakerphones.
SoundPoint automatically adapts itself to both the room and line conditions in order to ensure the best
full-duplex operation. This is especially critical when you have multi-party international conference calls
operating over a bridge. Additionally, this adaptation is an automatic and continuous process to
accommodate for changing room conditions.
Highlights
180° of microphone coverage – ideal for desktop applications
Tabletop, user installable solution for ease of setup and use
Neodymium speaker tuned to reproduce the human voice
Avaya DM1000 Directional Microphone for best voice clarity
Auto Answer capable for hands free applications
Microphone muting for privacy
Dual color LED for on and mute display lights
Models
3127-ATR: AVAYA SOUNDPOINT ANALOG
The analog version of SoundPoint plugs into any analog port or terminal and comes will all appropriate
cabling. In Addition, the analog version of SoundPoint can automatically answer (Auto-Answer) calls
placed to its extension.
3127-DCP: AVAYA SOUNDPOINT DCP
Connects to the adjunct port of the 7400-, 7500-, 8400-, and 8500-series terminals for added
convenience. Comes with all appropriate cabling.
3127 SoundStation speakerphone
The SoundStation speakerphone has three microphones providing 360 degree of coverage for offices and
small conference rooms. The amplified speaker provides enough audio for groups of up to 10 people.
The analog version plugs into any standard analog phone jack. The DCP version plugs into the adjunct
port of the 7102, 8102, and 7400- and 8400-series terminals.
SoundPoint and SoundStation speakerphones
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The full-duplex operation eliminates the clipping of speech and the Acoustic Clarity Technology helps to
eliminate background noise. SoundStation automatically adapts itself to both the room and line
conditions in order to ensure the best full-duplex operation. This is especially critical when you have
multi-party international conference calls operating over a bridge. Additionally, this adaptation is an
automatic and continuous process to accommodate for changing room conditions.
Highlights
360° of microphone coverage – ideal for desktop applications
Digitally tuned speaker with Acoustic Clarity Technology™
Full Duplex Operation – talk and listen at the same time
Tabletop, user installable solution for ease of setup and use
Extension microphones available for up to 20 people
Integrated dial pad
Microphone muting for privacy
Dual color LED for on and mute display
Wireless, lapel microphone available for stand-up presenters
Models
3127-STD: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION ANALOG
The analog version of SoundStation plugs into any analog port or terminal and comes will all appropriate
cabling. Requiring just an analog line and a power outlet, this system is easy to install and use. Good for
groups of up to 10 people.
3127-EXP: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION EX ANALOG
This analog version of SoundStation includes two extension microphones, which can be used to enhance
the room coverage to support up to 15 people. Plugs directly into an analog port.
3127-DCS: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION DCP
The DCP version connects to the adjunct port of the 7102, 8102, and 7400- and 8400-series terminals.
This SoundStation does not work with a 6400-series terminal. Comes with all appropriate cabling and
is user installable. Good for groups of up to 10 people.
3127-DCE: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION EX DCP w/Mics
This DCP version of SoundStation includes two extension microphones, which can be used to enhance
the room coverage to support up to 15 people. The DCP version connects to the adjunct port of the 7102,
8102, and 7400- and 8400-series terminals. This SoundStation does not work with a 6400-series
terminal. Comes with all appropriate cabling and is user installable.
SoundPoint and SoundStation speakerphones
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3127 SoundStation Premier audioconferencing
speakerphone
The SoundStation Premier speakerphone has three microphones providing 360° of coverage for offices
and small conference rooms. The amplified speaker provides enough audio for groups of up to 25
people.
The analog version plugs into any standard analog phone jack, the DCP version plugs into the adjunct
port of the 7102, 8102, and 7400- and 8400-series terminals and the 6400-SSDP version plugs directly
into a DCP jack.
The full-duplex operation eliminates the clipping of speech and the Acoustic Clarity Technology helps to
eliminate background noise. In addition, SoundStation Premier focuses a microphone on the main
speaker, effectively eliminating the hollow sound common with standard speakerphones. Also included
is a full feature remote control and Display.
SoundStation Premier automatically adapts itself to both the room and line conditions in order to ensure
the best full-duplex operation. This is especially critical when you have multi-party international
conference calls operating over a bridge. This adaptation is an automatic and continuous process to
accommodate for changing room conditions.
Highlights
360° of microphone coverage – ideal for desktop applications
Digitally tuned speaker accurately reproduces the human voice
Full Duplex Operation – talk and listen at the same time
De-reverberation – reduces the hollow, bottom of the well sound
Tabletop, user installable solution for ease of setup and use
Extension microphones available to support up to 25 people
Integrated dial-pad and full-featured remote control
Microphone muting for privacy
Dual color LED for on and mute display
Wireless, lapel microphone optional for stand-up presenters
Models
3127-APE: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION PREMIER EX ANALOG
The analog version of SoundStation Premier plugs into any analog port or terminal and comes will all
appropriate cabling. Expansion ports are available for adding on the optional extension microphones.
Requiring just an analog line and a power outlet, this system is easy to install and use. Good for groups
of up to 15 people.
3127-APX: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION PREMIER EX/MICS ANALOG
This analog version of SoundStation Premier EX/Mics includes two extension microphones, which can
be used to enhance the room coverage to support up to 25 people. Plugs directly into an analog port.
SoundPoint and SoundStation speakerphones
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3127-DPE: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION PREMIER DCP EX
A DCP version of SoundStation Premier EX connects to the adjunct port of the 7102, 8102, and 7400-
and 8400-series terminals. (Does not work with a 6400-series terminal.) Expansion ports are available
for adding on the optional extension microphones. Comes with all appropriate cabling and is user
installable. Good for groups of up to 15 people.
3127-DPX: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION PREMIER DCP EX w/Mics
This DCP version of SoundStation Premier EX includes two extension microphones, which can be used
to enhance the room coverage to support up to 25 people. The DCP version connects to the adjunct port
of the 7102, 8102, and 7400- and 8400-series terminals. (Does not work with a 6400-series terminal.)
Comes with all appropriate cabling and is user installable. Good for groups of up to 25 people.
3127-DDP: AVAYA 6400-SSDP – SOUNDSTATION DCP PREMIER EX
A DCP version of SoundStation Premier EX that connects directly into a DCP jack. It can work with or
without a terminal. It can work with any 6400-, 7400-, or 8400-series terminal. Expansion ports are
available for adding on the optional extension microphones. Comes with all appropriate cabling and is
user installable. Good for groups of up to 15 people.
3127-DDX: AVAYA 6400-SSDP – SOUNDSTATION DCP PREMIER w/Mics
This 6400-SSDP includes two extension microphones, which can be used to enhance the room coverage
to support up to 25 people. The 6400-SSDP connects directly into a DCP jack. It can work or without a
terminal. It can work with any 6400-, 7400- or 8400-series terminal. Comes with all appropriate cabling
and is user installable.
3127-MIC: AVAYA SOUNDSTATION WIRELESS LAPEL MIC
This clip-on microphone is designed for stand-up presenters. Consisting of a small transmit/receive pack
that clips onto your belt and collar, this microphone has a 100’ range and comes in two individual
frequencies.
3127-PMI: EXTENSION MICROPHONES FOR SOUNDSTATION PREMIER
Two extension microphones to enhance and expand room coverage. Compatible with 3127-APE, 3127-
DPE and 3127-DDP
Avaya UPS Units
Avaya Series 1 (AS1) UPS
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Avaya UPS Units
Avaya Series 1 (AS1) UPS
AS1 1000 VA 120 V Online Uninterruptible
Power Supply (UPS)
The 1000 VA 120 V Online UPS provides 1000 VA/490 Watts/8.3 Amps at 120 Volts AC and battery
holdover of five minutes at full load. Two optional Extended Battery Modules (EBM24) extend the run
time to 104 minutes at full load. The UPS groups the six available 5-15R receptacles into two groups of
three to make it possible for users to shutdown one set of loads to allow longer run times for more critical
loads during a power failure. Power management is included. The UPS chassis can be installed in a tower
or mounted in a data rack. Serial interface capabilities and DEFINITY alarm contacts are standard.
1000 VA 120 V models include the following
accessories:
Extended Battery Module (EBM24)
Bypass Distribution Module 1000-1500VA 120V
SNMP Module
Safety Compliance: UL, CSA, NOM
EMC Compliance: FCC Class B, VCCI Class II.
Input: 120 Vac, 45-65 Hz, auto sensing; user-selectable 100 or 127 VAC; 6-foot attached cord with 5-15
P
Output: Six 5-15 R receptacles in two load segments; sine wave; voltage +/- 3% of nominal.
Battery: Two 12 V 9 A/H sealed, lead-acid; maintenance free
Dimensions: (H x W x D) 89 mm x 432 mm x 494 mm = 3.5” x 17” x 19.4”
Weight: 15 kg = 34 pounds
AS1 1000VA 230V Online UPS
The 1000 VA 230 V Online UPS provides up to 700 Watts and basic battery holdover of five minutes at
full load. Output current for 208/220/230/240 volts is 4.8/4.5/4.3/4.2 Amps. Two optional Extended
Battery Modules (EBM24) extend the run time to 104 minutes at full load. By grouping the six available
5-15 R receptacles into two groups of three, the UPS allows users to shutdown one set of loads to allow
longer run times for more critical loads during a power failure. Power management is included. The UPS
can be installed as a tower or mounted in a data rack. Serial interface capabilities and DEFINITY alarm
contacts are standard.
Avaya UPS Units
Avaya Series 1 (AS1) UPS
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1000VA 230 V models include the following
accessories:
Extended Battery Module (EBM24)
Bypass Distribution Module 700-2000 VA 230 V
SNMP Module
Safety Compliance: UL, CSA, NOM, CE
EMC Compliance: FCC Class B, EN 50091-2, VCCI Class II, IECS-003
Input: 230Vac, 50/60 Hz, auto sensing, user-selectable 220, 240; 2-meter cord with unterminated plug-
end.
Output: Six 5-15 R receptacles in two load segments; sine wave; voltage +/- 3% of nominal.
Battery: Two 12V 9 A/H sealed, lead-acid; maintenance free
Dimensions: (H x W x D) 89 mm x 432 mm x 494 mm = 3.5” x 17” x 19.4”
Weight: 15 kg = 34 pounds
AS1 1500VA 120V Online UPS
The AS1 1500 VA 120 V Online UPS provides 1500 VA/1050 Watts/12.5 Amps at 120 Volts AC and
battery holdover of eight minutes at full load. Four optional Extended Battery Modules-EBM48 extend
the run time to 144 minutes at full load. By grouping the six available 5-15 R receptacles into two groups
of three, the UPS allows users to shutdown one set of loads to allow longer run times for more critical
loads during a power failure. Power management software is included. The UPS can be installed as a
tower or mounted in a data rack. Serial interface capabilities and DEFINITY alarm contacts are standard.
The AS1 1500 VA model includes the
following accessories:
Extended Battery Module (EBM48)
Bypass Distribution Module AS1 1000-1500 VA 120 V
SNMP Module
Safety Compliance: UL, CSA, NOM
EMC Compliance: FCC Class B, VCCI Class II.
Input: 120 Vac, 45-65Hz, auto sensing; user-selectable 110, 127 VAC; 6-foot attached cord with 5-15P.
Output: Six 5-15 R receptacles in two load segments; sine wave; voltage +/- 3% of nominal.
Battery: Four 12V 9 A/H sealed, lead-acid; maintenance free
Dimensions: (H x W x D) 89 mm x 432 mm x 494 mm = 3.5” x 17” x 19.4”
Weight: 23 kg = 50 pounds
AS1 1500VA 230V Online UPS
The AS1 1500 VA 230 V Online UPS provides up to 1050 Watts and basic battery holdover of eight
minutes at full load. Output current for 208/220/230/240 volts is 7.2/6.8/6.5/6.2 Amps. Four optional
Extended Battery Modules (EBM48) extend the run time to 144 minutes at full load. By grouping the six
available 5-15 R receptacles into two groups of three, the UPS allows users to shutdown one set of loads
to allow longer run times for more critical loads during a power failure. Power management is
included.The UPS can be installed as a tower or mounted in a data rack. Serial interface capabilities and
DEFINITY alarm contacts are standard.
Avaya UPS Units
Avaya Series 1 (AS1) UPS
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1500 VA 230 V models include the following
accessories:
Extended Battery Module (EBM48)
Bypass Distribution Module 1000-2000VA 230V
SNMP Module
Safety Compliance: UL, CSA, NOM, CE
EMC Compliance: FCC Class B, EN 50091-2, VCCI Class II, IECS-003
Input: 230 Vac, 50/60 Hz, auto sensing, user-selectable 220, 240; 2-meter cord with unterminated plug-
end.
Output: Six 5-15 R receptacles in two load segments; sine wave; voltage +/- 3% of nominal.
Battery: Four 12V 9 A/H sealed, lead-acid; maintenance free
Dimensions: (H x W x D) 89 mm x 432 mm x 494 mm = 3.5” x 17” x 19.4”
Weight: 23 kg = 50 pounds
UPS Add-on Modules
Extended Battery Module-EBM24 1000 VA
The Extended Battery Module-EBM24 supports the 1000 VA Online UPS with a 24v battery string to
extend the run time (see table for run times). The EBM chassis is suitable for tower and rack-mounted
installations in a compact 2U height. No other battery module or cabinet is compatible with the 1000 VA
Online UPS.
Maximum: Up to two Extended Battery Module (EBM24) per 1000VA Online UPS.
Safety Compliance: UL, CSA, NOM.
EMC Compliance: FCC Class B, VCCI Class II.
Dimensions: (H x W x D) 89 mm x 432 mm x 494 mm = 3.5” x 17” x 19.4”
Weight: 29.5 kg = 65 pounds
UPS Extended Battery Module-EBM48 1500-
2000 VA
The UPS Extended Battery Module-EBM48 supports the 1500 VA and 2000 VA online UPS with a 48v
battery string to extend the run time up to 144 minutes at full load. The EBM chassis is suitable for tower
and rack-mounted installations in a compact 2U height.
Maximum: Up to four Extended Battery Module-EBM48 per 1500 or 2000 VA Online UPS.
Safety Compliance: UL, CSA, NOM.
EMC Compliance: FCC Part 15 (Class B) and VCCI Class II.
Dimensions: (H x W x D) 89 mm x 432 mm x 494 mm = 3.5” x 17” x 19.4”
Weight: 29kg = 65 pounds
SNMP MODULE 1000-2000 VA
The SNMP module is included in the 1000 VA package, adding direct control and monitoring capabilities
in SNMP-based networks. The module is hot-swappable with the standard serial interface module.
Avaya UPS Units
Avaya Series 1 (AS1) UPS
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Dimensions: (H x W X D) 4.5” x 4” x 1
Weight: 0.2 pounds
BYPASS DISTRIBUTION MODULE 120V 1000-
1500 VA
The bypass distribution module (BDM) allows for replacement of the UPS or internal batteries without
shutting down the connected load.
Dimensions: (H x W X D) 12” x 5” x 4”
Weight: 5.0 pounds
PWR UPS BYPASS DISTR MOD S1 1000VA-2K
VA
The bypass distribution module (BDM) allows for replacement of the UPS or internal batteries without
shutting down the connected load.
Dimensions: (H x W X D) 12” x 5” x 4”
Weight: 5.0 pounds
Avaya Ethernet Switches
Avaya P330 Ethernet Switches
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Avaya Ethernet Switches
Avaya P330 Ethernet Switches
The Avaya P330 family of stackable Ethernet workgroup switches include:
A range of modules with 10/100/1000 Mbps ports
A Layer 3 capability
ATM Expansion sub-module.
The Avaya g2T switch has 24x10/100 Mbps ports and an Expansion sub-module slot. The optional
expansion sub-modules provide additional Ethernet, Fast Ethernet, and Gigabit Ethernet connectivity.
An Avaya P330 stack can contain up to 10 switches and up to three backup power supply units. The
stacked switches connect using the Avaya X330STK stacking sub-modules that plug into a slot in the
back of the Avaya P330. If the stack is split between two racks you can connect the P330 by using the
X330SC or X330LC cables. The Avaya X330RC cable connects the top and bottom switches in the stack
and provides redundancy and hot-swappability in the same way that modules can be swapped in a
modular switching chassis.
When two or more layer 2 switches are connected together, VLAN numbering consistency is maintained
by creating a trunk port that is logiclly connected to multiple VLANs. The numbering is kept consistent
through the use of 802.1Q tags. The Avaya P330 is fully compliant with IEEE standards for VLAN
Tagging, Gigabit Ethernet, Spanning Tree and Flow Control. This full standards-compliance, combined
with auto-negotiation for 10/100/1000 Mbps and half/full duplex facilitates the expansion of your
network to match your company’s growing needs.
Features of the Avaya P330 Product Line
You can connect up to 10 Avaya P330 switches in a stack. Moreover, this stack can be either in
one rack or split over several racks using the X330LC Long Cable.
Avaya X330STK is stacking sub-module that is used to connect Avaya P330 switches in a stack
by way of the Octaplane.
Avaya P330 BUPS is the back-up power supply module. The Avaya P330 BUPS can support up
to four Avaya P330 switches.
One RJ45/RS232 front panel console connector for both terminal and modem sessions.
Each switch is equiped with two fan units with operation sensors.
One virtual IP address for managing the whole stack that allows the P330 stack to be managed as
a single entity.
The ability to hot-swap one switch at a time by activation of the redundant cable:
Does not disrupt the operation of other Avaya P330 switches.
Does not change stack configuration.
Does not require network downtime.
Avaya Ethernet Switches
Avaya P330 Ethernet Switches
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Connection through Telnet from the front panel ports of any switch:
multiple levels of password protection
login and inactivity timeouts
Auto-Negotiation
Every 10/100 port on the Avaya P330 supports Auto-Negotiation. Auto-Negotiation automatically
detects and supports the operating mode and speed of a connected device. Auto-negotiation is also
supported on the Gigabit Ethernet ports for flow control mode only. You can simply connect the Avaya
P330 to Ethernet or Fast Ethernet equipment at full or half duplex without pre-configuration.
Congestion Control
Congestion control is a key element of maintaining network efficiency. Congestion control is used to
prevent resource overload. The Avaya P330 supports congestion control on all Ethernet ports by using the
following:
Back Pressure in half duplex mode
IEEE 802.3x Flow Control in full duplex mode
VLANs
The Avaya P330 VLANs are fully IEEE 802.1Q compliant and can handle up to 1k tagged VLANs.
Multiple VLANs per Port
The Avaya P330 provides the ability to set multiple (1K) VLANs per port. The three available Port Multi-
VLAN binding modes are:
Bound to All - the port is programmed to support the entire 3K VLANs range. Traffic from any
VLAN is forwarded through a port defined as Bound to All.
Bound to Configured - the port supports all the VLANs configured in the switch/stack. These may
be either Port VLAN IDs (PVID) or VLANs that were manually added to the switch.
Statically Bound - the port supports VLANs manually configured on it.
Leaky VLAN
Leaky VLAN provides the ability to send unicast traffic between two ports on different VLANs. Leaky
VLAN will function only on modules (and sub-modules) with C/S 2.0 and higher.
Port Classification
With the Avaya P330, you can classify any port as regular or valuable. Setting a port to valuable means
that a link fault trap can be sent even when the port is disabled. This feature is particularly useful for the
software redundancy application, where you need to be informed about a link failure on the dormant port.
Avaya Ethernet Switches
Avaya P330 Ethernet Switches
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Network TIME Acquiring Protocols
The Avaya P330 supports the SNTP Protocol over UDP port 123. You can choose between SNTP or
TIME protocol over UDP port 37.
MAC Security
To prevent the P330 from learning an new MAC address you can define a port as secure. If an unknown
MAC or station tries to access the secure port an intruder alarm is sent to the management station.
Link Aggregation Group (LAG)
LAG provides increased bandwidth and redundancy for critical high-bandwidth applications such as
inter-stack links and connections to servers. You can aggregate the bandwidth of up to eight 10/100Base-
Tx ports, two 100Base-FX or 1000Base-X ports. Load sharing ensures that if one of the port connections
fails, the other connections will assume the load seamlessly. Load balancing guarantees that the traffic
load at any level will be evenly divided among all the LAG links.
IP Multicast Filtering
IP Multicast allows you to send a single copy of an IP packet to multiple destinations, and can be used for
various applications including video streaming and video conferencing. On LANs, IP Multicast packets
are transmitted in MAC Multicast frames. Traditional LAN switches flood these Multicast packets to all
stations in the VLAN. Multicast filtering functions may be added to the Layer 2 switches to avoid
sending Multicast packets where they are not required. Layer 2 switches capable of Multicast filtering
send the Multicast packets only to ports that connect members of that Multicast group. In order for this
feature to operate correctly, you need in your network a router issuing IGMP queries.
NOTE:
IP Multicast filtering will function only based on the port’s VLAN ID and not based on
any VLAN bound to the port.
Radius Security
The Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) is an IETF standard (RFC 2138)
client/server security protocol. Security and login information is stored in a central location known as the
RADIUS server. RADIUS clients such as the Avaya P330, communicate with the RADIUS server to
authenticate users.
All transactions between the RADIUS client and server are authenticated through the use of a "shared
secret" which is not sent over the network. The shared secret is an authentication password configured on
both the RADIUS client and its RADIUS servers. The shared secret is stored as clear text in the client’s
file on the RADIUS server, and in the non-volatile memory of the Avaya P330. In addition, user
passwords are sent between the client and server are encrypted for increased security.
Port Redundancy
Redundancy can be implemented between any two ports in the same stack at the link level. You can also
assign redundancy between any two LAGs in the stack or between a LAG and a port. One port or LAG is
Avaya Ethernet Switches
Avaya P330 Ethernet Switches
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defined as the primary port, and the other as the secondary port. In case the primary port link fails, the
secondary port takes over.
Intermodule Redundancy
Intermodule redundancy includes all Port Redundancy functionality, and additionally maintains port
integrity even when the primary port link fails as the result of a failure of the module. If the module on
which the active port in an Intermodule Port Redundancy pair is located is powered down or removed
from the stack, the secondary port in the Intermodule Port Redundancy pair takes over. Only one pair per
stack can be set for Intermodule Port Redundancy.
Stack Redundancy
In the unlikely event that an Avaya P330 switch or Octaplane link should fail, stack integrity is
maintained if the redundant cable is connected to the stack. The broken link is bypassed and data
transmission continues uninterrupted. The single management IP address for the stack is also preserved
for uninterrupted management and monitoring.
Hot-Swappable
You can remove or replace any module within the stack without disrupting operation or performing stack-
level reconfiguration. You can therefore adapt the P330 to your requirements on the fly and with a down-
time which is second to none. When you remove an expansion module from the stack, all configuration
definitions on expansion modules are lost.
Backup Power Supply
Each Avaya P330 module comes with a Backup Power Supply (BUPS) connector. If the internal power
supply should fail, the Avaya P330 BUPS (available separately,) will automatically supply power to the
switch for uninterrupted operation.
Fans
The Avaya P330 module fans have integrated sensors which provide advance warnings of fan failure by
way of the management.
Network Management Agent (NMA)
Redundancy
Since each Avaya P330 module has an integral SNMP agent, any module in a stack can serve as the stack
NMA while other NMAs act as redundant agents in hot standby. If the live NMA fails then a backup is
activated instantaneously.
Software Download
Avaya P330 includes a safe software download procedure in which backup code is always present. You
should perform a reset after downloading software to the Module.
Avaya Ethernet Switches
Avaya P330 Ethernet Switches
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P330 Standards Supported by Avaya
The Avaya P330 complies with the following standards.
IEEE
802.3x Flow Control on all ports
802.1Q VLAN Tagging support on all ports and 802.1p compatible
802.1D Bridges and STA
803.2z Gigabit Ethernet ports
803.2u Ethernet/Fast Ethernet ports
IETF
MIB-II - RFC 1213
Bridge MIB for Spanning Tree - RFC 1492
RMON - RFC 1757
SMON - RFC 2613
Bridge MIB Groups - RFC 2674 dot1dbase and dot1dStp fully implemented. Support for relevant
MIB objects: dot1q (dot1qBase, dot1qVlanCurrent)
Avaya P330 Network Management
Comprehensive network management is a key component of today’s networks. Therefore we have
provided multiple ways of managing the Avaya P330 to suit your needs.
Avaya P330 Device Manager (Embedded Web)
The built-in Avaya P330 Device Manager (Embedded Web Manager) allows you to manage an Avaya
P330 stack using a Web browser without purchasing additional software. This application works with the
Microsoft® Internet Explorer and Netscape® Navigator Web browsers and Sun Microsystems Java
Plug-in.
Avaya P330 Command Line Interface (CLI)
The Avaya P330 CLI provides a terminal type configuration tool for local or remote configuration of
Avaya P330 features and functions.
CajunView
When you need extra control and monitoring or wish to manage other Cajun Campus equipment, then the
CajunView network management suite is the answer. This suite provides the ease-of-use and features
necessary for optimal network utilization.
CajunView is available for Windows® NT®/2000 and Solaris 8.
CajunView can operate in Stand-Alone mode with Windows® NT®/2000.
CajunView operates under HP OpenView for Windows® NT®/2000 and Solaris 8.
Avaya Ethernet Switches
Avaya P330 Ethernet Switches
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Avaya P330 Network Monitoring
RMON MIBs - RFC 1757
RMON support for groups 1,2,3 and 9.
Statistics
History
—Alarms
—Events
SMON MIBs - RFC 2613
SMON support for groups
Data Source Capabilities
—Port Copy
VLAN and Priority Statistics
Bridge MIB Groups - RFC 2674
dot1dbase and dot1dStp fully implemented.
Support for relevant MIB objects: dot1q (dot1qBase, dot1qVlanCurrent)
Port Mirroring
The Avaya P330 provides port mirroring for additional network monitoring functionality. You can filter
the traffic and mirror either incoming traffic to the source port or both incoming and outgoing traffic. This
allows you to monitor the network traffic you need. Ports which are members in a Link Aggregation
Group (LAG) can also be used as Port Mirroring Destination or Source ports.
SMON
The Avaya P330 supports Avaya’s ground-breaking SMON Switched Network Monitoring, which the
IETF has now adopted as a standard (RFC2613). SMON provides an unprecedented top-down
monitoring of switched network traffic at the following levels:
Enterprise Monitoring
Device Monitoring
VLAN Monitoring
Port-level Monitoring
This top-down approach gives you rapid troubleshooting and performance trending to keep the network
running optimally.
NOTE:
CajunView is required to run SMON monitoring. You need to purchase one SMON
License per Avaya P330 Stack.
Avaya P133 and P134 Ethernet Switches
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Avaya P133 and P134 Ethernet Switches
The Avaya P133G2 and P134G2 are part of the Avaya Switch Portfolio line of cost effective Workgroup
Ethernet switches. The Avaya P133G2 and P134G2 provide all the features needed at the network to
implement emerging applications and yet are simple to install, operate and manage.
Installing the Avaya P133G2 and P134G2 Ethernet switches at the network edge or a small enterprise
allows customers to easily build a network fully featured to meet their requirements. The switch’s
integrated uplinks enable connectivity to the network Backbone and you can scale up as you grow: stack
up to four P130 switches to create a single logical switch.
For the P133G2 and P134G2 products, application configuring, network operation and network
monitoring are straightforward tasks due to the user-friendly Web management capabilities. The P133G2
and P134G2 products have the same management and monitoring capabilities as other Avaya Cajun
switches and therefore can also be centrally managed by the widely acclaimed CajunView(tm) network
management suite of applications.
Like all Avaya MultiService Network products, the new P133G2 and P134G2 products are DayOne
Ready for Voice, Video and Data Networking; Day One Ready means these products offer application
optimization for converged voice, video and data networks. These products are designed to support a
superior data network environment with capabilities for QoS, Policy Management and redundancy
support that provides superior operational reliability and network availability.
Avaya P133G2
The P133G2 is a workgroup switch with 24 Fast Ethernet and 2 SFP GBIC slots for uplink and cascading.
This unit has a 8.8 Gbps wire speed switching and forwarding rate.
Avaya P134G2
The P134G2 configuration provides 48 Fast Ethernet ports and 2 SFP GBIC slots.
General Features of the P133G2 and P134G2
Switches
802.3 compliant ports for full/half duplex traffic, auto-negotiation, and flow control
802.1Q VLAN tagging
Port based VLAN
QoS Support
Transparent IEEE 802.1p
Per-port basis
Congestion control per port
Link Redundancy
Link Aggregate Group (LAG) Supports both load sharing and redundancy as an incremental way
to scale link bandwidth
Avaya P133 and P134 Ethernet Switches
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LAG Redundancy
IEEE 802.1d Spanning Tree
Load-Sharing Back-up Power Supply (BUPS)
Port mirroring
SMON (RFC2613) IETF SMON standard for Layer 2
Interfaces
24 x 10/100Base-TX ports with RJ connectors
2 x SFP GBIC connectors
RS-232 for terminal setup/modem and PPP
Standards Supported
IEEE 802.3x Flow control on all ports
IEEE 802.1Q/p VLAN Tagging and priority on all ports
IEEE 802.1D Spanning Tree protocol
IEEE 802.3z Gigabit Ethernet ports
IETF MIB-II, Bridge MIB, RMON, SMON
Physical Characteristics
Dimensions 2U (3.5"/88 mm) x 19", (h, w, d): (482.6 mm) x 13.8" (350 mm), Weight 11.4 lb (5.2
kg)
Environmental Conditions
Operating Temp: 23 to 122 o F (-5 to 50 o C)
Humidity: 5% to 95% non-condensing
Power Consumption
Power Entry (AC): 100-240 VAC, 1A, 50/60 Hz
Power Consumption: 75W maximum
Agency Approval
EMC Emission:
US - FCC Part 15, Subpart B, Class A
Europe - EN55022 class A and EN61000-3-2
Japan - VCCI-A
Immunity: Approved according to EN55024 and EN61000-3-3
Avaya P133 and P134 Ethernet Switches
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Safety:
UL for US approved according to UL1950 Std.
C-UL (UL for Canada) approved according to C22.2 No.950 Std.
CE for Europe approved according to EN 60950 Std
CLEI Code According to Telcordia (Bellcore) KS-22022 standard NEBS Level 3 Certified
Site requirements
Rack mounting, temperature and humidity information for the G600 Media Gateway
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Site requirements
Rack mounting, temperature and humidity information
for the G600 Media Gateway
The G600 Media Gateway can be mounted in a standard 19-inch data rack that has been properly pre-
installed and secured as per the EIA 464 (or equivalent) standards. The G600 Media Gateway can be
front mounted (as shipped) or mounted at its midpoint.
The customer must provide the rack and have it installed and secured prior to the G600 Media Gateway
installation. The customer must also provide AC power to the rack. The technicians who install the G600
Media Gateway do not typically have the tools or proper training for data rack installation.
Installation requires 1 foot (30 cm) of clearance in the rear, and 18 inches (45 cm) of clearance in the
front, which is consistent with the EIA 310 standards. In a 2-cabinet configuration, the dimensions of the
TDM/LAN cable require that you mount the B cabinet directly over the A cabinet.
The G600 Media Gateway must be installed in a well-ventilated area. Maximum equipment performance
is achieved at an ambient temperature between 40 and 120° F (4 and 49° C) for a short-term operation of
not more then 72 consecutive hours or 15 days in one year. A continuous operation requires up to 110° F
(43° C).
The relative humidity range is 10 to 95% at up to 84° F (29° C). Above this, maximum relative humidity
decreases from 95% down to 32% at 120° F (49° C). Installations outside these limits may reduce system
life or affect operation. The recommended temperature and humidity range is 65 to 85° F (18 to 29° C) at
20 to 60% relative humidity.
Table 10: Cabinet power source information
Cabinet style and power-
distribution unit Power sources Power input receptacles
G600 Media Gateway – *AC
power supply (650A integrated
power supply)
Single-phase 120-VAC with
neutral
Single-phase 240-VAC with
neutral
120-VAC, 60-Hz NEMA 5-15R
24-VAC, 50-Hz IEC 320
Japan installations use country-
specific receptacles for 100 VAC
and 200 VAC, 50/60 Hz
*There is no integrated DC power supply. DC rectifiers can be used if desired; follow manufacturer’s instructions.
Table 11: Circuit breakers for AC-powered G600 Media Gateway
G600 Media Gateway Circuit Amperes
120 VAC, 60 Hz 15
240 VAC, 50 Hz 10
Heat dissipation for the G600 Media Gateway
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Heat dissipation for the G600 Media Gateway
The amount of heat dissipated required by a G600 Media Gateway configuration is described below.
These estimates are highly dependent on the inclusion of telephones with the Media Gateways as well as
the amount of time that the telephones are off-hook.
NOTE:
Typical systems assume typical trunking, sparing, call rate, and a typical mixture of high-
function and low function telephones. The following table shows estimates of heat
dissipation for the G600 Media Gateway.Worst-case systems assumes typical trunking and
call rate, but no spare slots and all ports configured with high functioning terminals. The
G600 Media Gateway that was tested used the worst case of 16 port analog circuit packs
fully populated with analog sets.
Typical G600 Media Gateway heat-dissipation
specifications
BTU per hour # of G600 Media Gateways
only G600 with terminals
1 400 1000
2900 2200
3 1400 3475
41900 4700
Worst case 3200 5150
G650 specifications
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G650 specifications
Power requirements
AC power
Commercial AC is the primary input power source. Both slot 0 and slot 15 have dedicated AC input. The
655A power supply can operate on AC input of 90 - 264VAC at 47 - 63Hz. The nominal ranges for AC
power are:
100 - 120VAC at 50 or 60Hz
200 - 240VAC at 50 or 60Hz
DC power
Minus 48VDC power can be supplied simultaneously as backup power. One -48VDC power input point
is provided on the G650 backplane and is distributed through the backplane to each power supply.
Power output
Power supply output voltage measurements—+5VDC, -5VDC, and -48VDC
See the following table for power source information.
Table 12: Chassis power source information for the G650
Chassis style and
power-distribution
unit Power source options Power input receptacles
AC or DC
power supply
(Apparatus Code
655A)
A 655A power
supply is
required in slot
0.
A 655A power
supply is
optional in slot
15.
Single phase 120
VAC with neutral
wire
Single phase 240
VAC with neutral
wire
-48VDC
120 VAC, 60 Hz NEMA 5-15R
240 VAC, 50 Hz IEC 320
When installing G650s in Japan, use
country specific receptacles for 100
and 200 VAC, 50/60 Hz.
When installing G650s in Mexico,
use country specific receptacles for
127 VAC.
G650 specifications
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See Table 13, Circuit breakers for AC-powered chassis, on page 304 for circuit breaker information for
AC-powered chassis
Dimensions
The G650 Media Gateway has the following dimensions:
14h x 22d x 19w (inches)
36h x 56d x 48w (centimeters)
height in rack: 8 U
weight: 35 - 39 pounds, 16 - 18 kg
The G650 requires 12 inches (30 centimeter) of clearance in the rear and 18 inches (45 centimeters) of
clearance in the front for adequate ventilation and to conform with EIA3 10D data rack standards. In a
multiple G650 configuration, the G650s are placed in a rack without any space between them. If the
G650s are not correctly placed in the rack, the TDM/LAN cables cannot connect them.
Operating conditions
The normal operating conditions for the G650 are the following:
41o Fahrenheit (5o Celsius) to 104o Fahrenheit (40o Celsius)
10 percent to 90 percent relative humidity, non-condensing below 10,617 feet (3,236 meters.
Table 13: Circuit breakers for AC-powered chassis
Chassis type Circuit breaker size
Rack mount chassis (120 VAC) 60 Hz 15 A
Rack mount chassis (240 VAC) 50 Hz 10 A
Environmental considerations for the G700 Media Gateway
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Environmental considerations for the G700 Media
Gateway
The following table lists the environmental considerations for the G700 Media Gateway.
.
Table 14: Environmental considerations for the G700 Media Gateway
Consideration Description
Heat dissipation The unit uses global AC, 100-240 VAC, 50/60 Hz, 1.5 to 4.9
A, which translates to 360 to 400 Watts. However, some is
passed out the front, via -48VDC (up to 32 ports at 1.5 Watts
each for a total of 48 Watts).
Altitude and air pressure Functions at altitudes of minus 197 feet to 10,000 feet. Air
pressure is not specified.
Temperature and humidity Long term operation at +5 to +40 C at 5 to 85% humidity.
Short term operation at -5 to 50 C, at 5 to 90% humidity, non
condensing.
Air purity Indoor environments that are suitable for continuous human
occupancy.
Lightning The user is protected under the UL codes against over voltage
in the system. However, the system itself is susceptible to
over voltage (i.e. lightning) depending on the configuration.
The loss of service due to an over voltage condition can result
in the loss of one or more of the following:
Terminal loss
Port loss
Media Module loss
Power supply within the G700
Acoustic noise generated by unit 50dBA maximum
Electromagnetic compatibility
standards Conforms to the electromagnetic compatibility standards for
the countries in which it operates.
European union standards Approved to Safety Standard EN60950.
Air flow with a single fan failure In front of the backplane is 264 linear feet per minute average.
If a fan fails in front of the backplane, 174 lfpm average, with
a range from 42 to 340 1fpm.
Air flow with the power supply fan
failure Minimal air flow at power supply if power supply fan fails.
Power requirements for the G700 Media Gateway
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Power requirements for the G700 Media Gateway
The power supply complies with FCC Part 15, Subpart B Class B and EN55022 Class B requirements for
conducted and radiated electromagnetic interferences (EMI). When you use the power supply in a single
or multiple G700 Media Gateway system, the power supply must allow the system to comply with Class
B requirements with +6 dB of margin.
This power unit can be a single power supply or multiple modules that are sized and scalable for the load.
The Avaya Ethernet switches have a power unit that meets the 802.3 AF standard and provides remote
power for the telephone. The power supply meets all applicable global standards for safety, immunity,
and emissions, and is verified by in-country testing.
Thermal Protection
Thermal protection shuts down the power supply if the internal temperature exceeds the maximum rated
safe operating temperature. The minimum thermal shutdown point is determined at an ambient
temperature of 50 degrees C at 10,000 feet elevation or 60 degrees C at sea level under all input and load
conditions. You must consider the effects of component tolerances when defining the shutdown point.
This consideration ensures that the supply does not shut down at ambient temperatures that are less than
those specified above, with forced air flowing from input to output at a nominal rate of 46 CFM (300
LFM).
Manual Reset
The power supply requires reset when it manually when it shuts down because of over voltage or
overheating. To reset the power supply recycle the AC input power.
AC and Load Center Circuit Breakers
For AC power, each of the G700 Media Gateways has a detachable AC power cord that plugs into a wall
socket or into a power strip on the rack. This circuit must be protected by a circuit breaker for the panel
that serves the outlet.
As a result, the G700 Media Gateway itself does not have circuit breakers or on/off switches. However,
any customer AC load center must have circuit breakers protecting the power feeds to the G700 Media
Gateways as required by electric codes.
AC power distribution
AC power distribution is plugged into an outlet or power strip and can be backed up by an optional UPS
AC Grounding/Protective Grounds
The G700 Media Gateway contains a grounding screw on the back of the chassis. You must maintain
ground connection whether you connect the G700 Media Gateway directly to the branch circuit or to a
Power requirements for the G700 Media Gateway
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power distribution strip. The G700 Media Gateway also requires a cabinet ground connection directly to
an approved ground.
S8500 Media Server environmental specifications
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S8500 Media Server environmental specifications
The following table outlines the environmental specifications of the S8500 Media Server. For a complete
feature and specification table refer to the S8500 Installation Manual.
NOTE:
Some values are shown at maximum configuration. Avaya values will be slightly lower
then maximum.
Table 15: S8500 Environmental Specifications
Type Description
Acoustical Noise
Emissions Sound power, idling: 6.5 bel maximum
Sound power, operating: 6.5 bel maximum
Environment: Air
Temperature Server on:
10 to 35 degrees C (50.0 to 95.0 degrees F)
Altitude: 0 to 914 m (2998.7 ft)
Server off:
-40 to 60 degrees C (-104 to 140 F)
Maximum altitude: 2133 m (6998.0 ft)
Environment: Humidity Server on:
8% to 80%
Server off:
8% to 80%
Heat Output BTU output per hour (approximate):
Maximum configuration: 512 BTU (150 watts)
Electrical Input Sine-wave input (47-63 Hz) required
Input voltage low range:
Minimum: 100 V ac
Maximum: 127 V ac
Input voltage high range:
Minimum: 200 V ac
Maximum: 240 V ac
Input kilovolt-amperes (kVA) (approximate):
Minimum: 0.0870 kVA
Maximum: 0.150 kVA
Receptacle U.S.: XXXX 87=NEMA 5-15
Circuit breaker: XXXX 87=15 amp
Pole: XXXX 87=1
Amp Draw: XXXX 87=3
Altitude, air pressure and air purity for the S8700 Media Server
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Altitude, air pressure and air purity for the S8700
Media Server
The normal operating air pressure for the S8700 Media Server is from 9.4 to 15.2 psi (648 to 1048
millibars). For altitudes above 5,000 feet, reduce the maximum short-term temperature limit by 1 oF or
for 1,000 feet of elevation above 5,000 feet. At 10,000 feet, for example, the maximum short-term
temperature limit is 115 oF.
Air Purity
Do not install the equipment in an area where the air may be contaminated with any of the following:
Excessive dust, lint, carbon particles, paper fiber contaminants, or metallic contaminants
Corrosive gases, such as sulfur and chlorine
NOTE:
Avaya recommends that the S8700 Media Server and related equipment not be collocated
with copiers, printers, or plain paper FAX machines because of the fine dust these devices
produce.
Contaminant Average
Particulate matter 185 microgram/m3
Nitrate in particulate matter 12 microgram/m3
Total hydrocarbons equivalent to methane 10 ppm
Sulfur dioxide 0.20 ppm
Oxides of nitrogen 0.30 ppm
Total oxidants equivalent to ozone 0.05 ppm
Hydrogen sulfide 0.10 ppm
Temperature and humidity for the S8700 Media Server
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Temperature and humidity for the S8700 Media Server
The S8700 Media Server should be installed in an area that is well-ventilated. Maximum equipment
performance is obtained at an ambient temperature between 40 to 110 degrees Fahrenheit (4 and 43
degrees Celsius) for continuous operation and between 40 and 120 degrees Fahrenheit (4 and 49 degrees
Celsius) for short term operation. The system equipment can operate at the short-term operational limits
for a period not to exceed 72 consecutive hours or a total of not more than 15 days in a year.
The relative humidity range is 10 to 95 percent up to 84 degrees Fahrenheit (29 degrees Celsius). Above
84 degrees Fahrenheit (29 degrees Celsius), maximum relative humidity decreases from 95 percent down
to 32 percent at 120 degrees Fahrenheit (49 degrees Celsius). Installations outside these limits may
reduce system life or impede operation.
The following table correlates room temperature with allowable relative humidity.
Recommended
temperature range
(degrees Fahrenheit)
Recommended
temperature range
(degrees Celsius) Recommended
humidity range (in %)
65 to 85 18 to 29 20 to 60
40 to 84 4.4 to 28.8 10 to 95
86 30.0 10 to 89
88 31.1 10 to 83
90 32.2 10 to 78
92 33.3 10 to 73
94 34.4 10 to 69
96 35.6 10 to 65
98 36.7 10 to 61
100 37.8 10 to 58
102 38.9 10 to 54
104 40.0 10 to 51
106 41.1 10 to 48
108 42.2 10 to 45
110 43.3 10 to 43
112 44.4 10 to 40
114 45.6 10 to 38
116 46.7 10 to 36
118 47.8 10 to 34
120 48.9 10 to 32
EMI and RFI specifications for the S8700 Media Server
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EMI and RFI specifications for the S8700 Media Server
Country Specification
USA FCC74 CFR Parts 2 and 15
Verified Class A limit
Canada IC ICES-003 Class A limit
Europe EMC Directive, 89/336/EEC; EN55022, Class A Limit,
Radiated and Conducted Emissions; EN55024, Immunity
Standard for Information Technology Equipment; EN61000-3-2
Harmonic Currents; EN61000-3-3 Voltage Flicker
Australia and New Zealand AS/NZS 3548
Class A limit
Japan VCCI, Class A ITE (CISPR 22, Class A Limit); IEC 1000-3-2;
Harmonic Currents
Taiwan BSMI
Class A (CISPR 22)
Russia Gost approval
International CISPR-22
Class A limit
Power supply specifications for the S8700 Media Server
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Power supply specifications for the S8700 Media
Server
BTU
British thermal units (BTUs) are standard for measuring the thermal output of a device. One BTU equals
the heat that will raise the temperature of one pound of water by one degree Fahrenheit. In physical terms,
one BTU equals 1054 joules. The maximum BTU output of the Intel SRTR1 server is 988 BTU’s. This
rating represents a SRTR1 with the following components:
SRTR1 server board
Front panel board
PCI riser board
One 80-mm fan
Three 40-mm fans
850-MHz Pentium III with heat sink fan
Four Micron 32-Mb × 72 (256-Mb) DIMM modules
IDE hard drive
Slimline CD-ROM drive
Slimline floppy drive
Three PCI cards
NOTE:
The BTU number is rated at the lowest efficiency or worst case of the power supply.
Under normal conditions the power supply should perform above the 70% efficiency
level, which will lower the BTU ratings.
Power Voltage and frequency
AC 100 to 127 VAC
200 to 240 VAC
DC 200 Watts
+5 VDC 22 A maximum
+5 VDC standby 1.0 A maximum
+12 VDC 3.5 A maximum
+3.3 VDC 13.0 A maximum
-12 VDC 0.25 A maximum
Regulatory certification for an S8700 Media Server
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Regulatory certification for an S8700 Media Server
Product-safety standards and approvals
Electromagnetic-compatibility (EMC)
standards and approvals
Country Safety standards and approval summary
US and Canada UL 1960, CSA 22.2, No. 950M95, 3rd edition
Europe Low Voltage Directive, 73/23/EEC
TUV/GS to EN60950 2nd Edition with Amendments, A1 + A2 + A3 + A4 + A11
International CB Certificate and Report to IEC 60950, 2nd edition including EMKO-TSE (74-
SEC) 207/94 and other national deviations
Country EMC standards and approvals
US FCC 47 CFR Parts 2 and 15, Verified Class A Limit
Canada IC ICES-003 Class A Limit
Europe EMC Directive, 89/336/EEC
EN55022, Class A Limit, Radiated and Conducted Emissions
EN55024, Immunity Standard for Information Technology Equipment
EN61000-3-2 Harmonic Currents
EN61000-3-3 Voltage Flicker
Australia and
New Zealand C-Tick; AS/NZS 3548, Class A Limit
Japan VCCI Class A ITE (CISPR 22, Class A Limit)
IEC 61000-3-2; Harmonic Currents
Taiwan BSMI Class A (CISPR 222)
Russia Gost Approval
International CISPR 22, Class A Limit
Data rack mounting and media gateway floor loading for an S8700 Multi-Connect
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Data rack mounting and media gateway floor
loading for an S8700 Multi-Connect
Hardware components of the S8700 Media Server with Multi-Connect are, the S8700 Media Servers, an
Ethernet Switch, a modem and the two UPS units. All components are installed in a 19 inch open data
rack.
19-Inch Rack
The customer provides a data rack that is used to hold equipment not necessarily specified or provided by
Avaya. The footprint of the data rack is 19 inches by 21 inches.
S8700 Media Server
The two S8700 Media Servers are designed for mounting in an open 19-inch data rack. S8700 Media
Servers weigh approximately 25 pounds.
Avaya 700VA or 1500VA UPS Units
For configurations that require 28 to 410 minutes of battery holdover the Avaya 700VA UPS can be used.
The 700VA is available in the following voltages:
700VA 120-V for US and Canada
700 VA 230-V Online for International
700 VA 100-V and 200-V for Japan
The physical characteristics of the Avaya 700VA are:
Width: 17 inches (43.2 cm)
Depth: 19 inches (48.2 cm)
Height: 3.5 inches (8.9 cm)
Weight: 34 pounds (15 kg)
For configurations that require 411 to 480 minutes of battery holdover the Avaya 1500VA UPS can be
used. The 1500VA is available in the following voltages:
1500VA 120 V for US and Canada
1500 VA 230 V Online for International
1500 VA 100V and 200V for Japan
The physical characteristics of the Avaya 1500VA are:
Width: 17 inches (43.2 cm)
Depth: 24 inches
Height: 3.5 inches (8.9 cm)
Weight: 50 pounds
Data rack mounting and media gateway floor loading for an S8700 Multi-Connect
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Avaya Ethernet switches
The P133G2 and the P134G2 equipped with CCS PNC:
The height, weight, and length of the P133G2 and the P134G2 is:
(3.5”/88 mm) × 19” (482.6 mm) × 13.8" (350 mm)
The weight of the P133G2 is 11.4 pounds (5.2 kg)
The weight of the P134G2 is 13.2 pounds (6.0 kg)
The P333T and the P334T equipped with ATM PNC:
The height, weight and length of the P333T and the P334T is:
(3.5”/88 mm) × 19 inches (482.6 mm) × 17.7 inches (450 mm)
The weight of the P333T and the P334T is 16.5 pounds (7.5 kg)
Media gateways
The floor of the equipment room must meet the loading code of a commercial floor of at least 50 pounds
per square foot (242 kg per square meter). Floor plans typically allocate space around the front, the ends,
and the rear of the cabinets, for maintenance access. Additional equipment room floor support may be
required if the floor load is greater than 50 pounds per square foot (242 kg per square meter).
The following table shows the weight and floor loading of the media gateways.
Media gateway Weight Floor loading
SCC1 125 lb. (56 kg) 31 lb./sq. ft. (148.9 kg/m2)
MCC1 200 to 800 lb. (90 to 363 kg) 130 lb./sq. ft. (624.2 kg/m2)
G700 16.5 lbs (7.5 kg) 19-inch rack-mounted – floor loading
depends on load on the rack
Site requirements for DEFINITY
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Site requirements for DEFINITY
Altitude, air pressure, and air purity for
DEFINITY
Altitude and air pressure
At altitudes above 5,000 feet (1,525 meters), the maximum short-term temperature limit reduces by 1o
Fahrenheit for each 1,000 feet (305 meters) of elevation above 5,000 feet (1,525 meters). For example: at
sea level, the maximum short-term temperature limit is 120o F (49o Celsius). At 10,000 feet (3,050
meters), the maximum short-term temperature limit is 115o F (46o C).
The normal operating air pressure range is: 9.4 to 15.2 psi (pounds per square inch) (648 to 1,048
millibars).
Air purity
The CMC1, SCC1, and MCC1 Media Gateways contain an air filter to reduce the flow of particulates
through the equipment. Do not install the Media Gateways where the air might be contaminated by
excessive dust, lint, carbon particles, paper fiber contaminants, or metallic contaminants. For example, do
not install the cabinet near paper handling equipment such as copiers and high-speed printers, which
introduce paper dust and print particles into the environment. Avoid Corrosive gases above the levels in
the following table.
Table 16: Allowable concentrations of atmospheric contaminants
Contaminant Average concentration not to exceed
All particulate matter 185 micrograms/cubic meter
Nitrate 12 micrograms/cubic meter
Total hydrocarbons equivalent to methane 10 ppm (parts per million)
Sulphur dioxide 0.20 ppm (parts per million)
Oxides of nitrogen 0.30 ppm (parts per million)
Total oxidants equivalent to ozone 0.05 ppm (parts per million)
Hydrogen sulfide 0.10 ppm (parts per million)
Cabinet dimensions and clearances
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Cabinet dimensions and clearances
Floor plans typically allocate space around the front, ends, and rear of the cabinets for maintenance
purposes. Floor area requirements vary between cabinets. The following table lists the dimensions and
clearances for the SCC1 Media Gateway and the MCC1 Media Gateway.
Table 17: Dimensions and clearance for the MCC1 Media Gateway and the SCC1 Media
Gateway
Cabinet type Height Width Depth Clearance
SCC1
1-cabinet
2-cabinets
3-cabinets
4-cabinets
20 in.
(51 cm)
39 in.
(99 cm)
58 in.
(1.5 m)
77 in.
(2 m)
27 in.
(69 cm)
27 in.
(69 cm)
27 in.
(69 cm)
27 in.
(69 cm)
22 in.
(56 cm)
22 in.
(56 cm)
22 in.
(56 cm)
22 in.
(56 cm)
38 inch (97 cm)
between cabinet and
wall
MCC11
1 This row includes the auxiliary cabinet, the global AC cabinet, and the global DC cabinet.
70 in.
(1.8 m) 32 in.
(81 cm) 28 in.
(71 cm) Rear 38 in.
(97 cm)
Front 36 in.
(91 cm)
Cable slack manager2
2 Cable slack manager is used with MCC1 Media Gateway and the SCC1 Media Gateway.
7 in.
(18 cm) 32 in.
(81 cm) 38 in.
(97 cm)
DC power cabinet3
3 DC power cabinet requires a floor area of eight square feet (0.74 square inches). The DC power cabinet also
requires 38 inches (97 cm) between the cabinet and the wall.
20 in.
(51 cm) 27 in.
(69 cm) 22 in.
(56 cm) 38 in. (97 cm) Front
and Rear
Large battery cabinet
100 Amp
200 Amp
300 Amp
400 Amp
27 in.
(69 cm)
42 in.
(107 cm)
42 in.
(107 cm)
57 in.
(145 cm)
55 in.
(140 cm)
55 in.
(140 cm)
55 in.
(140 cm)
55 in.
(140 cm)
21 in.
(53 cm)
21 in.
(53 cm)
21 in.
(53 cm)
21 in.
(53 cm)
38 in. (97 cm) Front
and Rear
Floor load requirements
318 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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Floor load requirements
The equipment room floor must meet the commercial floor loading code of at least 50 pounds per square
foot (242 kg per square meter). Floor plans typically allocate space around the front, ends, and rear (if
necessary) for maintenance access of the Media Gateways. Additional equipment room floor support may
be required if the floor load is greater than 50 pounds per square foot (242 kg per square meter). See the
following table for Media Gateway and battery information concerning weight and floor loading.
Type Weight Floor loading Remarks
SCC1 Media
Gateway 125 pounds (56 kg) 31 pounds per square foot
(148.9 kg/m2)
MCC1 Media
Gateway 200-800 pounds (90-363
kg) 130 pounds per square foot
(624.2 kg/m2)Includes
auxiliary, global
AC and global
DC cabinets
100-A battery maximum 400 pounds
(181 kg) 180 pounds per square foot
(871.2 kg/m2)
200-A battery maximum 815 pounds
(370 kg) 328 pounds per square
foot.(1587.5 kg/m2)
300-A battery maximum1480 pounds
(671 kg) 476 pounds per square foot
(2303.8 kg/m2)
400-A battery maximum 1580 pounds
(717kg) 625 pounds per square foot
(3025 kg/m2)
Power requirements
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December 2003
Power requirements
This section describes AC-power and DC-power source requirements for the cabinet.
Global AC MCC power supply
The Global MCC (GMCC) power supply is for use in both US and international systems. The GMCC
replaces the existing AC MCC1 cabinet configuration that is used in the US, and thus reducing the
number of power supplies and distribution units that are associated with the MCC1 platform.
The GMCC automatically accepts 200- to 240-VAC power at 50 or 60 Hz. The GMCC complies with all
emissions and safety requirements for customer applications worldwide. the GMCC power system
consists of:
NP850 rectifier that consists of cabinet-level power units located in the power-distribution unit at
the bottom of the MCC1
649A power supplies that are DC/DC converters that provide carrier-level power
One battery interface and alarm unit
Battery connections
Alarm outputs
One cabinet input cord, NEMA 6-30P in the US.
The GMCC power architecture offers both short-term and long-term power backup. Batteries inside the
MCC1 provide short-term backup. External battery cabinets provide long-term backup. Because of its
long-term power backup capabilities, the GMCC significantly reduces or eliminates the need for UPS and
DC battery plants for most customer applications.
AC power
Power feeders from a dedicated power source that is typically located outside the building connect to an
AC load center. These feeders do not provide power to other equipment. The AC load center distributes
the power to receptacles. The power cords from the AC power-
distribution unit in each MCC1 and AC power supply in each SCC1 plugs into a receptacle.
60-Hz power sources in DEFINITY R
Each of the following power sources can supply 60-Hz power to the AC load in R7 and later systems. See
the following figures for information on 120- to 240-VAC power sources.
Power requirements
320 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 70: Single-phase, 120- to 240-VAC, 60-Hz source
Figure 71: 3-phase, 120- to 208-VAC, 60-Hz source
50-Hz power sources in DEFINITY R
Either of the following power sources can supply 50-Hz power to the AC load in R7 and later systems.
See the following figures for 220-VAC power source.
NOTE:
For type of power see:
MCC1 is shown on the cabinet’s rear door
SCC1 is shown on the cabinet’s rear cover
CMC1 is shown on the right door
120 240
120
Phase A
Ground
Neutral
Phase B
To equipment room
AC load center
widf1phs LJK 07229
8
120
208
208
120
120
Neutral
Phase A
Phase C
Ground
Phase B
To equipment room
AC load center
widf3phs LJK 071597
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 321
December 2003
Figure 72: International, 3-phase, 220- to 380-VAC, 50-Hz source
Figure 73: International delta, 220- or 240-VAC, 50-Hz source
The following table lists the AC power sources that can supply power to an AC load in a cabinet. A
NEMA receptacle or it’s equivalent, connects to the wires from the unit. The AC power cord from the
power input of each unit plugs into a receptacle.
220 V 220 V
220 V
380 V
380 V
380 V
Phase A
Phase B
Neutral
Ground
Phase C
To equipment room
AC load center
widf4wir LJK 071497
220 V
220/240 V
220 V
Phase A
Phase B
Phase C
To equipment
room AC load
center
widf3wir LJK 071497
Power requirements
322 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Contact your Avaya representative for ordering information.
DC power
DC-powered cabinets that contains a J58890CF power-distribution unit require a -42.5 to -56 VDC
source at up to 75 A.
Table 18: Cabinet AC power sources
Cabinet style and
power-
distribution unit Power sources Power input receptacles
CMC AC power supply
(650A power unit) Single phase 120 VAC with
neutral
Single phase 240 VAC with
neutral
120 VAC, 60 Hz NEMA 5-15R
240 VAC, 50 Hz IEC 320
Note: Configurations installed in
Japan use country specific
receptacles for 100 and 200 VAC,
50/60 Hz
MCC1 AC power
distribution Single phase 120 VAC with
neutral
Single phase 240 VAC with
neutral, or single phase of 3-
phase, 208 VAC with neutral
120 VAC, 60 Hz NEMA
5-50R
or
208/240 VAC, 60 Hz NEMA
MCC1 AC power
distribution Single phase 176-264 VAC 200-240 Volts, 50-60 Hz NEMA L6-
30R. Configurations that are
installed outside the United States
require a receptacle suitable for use
in the country of installation.
SCC1 AC power supply
(1217A power unit) Single phase 120 VAC with
neutral
Single phase of 220 VAC or
Single phase of 240 VAC
120 VAC, 60 Hz NEMA 5-20R or 5-
15R
220-VAC to 240-VAC at a country-
specific receptacle
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 323
December 2003
Circuit-breaker sizes for AC and DC cabinets
The following tables list the circuit-breaker sizes for every AC- and DC-powered cabinet.
.
MCC1 power system
The MCC1 power system consist of an AC power or DC power-distribution unit in the bottom of each
cabinet and cables to distribute output voltages to power unit circuit packs in the carriers. These power
systems also consist of power-converter circuit packs in the carriers. These circuit packs supply DC
power to the circuit pack slots. The following tables list the input voltages and the output voltages of
power unit circuit packs in the carriers of MCC1s.
Table 19: Circuit breakers for AC-powered cabinets
Cabinet Circuit breaker size (A)
CMC1 (120 VAC) 60 Hz 15
CMC1 (240 VAC) 50 Hz 10
MCC1 (120 VAC) 60 Hz 50
MCC1 (208 VAC) 60 Hz 30
MCC1 (240 VAC) 60 Hz 30
MCC1 (200-240 VAC) 50 to 60 Hz 30
SCC1 (120 VAC) 15 or 20
Auxiliary cabinet (120 VAC) 20
Table 20: Circuit breakers for DC-powered cabinets
Cabinet (–48 VDC) Circuit breaker size (A)
MCC1 75
SCC1 25
Auxiliary 20
Table 21: Power Units in the MCC1: Inputs
Model Inputs
120 VAC 144 VDC -48 VDC
AC 631DA1 Yes Yes No
AC 631DB1 Yes Yes No
DC 644A No No Yes
DC 645B No No Yes
DC 649A No No Yes
Power requirements
324 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
AC power distribution
A typical AC power-distribution unit for an MCC1 contains:
Circuit breakers
Ring generator
Optional batteries
Optional battery charger
The power distribution cables carry 120-VAC during normal operation and 144-VDC from optional
batteries if AC power fails. Another cable connects 120-VAC to the battery charger.
The following figure shows an AC power-distribution unit and battery charger (J58890CE-2 List 15 or
later). The AC power-distribution unit and the battery charger sits at the bottom of some MCC1s.
Figure 74: AC power-distribution unit (J58890CE-2) (front)
The AC power-distribution unit contains the following additional components that are not shown in the
figure:
Electromagnetic interference (EMI) filter
AC input fuse
Table 22: Power Units in the MCC1: Outputs
Model Outputs
+5 VDC
60 A –5 VDC
6 A –48 VDC
8 A
AC 631DA1 Yes No No
AC 631DB1 No Yes Yes
DC 644A Yes No No
DC 645B No Yes Yes
DC 649A Yes Yes 10 A
Circuit
breakers
Ring
generator
631DB
power unit
Ring generator
fuse
psdfacpd RPY 053097
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 325
December 2003
Five circuit breakers (1 for each carrier)
20-A fuses
A signal connector
-48 VDC fan power
The optional battery charger sits at the bottom of some MCC1s.
Figure 75: Battery Charger (Optional Part of J58890CE-2) (Front)
The battery charger is used only without an uninterruptible power supply (UPS). The charger contains:
Three 48-VDC batteries for backup power to the cabinet
A DC-power relay to connect the batteries into the power circuit if a main power failure is
detected
Circuit breaker
The circuit breaker protects the AC input power to the cabinet and serves as the main AC input
disconnect switch. The circuit breaker has two poles for 120-VAC or three poles for 208/240 VAC. If a
problem develops, the circuit breaker automatically opens and removes the AC power input.
48-VDC batteries
The three series-connected 48-VDC batteries produce a nominal 144-VDC that is fused at 20 A. The
batteries are trickle-charged from the battery charger.
Battery charger
When AC power restores after an outage, the battery charger converts a 120-VAC input to a DC voltage
that recharges the batteries. The batteries typically recharge within 24 hours.
Batteries
Battery
charger
psdfbatt RPY 053097
Power requirements
326 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
DC power relay
The DC power relay disconnects the batteries from a system that is using AC power. The relay also
disconnects the batteries if power fails for more than:
10 minutes in a standard-reliability system
5 minutes in high- and critical-reliability systems
10 minutes in an expansion port network (EPN)
This protects the batteries from over discharging.
EMI filters
The Electromagnetic interference (EMI) filters suppress noise voltage on the AC input line to the MCC1
cabinet.
Ring generator
The ring generator converts the -48 VDC input to a 67 to 100-VAC, 20 or 25-Hz ringing voltage. The
analog line circuit packs use this AC voltage output to ring telephones. The AC outputs are routed from
the ring generator to port carriers, expansion control carriers, and control carriers.
Fuses
20-A fuses protect the power on each cable that goes from the AC power-distribution unit to power
converters in the carriers.
The following figure shows AC power distribution in some MCC1s. The DC power-distribution cables
are on both sides of the cabinet. These cables supply power to each of the carriers. The optional battery
charger is at the right side of the power-distribution unit.
Figure 76: AC power distribution in MCC1 cabinets
Power backup
If AC power fails, three 48-VDC batteries power the system for:
10 seconds in a PPN cabinet
3
"D" position
carrier
Battery
charger
(optional)
"E" Position
Carrier
Power
distribution
unit
lcdfacpd RPY 053097
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 327
December 2003
15 seconds in an EPN cabinet
10 minutes in the control carrier of a standard-reliability system
5 minutes in a control carrier of a high- or critical-reliability system
10 minutes in the expansion control carrier in the A position of an EPN cabinet for a DEFINITY
R configuration only
UPS
An external, uninterruptible power supply (UPS) provides a longer backup time than holdover batteries
which have holdover times that vary from less than 10 minutes to up to 8 hours. The UPS can replace the
batteries and battery charger. The UPS connects from the AC power source to a AC power cord on the
cabinet. If AC power fails, the UPS supplies its own AC power to the cabinet.
AC power-distribution unit (J58890CH-1)
The following figure shows a typical AC power-distribution unit that is used in some MCC1 cabinets.
The AC power-distribution unit sits at the bottom of an MCC1 cabinet.
Figure 77: AC power-distribution unit (J58890CH-1) (front)
Power backup
There are 2 types of battery assemblies used for power backup: small and large. The small batteries are
typically located at the center rear of a MCC1 gateway. The large batteries are typically located inside the
battery cabinet.
Small batteries
The small batteries are an 8 AH (Amp-hour) batteries fused for short circuit protection and charged by the
J58890CH-1. The batteries also contain a thermal sensor that changes the charging voltage depending on
battery temperature. See the following figure for an example of the small batteries.
Circuit
breakers
Rectifier
modules
Ring
generator
Ring generator
fuse
Battery
interface unit
psdfacp1 RPY 05309
7
Power requirements
328 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
The small batteries provide short-term battery holdover. If AC power fails, 48 VDC batteries supply
system power for:
10 seconds in a PPN cabinet
15 seconds in an EPN cabinet
10 minutes in the control carrier in a standard-reliability system
5 minutes in the control carrier in high and critical-reliability systems
10 minutes in the expansion control carrier in the A position of an EPN cabinet for a DEFINITY
R configuration only
Figure 78: Small Battery Assembly
Large batteries
The large batteries provide holdover times of 2 to 8 hours, depending on the number of batteries. To use
large battery holdover one battery cabinet is required per system. The 24-cell battery cabinet must have a
float voltage of 54.2-VDC. The 23-cell battery cabinet must have a float voltage of 51.75-VDC. The
batteries are circuit breaker protected and are charged by the J58890CH-1.
psdfbatw RPY 061797
Battery
connector
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 329
December 2003
The batteries also contain a thermal sensor that changes the charging voltage, depending on the battery
temperature. The following table shows the battery holdover and recharge times for a typical 2500-Watt
load.
.
The following figure shows a typical large battery cabinet, (200 A).
Figure 79: Typical large battery cabinets
DC power distribution
The typical DC distribution system has a DC power converter and cables to provide the power to the
system circuit packs. DC-powered cabinets require -42.5 to -56-VDC.
DC power-distribution unit (J58890CF-2)
The following figure shows a power-distribution unit that is used in some DC-powered MCC1 cabinets.
The DC power unit sits at the bottom of the MCC1 cabinet and contains the ring generator, 20-amp
circuit breakers, terminal blocks, and system fan power.
Table 23: Battery holdover and recharge times
Battery cabinet (A) Holdover time (hours) Recharge time (hours)
100 2 7
200 413
300 6 20
400 826
Large battery
cabinets
Circuit
breaker
psdflbc1 RPY 053097
Power requirements
330 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 80: DC power-distribution unit (J58890CF-2) (front view))
Ground isolation
Each peripheral device that is connected to a system by the asynchronous (EIA) RS-232 interface,
requires either a 105C, a 105D, or a 116A isolator interface. The interface isolates ground between the
system and external adjuncts.
The isolator interface sits behind a PPN control carrier or behind an EPN expansion control carrier. The
isolator interface is installed at the RS-232 interface between the peripheral equipment and the interface
connector.
The following figure shows the power distribution in some MCC1s with small battery, short term battery
holdover. In DEFINITY R systems, the power distribution cables are on the right side of the cabinet
because that is where the 649A DC power converter circuit pack is located. Switch node (SN) carriers
require two 649 DC power converters and two cables.
Circuit
breakers
DC power
distribution
unit
Ring
generator
Ter mi n a
l
block
psdfdpdu RPY 053097
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 331
December 2003
Figure 81: Power distribution in MCC1
The following figure shows the DC-power distribution in some MCC1s with large batteries or extended
battery backup. In DEFINITY R configurations, the power distribution cables are on the right side of the
cabinet only because that is where the 649A DC power converter circuit pack is located. Switch node
(SN) carriers require two 649 DC power converters and two cables.
Figure 82: DC power distribution in MCC1s
DC power converter (649A)
The 649A converts the –48 VDC from the power-distribution unit to outputs of –48 VDC at 10 A, +5
VDC at 60 A, and –5 VDC at 6 A. These outputs distribute power to circuit pack slots in the carriers.
4
1
Fan unit
Power
distribution
unit
Port carrier
Control
carrier
649A DC
power converter
circuit pack
Port or switch
node carrier
Port or switch
node carrier
649A DC power
converter circuit pack
Port or
control carrier
lcdfpdu1 LJK 071497
Small battery
(Inside cabinet)
Power
distribution
unit
649A DC
power converter
circuit pack
649A DC power
converter
circuit pack
Control
carrier
Large battery
cabinets
Circuit
breaker
Switch node
carrier
lcdfpdu2 LJK 110797
Power requirements
332 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
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AC and DC grounding
Approved grounds
An approved ground is the closest acceptable medium for grounding the building entrance protector or
the entrance cable shield, or for a single-point ground of the system.
If more than one type of approved ground is available on the premises, bond the grounds together. Follow
the instructions in Section 250-81 of the National Electrical Code, or the applicable electrical code in the
country where the equipment is installed.
Protective grounds
Acceptable grounds include the following:
Grounded building steel — The metal frame of the building where it is grounded by one of the
following: acceptable metallic water pipe, concrete encased ground, or a ground ring.
Acceptable Water Pipe — An underground water pipe, at least 1/2 inch
(1.3 cm) in diameter, and in direct contact with the earth for at least 10 feet (3 meters). The pipe
must be electrically continuous to the point where the protector ground wire is connected. The
pipe can also be or made electrically continuous by bonding around insulated joints, plastic pipe,
or plastic water meters.
Concrete encased ground — An electrode that is encased by at least 2 in. (5 cm) of concrete and
located within and near the bottom of a concrete foundation or footing in direct contact with the
earth. The electrode must be at least 20 feet (6 meters) of one or more steel reinforcing bars or
rods 1/2 inch (1.3 cm) in diameter, or at least 20 feet (6 meters) of bare, solid copper, 4 AWG (26
mm2) wire.
Ground ring — A buried ground that encircles a building or structure at a depth of at least 2.5 feet
(0.8 meter) below the surface of the earth. The ground ring must be at least 20 feet (6 meters) of
2AWG (35 mm2), bare, copper wire.
If these grounds are not available, the water pipe ground can be supplemented by one of the following
types of grounds:
Other local metal underground systems or structures — Local underground structures such as
tanks and piping systems
Rod and pipe electrodes — A 5/8 inch (1.6 cm) solid rod or 3/4-inch (1.9-cm) conduit or pipe
electrode that is driven to a minimum depth of 8 feet (2.5 meters)
Plate electrodes — Must have a minimum of two square feet (0.18 square meters) of metallic
surface exposed to the exterior soil
A metallic underground water pipe must be supplemented by the metal frame of the building, a concrete-
encased ground, or a ground ring.
Approved floor grounds
!
WARNING:
If you can only access the approved ground or approved floor ground from within a dedicated
power equipment room, then a licensed electrician must make the connections.
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 333
December 2003
Approved floor grounds are those grounds on each floor of a high-rise building that are suitable for
connection to the ground terminal in the riser closet and to the cabinet equipment single-point ground
terminal. Approved floor grounds might include the following:
Building steel
The grounding conductor for the secondary side of the power transformer that feeds the floor
Metallic water pipes
Power feed metallic conduit that supplies panel boards on the floor
A point that is specifically provided in the building design for grounding
NOTE:
You must ensure that you electrically connect all protective grounds together to form a
single grounding electrode system.
Coupled bonding conductor
When you use a coupled bonding conductor (CBC) grounding in an AC-powered cabinet, you must
maintain a minimum 1 ft. (0.3 m) space between the CBC power and other power and ground leads.
In AC-powered systems, locate the system single-point ground terminal block on the AC load or AC
protector cabinet.
SCC1 power systems
Each SCC1 has one AC or one DC power supply that distributes DC power and AC ringing voltage to the
circuit pack slots in the cabinet.
AC power supply (1217A)
In an AC-powered cabinet, the power supply slot contains, a single, plug-in, multi-output AC power
supply. A power cord, with a three-prong plug on one end and an appliance connector on the other end,
connects the supply to a dedicated AC power source.
The 1217A power supply is a global power unit for SCC1s. The 1217A power supply has a wide input
voltage operating range of 90 to 264-VAC and a 50 or 60 Hz auto-ranging input, multi-output power
supply that provides regulated DC output. The 1217A also has a selectable 20 or 25 Hz AC ringer.
The 1217A power supply uses one of the following inputs, depending on the version:
120-VAC, 60-Hz, 15-A to 20-A; three wires in the power cord: one hot wire, one neutral wire, and
one ground wire
220-VAC or 240-VAC, 50-Hz, 10-Amp; three wires in the power cord: one hot wire, one neutral
wire, and one ground wire
The AC power supply produces the following DC outputs: +5 VDC, –5 VDC, –48 VDC, +12 VDC, and
a battery-charging voltage. The DC outputs distribute power on the cabinet backplane to the circuit pack
slots. Additionally, the -48 VDC output current capacity has been increased from 6.85 amps to 8.25 A. A
50 A load inrush requirement has been added to the -48 VDC output
Power requirements
334 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
A holdover circuit in the power supply allows a system to operate normally during AC power
interruptions. If AC input power fails, reserve batteries supply power to the memory and processor circuit
packs and fans for two minutes. All port circuit packs are inactive during this time. The power supply
contains a battery charger to charge the holdover batteries.
DC power supply (676C)
In a DC-powered SCC, the power slots contain a single, plug-in multi-output DC power supply.
The 676C DC power supply has a wide input voltage operating range of -42 to -60 VDC at up to 22 A.
The 676C power supply produces the following outputs: +5.1 VDC at 0 to 55 A, -5.1 VDC at 0 to 5.5A,
+12 VDC at 0 to 2 A (surge to 2.8 A for 350 ms), -48 VDC at 0 to 8.25 A. The outputs distribute power
on the cabinet backplane to the slots for the circuit packs. The value and frequency of the AC ringing
voltage output value depend on the country of use. The power supply has circuit breakers and EMI
filtering.
DC power-distribution unit (J58890CG)
The J58890CG is used with SCC1s. Individual DC output connectors can power up to four SCC1s. Each
output connector is separately fused at 25 A. The fuses are inside the unit the DC power-distribution unit.
The input for the DC distribution unit is from the DC power cabinet.
The J58890CG DC power-distribution unit is required when the distance between the DC power cabinet
and the cabinet stack is greater than 30 feet (9 m).
Enhanced DC rectifier cabinet (J58890R)
The J58890R enhanced DC rectifier cabinet is used with SCC1s. Each rectifier assembly in the DC
rectifier cabinet can supply up to 50 A of DC current. You can install a minimum of two rectifiers install
in each DC cabinet to supply a total of 100 A. A third rectifier assembly is used as a backup only.
Each SCC1 can draw up to 15 A. Up to three DC cabinets can be stacked to supply power to single-
carrier cabinets stacks.
Each output connector is separately fused at 25 A. The fuses are inside each DC rectifier assembly.
NOTE:
A J58890CG DC power-distribution unit is required if the distance between the
DC cabinet and the cabinet stack is greater than 30 feet (9 m).
CMC1 AC power supply (650A)
In the CMC1, a power cord with a 3-prong plug on one end and an appliance connector on the other end
that connects the supply to a dedicated AC power source. The power supply is a global power factor
corrected AC/DC converter that provides multiple DC outputs and AC ring outputs. It is auto ranging 85
to 264 VAC, 47 to 63 Hz, at 330 Watts, 4.5 A (100 to 120-VAC) or 2.3 A (200 to 240-VAC) at 500-VA.
The inputs to the power supply can be:
120 VAC, 50-Hz to 60-Hz, 6-Amp; 3 wires in the power cord: 1 hot wire, 1 neutral wire, and 1
ground wire
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 335
December 2003
220 VAC or 240 VAC, 50-Hz to 60-Hz, 3-Amp; 3 wires in the power cord: 1 hot wire, 1 neutral
wire, and 1 ground wire
The AC power supply produces the following outputs: +5 VDC, –5 VDC, and –48 VDC. The outputs
distribute power on the cabinet backplane to the circuit pack slots. The AC ringing voltage output value
and frequency depend on the country of use. The 650A also supplies power for neon message-waiting
lamps (150 VDC). The power supply has EMI filtering.
CMC1 UPS
The uninterruptible power supply (UPS) provides surge protection for all connected cabinets.
Connect the UPS to an electrical outlet that can handle the power requirements of all cabinets. To
calculate the number of amps drawn, use the following formulas.
a. For 100 to 200-VAC, multiply 3.5 A times the number of cabinets.
b. For 200 to 240-VAC, multiply 1.8 A times the number of cabinets.
Cabinet A (control carrier) is always connected to an unswitched or always on electrical outlet on
the UPS.
Cabinet cooling fans
CMC1 fan unit
Two variable-speed fans are at the bottom of the cabinet. The fans receive +8 to +14 VDC from the power
supply. An air filter, which can be removed and cleaned or replaced, is located above the fans. Air flows
from the outside, into the bottom of the cabinet, around the circuit packs, and out through the top of the
cabinet.
If the cabinet temperature reaches 158o F (70o C), the temperature sensor in the power supply shuts the
system down and invokes the emergency transfer.
MCC1 fans
A fan unit that consists of six fans, mounts near the center of the cabinet. The three front fans blow up and
the three rear fans blow down. A removable air filter is provided above and below each fan unit. Four
sensors monitor the cabinet temperature; three sensors are inside the cabinet top and 1 sensor is inside the
cabinet bottom. One of the top sensors affects the speed of the front fans and the bottom sensor affects the
speed of the rear fans. A speed control and thermal alarm circuit in each fan monitors the sensors. When
a sensor indicates a change in cabinet temperature, the circuit in a fan changes the speed for that fan.
A power cable from the power-distribution unit connects -48 VDC to each fan, +5 VDC to the speed
control and thermal alarm circuit in each fan, and temperature sensor signals to the equivalent circuit in
each fan. One pair of wires is routed to each fan circuit. Alarm signals are also routed to the equivalent
circuit in each fan. One pair of wires routes to each fan circuit.
A minor alarm is sent to the processor circuit pack in the PPN cabinet and the maintenance circuit pack in
an EPN cabinet if any fan’s speed drops below minimum. A minor alarm occurs if a fan stops due to loss
of -48 VDC. One of the cabinet top thermal sensors sends an alarm if the exhaust temperature reaches
149 oF (65oC).
Power requirements
336 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Another cabinet top sensor senses if the exhaust temperature reaches 158 oF (70 oC). If the temperature
reaches 158oF the system shuts down and the Emergency Transfer is invoked.
SCC1 fan unit
Four constant-speed fans at the top rear of the cabinet receive -48 VDC from the backplane. An air filter
is located below the fan unit. Air flows down through the filter over the circuit packs. The filter is
removable and can be cleaned or replaced when necessary.
If the cabinet temperature reaches 158o F (70o C), the temperature sensor in the power supply causes the
system to shut down and invokes the Emergency Transfer.
System protection
Protections are established to keep the switch active and on line. The following 4 types of system
protection are provided:
Overvoltage
Sneak current
Lightning
Earthquake
Protection from hazardous voltages
Protection from hazardous voltages and currents is required for all off-premises trunks, lines, and
terminal installations. Both over-voltage protection from lightning, power induction, and so on, and sneak
current protection are required.
Overvoltage protection
The following devices protect the system from over voltages:
Analog trunks use the 507B Sneak Protector. The local telephone company normally provides
over voltage protection.
Analog voice and 2-wire DCP terminals can use one of the following types of combined
protection against over voltage and sneak current or the equivalent of one of the following types:
Carbon block with heat coil for UL code 4B1C
Gas tube with heat coil for UL code 4B1E-W
Solid state with heat coil for UL code 4C1S
DCP and ISDN-BRI terminals use the solid state 4C3S-75 with heat coil protector, or equivalent.
DS1/E1/T1 circuits require isolation from exposed facilities. A CSU (T1), LIU (E1), or other
equipment provides this isolation.
Sneak current protection
Sneak current protection uses fuses to protect building wiring between the network interface and trunk
circuits when exposed to extraneous power. The fuses also protect the circuit packs.
Power requirements
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 337
December 2003
All incoming trunks and outgoing trunks and off-premises station lines pass through the sneak fuses.
507B Sneak fuse panels. These panels are install on the system side of the network interface.
Sneak current protectors must be either UL-listed or CSA-certified or must comply with local safety
standards. Sneak current protectors must have a maximum rating of 350 mA and a minimum voltage
rating of 600 V, or as required by local regulations.
Lightning protection
A Coupled Bonding Conductor (CBC) in the cabinet ground wiring protects the system from lightning.
The CBC runs adjacent to wires in a cable and causes mutual coupling between itself and the wires. The
mutual coupling reduces the voltage difference between ground and the switch.
Be sure that the CBC connects to telecommunication cable that is firmly connected to an approved
ground. In multiple-story buildings, be sure to connect the CBC to an approved ground at each floor.
The CBC can be a 10 AWG (5.3 mm2/2.6 mm) ground wire, a continuous cable sheath surrounding wires
within a cable, or six unused pairs of wire within a cable that are twisted and soldered together. The CBC
connects from the cabinet single-point ground bar in an AC-powered cabinet or the ground discharge bar
in a DC-powered cabinet to the terminal bar at the cross-connect field.
When there is an auxiliary cabinet, a 6 AWG (13.3 mm2/4.1 mm) wire connects the system cabinet
single-point ground block to the Auxiliary cabinet ground block. The ground wire routes as closely as
possible to the cables that connect the system cabinet to the Auxiliary cabinet.
If equipment is not present in the Auxiliary cabinet, plug the power supply for this equipment into one of
the two convenience outlets on the rear of the MCC1, to preserve ground integrity. The convenience
outlets are fused at 5 A. A dedicated maintenance terminal plugs into the other convenience outlet.
Earthquake protection
For earthquake or disaster bracing, the cabinets bolt to the floor. Other areas may require additional
bracing. Contact your Avaya representative for earthquake requirements at the location of the system
installation.
Temperature and humidity for DEFINITY
338 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Temperature and humidity for DEFINITY
Install the DEFINITY equipment in a well-ventilated area. Maximum equipment performance is
achieved at an ambient room temperature between 40 and 120o Fahrenheit (4o and 49o Celsius) for short
term operation (not more than 72 consecutive hours or 15 days in a year) and up to 110o Fahrenheit (43o
Celsius) for continuous operation.
The relative humidity range is 10 to 95 percent at up to 84o Fahrenheit (29o Celsius). Above 84 degrees
Fahrenheit the maximum relative humidity decreases from 95 percent down to 32 percent at 120o
Fahrenheit (49o Celsius). Installations outside these limits may reduce system life or impede operations.
The recommended temperature and humidity range is 65o to 85o Fahrenheit (18o to 29o Celsius) at 20 to
60 percent relative humidity.
The following table correlates room temperature with allowable relative humidity.
Table 24: Temperature and relative humidity
Recommended room
temperature (degrees Fahrenheit)
Recommended room
temperature (degrees
Celsius) Recommended
relative humidity (%)
40 to 84 4.4 to 28.8 10 to 95
86 30.0 10 to 89
88 31.1 10 to 83
90 32.2 10 to 78
92 33.3 10 to 73
94 34.4 10 to 69
96 35.6 10 to 65
98 36.7 10 to 61
100 37.8 10 to 58
102 38.9 10 to 54
104 40.0 10 to 51
106 41.1 10 to 48
108 42.2 10 to 45
110 43.3 10 to 43
112 44.4 10 to 40
114 45.6 10 to 38
116 46.7 10 to 36
118 47.8 10 to 34
120 48.9 10 to 32
Customer configurations
Small businesses
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 339
December 2003
Customer configurations
Small businesses
Figure 83: Small-business solution using the Avaya S8300 Media Server in the G700
Media Gateway
Figure notes
Number Description
1This figures shows a G700 Media Gateway with a S8300 Media Server installed in the
upper right hand slot. This configuration is using the T1/E1, DCP and analog media
modules.
2Ethernet Switch: Can be customer provided or Avaya™ provided. This device provides
for port multiplication by having more than one network segment.
3UPS: Avaya™ suggests a UPS be provided to allow for a graceful shutdown of the server
during a power outage.
4Analog connectivity such as, analog trunks, stations and lines.
5DCP phones: Avaya multifunction digital phones.
6T1/E1 connectivity:
The T1 (or T-1) carrier is the most commonly used digital line in the United
States, Canada and Japan.
The E1 (or E-1) is a European digital transmission format. It is the equivalent of
the North American T-carrier system format.
7Avaya IP telephones
LAN
V1
T1/E1
cydcsmos LJK 032302
1
2
3
5
7
PSTN
4
6
Customer configurations
Small businesses
340 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Figure 84: Small-business solution using the Avaya S8100 Media Server and the G600
Media Gateway
Figure notes
Number Description
1This figure shows the S8100 Media Server with a G600 Media Gateway: The S8100
Media Server is a two slot processor running the WINDOWS 2000 operating system
with co-resident applications such as Communication Manager, INTUITY™ AUDIX®
and Avaya Site Administration.
2DCP phones: Supports 2- and 4-wire Avaya multifunction phones.
3Analog connectivity such as, analog trunks, stations and FAX machines.
4IP phones: Avaya 4600-series phones.
5Voice Mail: Co-resident INTUITY™ AUDIX® eight port voice mail or an external
Voice Mail system (external shown).
6T1/E1 Capability:
The T1 (or T-1) carrier is the most commonly used digital line in the United
States, Canada, or Japan.
The E1 (or E-1) carrier is a European digital transmission format. It is the
equivalent of the North American T-carrier system format.
LAN
T1/E1
cydcsmmv LJK 032302
Co-resident
Voice Mail
PSTN
1
2
3
4
5
6
Medium-sized business solution
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 341
December 2003
Medium-sized business solution
Figure 85: Medium-sized business solution using the Avaya S8500 Media Server and the
G650 Media Gateway
Figure notes
Number Description
1S8500 Media Server
2Ethernet Switch: A device that provides for port multiplication by having more than
one network segment. The Ethernet Switch could be provided by Avaya or already
exists in the customer’s network.
3UPS: Used to provide power during an outage and allow for a graceful shutdown of the
server.
4G650 Media Gateways: Connected to the S8500 Media Server by IP.
5DCP phones: Supports 2- and 4-wire Avaya multifunction phones.
6IP phones: Avaya 4600-series IP phones.
7Analog connectivity such as analog stations, lines, trunks and FAX machines
8T1/E1 Connectivity:
The T1 (or T-1) carrier is the most commonly used digital line in the United
States, Canada, and Japan.
The E1 (or E-1) carrier is a European digital transmission format. It is the
equivalent of the North American T-carrier system format.
9Wireless
10 Voice Mail System: INTUITY™ AUDIX® is shown connecting via IP.
LAN
PSTN
1
2
3
INTUITY
Voice Mail
cydcg600 LJK 032402
T1/E1
46
7
8
9
10
5
disc
Large businesses
342 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Large businesses
Figure 86: Large-business solution using the Avaya S8700 Media Server and the MCC1
Media Gateway
Figure notes
Number Description
1The S8700 Media Server and a MCC1 Media Gateway
2Ethernet must be Avaya provided.
3UPS: Provides power hold over when commercial power shuts down. The UPS units
are duplicated in this configuration (one for each server).
4Modems for services access.
5Services connectivity.
6Dedicated LAN A for control data.
7Dedicated LAN B for control data.
8Port networks consisting of G650 Media Gateways.
9DCP Phones: Avaya multifunction digital terminals.
10 Analog connectivity such as, analog phones, FAX machines and trunks.
LAN/WAN
PSTN
IPSI
CLAN
A
B
IPSI
IP Media
Processor
4
5
6
7
8
1
2
3
A
B
9
10
12
T1/E1
CMS INTUITY
Voice Mail
11
13 14
cymsmult LAO 072903
Large businesses
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 343
December 2003
11 T1/E1 Connectivity:
The T1 (or T-1) carrier is the most commonly used digital line in the United
States, Canada and Japan.
The E1 (or E-1) carrier is a European digital transmission format. It is the
equivalent of the North American T-carrier system format.
12 IP phones: Avaya 4600-series IP phones.
13 Avaya Call Management System (CMS): Used in a call center environment to collect
and store data for reports and management.
14 Voice Mail: INTUITY™ AUDIX® shown in this configuration connecting via IP.
Figure notes
Number Description
Branch Office and Multi-Site Configurations
344 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Branch Office and Multi-Site Configurations
Branch Office Configuration
A remote branch office location is a part of a larger enterprise network. In this configuration the S8700
Media Server resides in the main location and controls the G700 Media Gateway in the remote location.
It is highly desirable for the branch office to be survivable in the event of lost connectivity to the S8700
Media Server. Survivability is accomplished with the use of the S8300 Media Server in an LSP
configuration
Branch Office and Multi-Site Configurations
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 345
December 2003
Figure 87: Branch Office Configuration
Figure notes
Number Description
1Duplicated S8700 Media Servers
2Ethernet switch must be Avaya provided.
3UPS units: Two UPS units one for each server.
4G650 Media Gateways
5LAN connectivity to the IPSI in the G650 Media Gateway.
6IP Phones off of the customer’s LAN
7Voice Mail: INTUITY™ AUDIX® shown connected via IP.
8The G700 Media Gateway is connected via the LAN to the C-LAN board located in the
G650 Media Gateway. The S8300 Media Server in an LSP configuration is located in
the G700 Media Gateway. In the event of a loss in communication between the S8700
and the G700 the LSP will provide a backup for the endpoints that register with it.
9DCP Phones: Avaya Multi-Function Digital Phones.
10 Analog connectivity such as, analog phones, lines and trunks.
LAN
CLAN
A
IPSI
IP Media
Processor
1
11
3
A
Voice Mail
cymsrbro LAO 072903
V1
4
5
6
8
9
10
7
2
Branch Office and Multi-Site Configurations
346 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Multi-Site Environment
The following figure shows the S8700 Media Server (top middle) connected to two sites with S8300
Media Servers in G700 Media Gateways.
Figure 88: Multi-Site Configuration
In a multi-site environment there are a number of standalone solutions connected together using protocols
such as QSIG or DCS. Each location has it’s own processing capability and separate managed
configurations. These configurations can be a mix of different solutions. Voice mail can be shared or
connected to a network.
LAN LAN
LANLAN
cymsmse2 LAO 072903
PSTN PSTN
WAN
V1 V1
Index
Numerics
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 347
December 2003
Index
Numerics
4-wire S/T-NT interfaces,181
4C3S-75 solid state protectors,336
1217A Power Supply,173
48-VDC batteries,325
507B sneak fuse panels,336, 337
631DA1/B1 AC power units,173, 323
649A DC power units,174, 331
676B DC power units,334
676C DC Power,177
982LS Current Limiter for DEFINITY SI,177
A
AC power
battery chargers,324
circuit breakers,323
distribution units,324
grounding,332
power feeders,319
supply
WP-91153,333
units
631DA1/B1,173, 323
acoustic noise levels,319
Adjunct Systems,56
Analog Trunk/Telephone Media Module (MM711),48
approved grounds,332
AS1 UPS
1500VA 120V,288
1500VA 230V,288
700 VA 120V,287
700VA 230V,287
Add-on Modules,289
ASB button,125
ATM
switch,89
ATM-CES,119
ATM-PNC,119
auxiliary cabinets,100
Avaya Solutions
Large Business,342
Medium Sized Business,340, 341
Small Business,339
Avaya Telephones
Analog,276
2500 and 2554,276
2520B,279
6211,277
6219,278
Attendant Consoles,274
302D,274
Softconsole,275
Digital Communications Protocol (DCP) Telephone
2402,267
Digital Telephones,267
2420,268
6402 and 6402D,268
6408D+,269
6416D+M,270
6424D+M,271
Callmaster IV,272
Callmaster V,273
Callmaster VI,273
IP Telephones
4602,259
4602SW,260
4606,260
4610SW,261
4612,262
4620,263
4620SW,264
4624,264
4630,266
Wireless,279
Transtalk 9040,279
B
backup power,325, 327
batteries
48 VDC,325
chargers,325
small assemblies,327
BCCs (J58890L),99
C
cabinets
AC-powered,333
auxiliary (J58886N),161
CBCs,333
cooling fans,335
DC-powered,337
dimensions/clearances,317
earthquake protections,337
lightning protection,337
power sources,319
CallVisor ASAI,152, 177
CBCs,333, 337
CC port,125
center stage switches,88
CFY1B Current Limiter for DEFINITY R,177
Index
D
348 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
CFY1B current limiters,171
circuit breakers,323, 325
circuit packs
sneak current protection,336
CMC1 Media Gateway,147
CMC1 Media Gateway for DEFINITY CSI,30
CMCs (J58890T),99
dimensions,317
fan units,335
commercial floor loading code,318
CON port,125
concrete encased grounds,332
conduit, as ground,333
cooling fans,335
corrosive gas contaminants,316
coupled bonding conductor (for grounding),333
CSS,117, 118
Current Limiter,177
current limiters
CFY1B,171
Customer Configuration Options for the S8300 Media
Server with G700 Media Gateway,55
D
DC power
circuit breakers,323
distribution units
J58890CF,329
J58890CG,334
grounding,332
relays,325, 326
requirements,322, 329
units
649A,174, 331
676B,334
DCP Media Module (MM712),49
DEFINITY CSI
Detailed description,29
Overview,29
overview,29
Reliability and recovery,30
Required System Components,29
CMC1 Media Gateway,30
TN2182 Tone Clock,30
TN2402 Processor board,29
DEFINITY R
Adjunct Systems,121
Cabinets,111
Multicarrier cabinets (MCC1s),112
Single-carrier cabinets (SCC1s),111
Carriers,111
Connectivity,115
ATM,119
ATM WAN spare processors
ATM WAN spare processors,119
TCP/IP,116
Detailed description,108
Optional Components
ATM Switch,119
Center Stage Switch (CSS),117
Expansion Port Network,113
IP Solutions,113
Overview,107
Port Network,110
Processor Port Network and Switch Processing
Element,109
Reliability,120
DEFINITY Server CSI
Adapter,249
Avaya Telephones,249
Analog,250
Consoles,250
Digital,249
Explosive Atmosphere,250
IP,249
SoundStation,250
Wireless,250
Circuit Packs,247
Application,248
Control,248
Line,247
Port,249
Power,247
Service,248
Trunk,247
Media Gateways,247
DEFINITY Server R
Avaya Telephones,257
Analog,258
Consoles,258
Digital,258
Explosive Atmosphere,258
IP,257
Wireless,258
Circuit Packs,255
Application,257
Control,256
Line,255
Port,257
Power,255
Trunk,256
Cirucit Packs
Service,257
Media Gateways,255
DEFINITY Server SI
Avaya Telephones,253
Analog,254
Consoles,254
Digital,254
Explosive Atmosphere,254
IP,253
SoundStation,254
Wireless,254
Circuit Packs,251
Application,253
Control,252
Line,251
Port,253
Power,251
Service,253
Index
E
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 349
December 2003
Trunk,252
Media Gateways,251
DEFINITY SI
Adjunct Systems,32, 94, 106
Cabinets,99
Multicarrier cabinets (MCC1s),100
Single-carrier cabinet (SCC1),99
Carriers,99
Connectivity,103
C-LAN,103, 116
IP Asynchronous Links,104, 116
TCP/IP,103
Detailed description,96
H.323 IP Trunk,103, 115
IP Trunk,103, 115
Network Control/Packet Interface,101
Optional Components,101
Expansion Port Network,101
IP Media Processor,101
IP Solutions,101
Port Network,98
Processor Port Network and Switch Processing
Element,97
Reliability,105
Required System Components,96
System capacity,105
DIGITAL Server R
Avaya Telephones
SoundStation,258
duplicated control cabinets (J58890M),99
duplication interfaces
UN330B,212
E
earth,332
earthquake protections,337
electrical components, power distribution units,324
EMI filters,326
enhanced DC rectifier cabinet,334
EPN cabinets (J58890A),100, 163
EPNs,101
Ethernet Switch for S8700 Multi-Connect,72
expansion control cabinets
J58890AF,163
SCCs,99
expansion port carriers (J58890BB),163
F
Features,123
Fixed ports
CC,125
CON,125
LAN 1,125
LINE 2,125
LINE1,125
TRK,125
USB,125
WAN 1,125
floor grounds,333
floor loads,318
Front panel buttons,125
fuse panels (J58889AB),161
fuses
20-amp,326
sneak current protectors,337
G
G350
features,123
G600 Media Gateway,127
G700 Media Gateway,41, 139
Cabling,44, 142
Expansion Module,43, 140
Gateway Software,45, 144
LEDs,45, 143
Maintenance Software,46, 144
Media Modules,46
Motherboard,44, 142
Power Supply,44, 142
Stacking Module,44, 142
System-Level LEDs,45, 143
G700 Media Gateway for S8700 Multi-Connect,79
ground isolation,330
ground ring,332
ground wiring,323
grounding, AC and DC,332, 333
H
hardware
center stage switches,88
humidity,338
I
international requirements,322, 329
IP Server Interface for S8700 Multi-Connect,71
IP Solutions,101, 113
implementation,102, 114
trunks
H.323,103, 115
IPSI for S8700 Multi-Connect,71
isolator interfaces,330
J
J58886N auxiliary cabinets,161
J58889AB fuse panels,161
J58890A EPN/PPN cabinet,163
J58890AF expansion control cabinets,163
J58890AP processor carriers,166
J58890BB port carriers,161, 163
Index
K
350 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
J58890CE-2 AC power distribution units/battery
chargers,324
J58890CF-2 DC power distribution units,329
J58890CG DC power distribution units,334
J58890CH-1 AC power distribution units,327
J58890H port cabinets,99
J58890L BCCs,99
J58890R enhanced DC rectifier cabinets,334
J58890SA SN carriers,164
K
KS-21906, L9 48 VDC battery,325
L
LAN 1 port,125
large battery power backup,328
lightning protection,337
LINE 1 port,125
LINE 2 port,125
Local Survivable Processor (LSP),50
M
MCC1 Media Gateway,159, 164
MCC1 Media Gateway for S8700 Multi-Connect,75
MCCs (multicarrier cabinets)
auxiliary cabinets,161
carrier types,100
DC power distribution,330
fan units,335
ground integrity,337
power distribution,326, 327
power systems,323
Media Gateway
CMC1,147
G600,127
G700,139
MCC1,159
SCC1,150
Media Gateways for S8700 Multi-Connect,73
Media Module
Analog,222
BRI,226
DCP,224
T1/E1,219
VoIP,228
Media Module LEDs,45, 143
Media Modules,46
Analog Trunk/Telephone Media Module
(MM711),47, 48
DCP Media Module (MM712),49
T1/E1 Media Module (MM710),47
VoIP Media Module (MM760),50
MM 712 DCP Media Module,49
MM710,219
MM710 T1/E1 Media Module,47
MM711,222
MM711 Analog Trunk/Telephone Media Module,48
MM712,224
MM720,226
MM760,228
MM760 VoIP Media Module,50
Modem for S8700 Multi-Connect,73
N
NAA1 Fiber Optic Cable Adaptor (CMC1 Media
Gateway),178
non-US power requirements,322, 329
O
overvoltage protections,336
P
P133G2 and P134G2
Features,297
Agency Approval,298
Environmental Information,298
Interfaces,298
Physical Characteristics,298
Power Consumption,298
Supported Standards,298
Overview,297
P133G2 Ethernet Switch,297
P134G2 Ethernet Swtich,297
P330 Ethernet Switch,291
Features,291
Auto-Negotiation,292
Backup Power Supply,294
CajunView,295
Command Line Interface,295
Congestion Control,292
Device Manager,295
Fans,294
Intermodule Redundancy,294
IP Multicast Filtering,293
Leaky VLANs,292
Link Aggregation Group,293
MAC Security,293
Multiple VLANs per Port,292
Network Management,295
Network Management Agent Redundancy,294
Network Monitoring,296
Network TIME Acquiring Protocols,293
Port Classification,292
Port Mirroring,296
Port Redundancy,293
Radius Security,293
SMON,296
Index
R
Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 351
December 2003
Software Download,294
Stack Redundancy,294
Standards,295
VLANs,292
peripherals, ground isolation,330
pipe grounds,332
port cabinets,99
port carriers,161, 163
power
backup,326, 327
current limited,171
DC requirements,322, 329
feeders,319
global requirements,322, 329
outages,89
sources,319
transformers,333
Power Backup for S8700 Multi-Connect,73
power converters
631DA1/B1,173, 323
649A,174, 331
Power Supply, AC, WP-1217A,173
power units
AC 631DA1/B1,173, 323
J58890CE-2,324
DC
649A,174, 331
676B,334
distribution,324
distribution (J58890CH-1),327
electrical components,324
inputs,323
outputs,324
PPNs
cabinets,100
processors
J58890AP carriers,166
protections, system,336
protective grounds,332
R
relays, DC power,325, 326
requirements
international,322
ring generators,326
RST button,125
Russia
MFR (TN2182C),197
MFR (TN744B/C/D),130, 184
S
S8100 Media Server
Adapters,231
Administration,36
Avaya Telephones,231
Analog,232
Consoles,232
Digital Telephones,231
Explosive Atmosphere Telephones,232
IP Telephones,231
Soundstation Speakerphones,232
Wireless,232
Circuit Packs,229
Application,231
Control,230
Line,229
Port,231
Power,229
Service,230
Trunk,230
CMC1 Media Gateway,35
Detailed Description,33
G600 Media Gateway,34
Main components,34
Media Gateways,229
MultiVantage Software,37
Overview,33
Recoverability,36
Reliability,35
S8100 Media Server Optional Components,229
S8300 Media Server
Avaya Telephones,233
Analog Telephones,234
Digital Telephones,233
IP Telephones,233
SoundStation,234
Wireless,234
Media Gateways,233
S8300 Media Server in a Local Survivable Processor
Mode with an S8700 Multi-Connect,89
S8300 Media Server in an LSP Configuration,50
S8300 Media Server Web Interface,56
S8300 Media Server with G700 Media Gateway
Configuration Description,39
Customer Configuration Options,55
Detailed Description,39
Media Server Web Interface,56
Overview,39
S8300 Media Server in an LSP Configuration,50
System Management,55
S8700 Media Server,71
Circuit Packs
Line,235, 239
Trunk,236, 239
S8700 Media Server IP Connect
Avaya Telephones,237, 241
Analog,238, 241
Consoles,238, 242
Digital,238, 241
Explosive Atmosphere,238, 241
IP,237, 241
SoundStation,238, 241
Wireless,238, 241
Circuit Packs,235, 239
Application,237, 240
Control,236, 240
Port,237, 240
Index
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352 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003
Service,237, 240
Media Gateways,235, 239
S8700 Media Server Multi-Connect
Avaya Telephones,245
Analog,246
Consoles,246
Digital,246
Explosive Atmosphere,246
IP,245
SoundStation,246
Wireless,246
Circuit Packs,243
Application,245
Control,244
Line,243
Port,245
Power,243
Service,245
Trunk,244
Media Gateways,243
S8700 Multi-Connect
Communication Complex Configuration,71
Connectivity,88
ATM Network,89
CSS Network,88
Detailed Description,70
Ethernet Switch,72
G700 Media Gateway,79
High-level capabilities,90
IP Server Interface (TN2312AP),71
MCC1 Media Gateway,75
Media Gateways,73
Overview,70
Recoverability,89
Reliability,83, 88, 89
Critical Reliability,88
Duplex Reliability,83
High Reliability,85
Required System Components,70
S8300 Media Server in a Local Survivable Processor
Mode,89
S8700 Media Server,71
SCC1 Media Gateway,77
Survivable Remote EPN,90
System Capacity,91
System Management,93
UPS or Power Backup,73
USB Modem,73
S8700 Multi-Connect Connectivity,88
ATM Network,89
CSS Network,88
S8700 Multi-Connect Detailed Description,70
S8700 Multi-Connect Recoverability,89
S8700 Multi-Connect Reliability,83, 88, 89
Critical Reliability,88
Duplex Reliability,83
High Reliability,85
S8700 Required System Components,70
SCC1 Media Gateway,150
SCC1 Media Gateway for S8700 Multi-Connect,77
SCCs (single carrier cabinets)
acoustic noise levels,319
DC power supply (676B),334
fan units,336
power systems,333
SCSI drives,196
single point ground terminals,333
small battery power backup,327
SN carriers,164
SN clock circuit packs,182
sneak fuse panels (507B),337
sneak protectors,336
SNIs (TN573/B),170, 182
solid state voltage protection,336
SPEs,98, 110
Survivable Remote EPN in an S8700 Multi-Connect,90
system
protections,336
T
T1/E1 Media Module (MM710),47
TCP/IP
connectivity
C-LAN,193
terminals
grounding,333
TN1648 System Access and Maintenance
(SYSAM),194
TN1650B Memory for DEFINITY R,195
TN1654 DS1 Converter, T1 (24 channel) and E1 (32
channel),195
TN1655 Packet Interface for DEFINITY R,195
TN1657 Disk Drive for DEFINITY R,196
TN2138 CO Trunk for Italy (8 ports),196
TN2139 DID Trunk for Italy (8 ports),196
TN2140BTie Trunk for Hungary and Italy (4-wire, 4
ports),196
TN2146 DID Trunk for Belgium and the Netherlands (8
port),196
TN2147C CO Trunk for Multiple Countries (8 ports),197
TN2181 DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 16 ports),197
TN2182C Tone-Clock, Tone Detector, and Call Classifier
(8 ports),197
TN2183/TN2215 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16
ports),202
TN2184 DIOD Trunk for Germany (4 ports),198
TN2185 ISDN-BRI S/T-TE Interface (4-wire),198
TN2198 ISDN-BRI U Interface (2-wire),199
TN2199 CO Trunk for Russia (3-wire, 4 ports),199
TN2202 Ring Generator for France,200
TN2207 DS1 Interface, T1 (24-channel) and E1 (32-
channel),200
TN2209 Tie Trunk for Russia (4-wire, 4 ports),200
TN2211 Optical Drive for DEFINITY R,201
TN2214B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports),201
TN2215/TN2183 Analog Line for Multiple Countries (16
ports),202
TN2224B DCP Digital Line (2-wire, 24 ports),203
TN2242 Digital Trunk (Japan 2MB TTC),203
TN2301 Logic Switch for DEFINITY R,203
TN2302 IP media processor,203
TN2302AP IP Media Processor,203
Index
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Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager 353
December 2003
TN2305 ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for
Muti-Mode Fiber,204
TN2306 ATM-CES Trunk/Port-Network Interface for Sin-
gle-Mode Fiber,204
TN2308 DID Trunk for Brazil (8 ports),204
TN2313AP DS1 interface,207
TN2313AP DS1 Interface (24-channel),207
TN2314 S8100 Media Server,129, 207
TN2401 Net/Pkt,208
TN2401 Network Control/Packet Interface for DEFINITY
SI,208
TN2401/2400 Net/Pkt sandwich board,208
TN2401/TN2400 Net/Pkt Interface sandwich board
assembly for DEFINITY SI/I upgrades,208
TN2402 Processor for DEFINITY CSI,208
TN2404 Processor for DEFINITY SI,209
TN2464BP DS1 Interface with Echo Cancellation, T1/
E1,209
TN2501AP Voice Announcements over LAN (VAL),210
TN2793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports),210
TN572 SN clock,182
TN573/B SNI,182
TN2202 ring generator,326
TN429D DIOD or Central Office Trunk (8 ports),178
TN433 speech synthesizer Italy,178
TN436B DID Trunk for Australia (8 ports),178
TN438B CO trunk for Australia (8 port),178
TN439 Tie Trunk for Australia and Japan,178
TN457 Speech Synthesizer for British English,179
TN459B DID Trunk for the United Kingdom,179
TN464C/D/E/F DS1 Interface,179
TN465C CO Trunk for Multiple Countries (8 port),180
TN479 Analog Line (16 ports),180
TN497 Tie Trunk for Italy TGU, TGE, and TGI (4
ports),180
TN553 Packet Data Line,181
TN556D ISDN-BRI 4-Wire Interface (12 ports),181
TN568 DEFINITY AUDIX 4.0 Voice Mail System,181
TN570D Expansion Interface,182
TN572 Switch-Node Clock for DEFINITY R,182
TN573/B SNI,170
TN573B Switch Node Interface,182
TN577 Packet Gateway (PGATE),182
TN725B Speech Synthesizer for United States
English,183
TN726B Data Line (8 ports),183
TN735 MET Line (4 ports),183
TN744E Call Classifier Tone Detector for Multiple Coun-
tries (8 ports),130, 184
TN746B Analog Line (16 ports),184
TN747B CO Trunk (8 ports),185
TN750C Recorded Announcement (16 channels),185
TN753B DID Trunk (8 ports),186
TN755B Neon Power Unit,186
TN758 Pooled Modem,187
TN760E Tie Trunk (4-wire, 4 ports),187
TN762B Hybrid Line (8 ports),187
TN763D Auxiliary Trunk (4 ports),187
TN767E DS1 Interface, T1 (24 channel),187
TN769 Analog Line (8 ports),188
TN771DP Maintenance/Test,189
TN771DP maintenance/test board with firmware
download,189
TN775C Maintenance board,189
TN780 Tone Clock,190
TN787K Multimedia Interface,190
TN788C Multimedia Voice Conditioner,190
TN789B Radio Controller,191
TN791 Analog Guest Line (16 ports),191
TN792 Duplication Interface for TN2404 Processor for
DEFINITY SI,192
TN793B Analog Line with Caller ID (24 ports),192
TN797 US Analog Trunk or Line Circuit Pack (8
ports),193
TN799/B/C CLAN interface,193
TN801 LAN Gateway interface,194
TN801 MAPD (LAN Gateway Interface),194
TN801B MAPD LAN Gateway Interface,177
TN802B MAPD IP Interface Assembly,194
TN-C7 ISDN-PRI to SS7 Converter,211
TNCCSC-1 ISDN-PRI to DASS Converter,211
TNCCSC-2 ISDN-PRI to DPNSS Converter,211
TNCCSC-3 ISDN-PRI to DPNSS Converter,211
TN-CIN Voice/Fax/Data Multiplexer,211
TRK port,125
trunks
H.323,103, 115
U
UN330B duplication,212
UN330B Duplication Interface for DEFINITY R,212
UN331C Processor for DEFINITY R,212
UN332C Mass Storage/Network Control for DEFINITY
R,213
UPS,325, 327
UPS for S8700 Multi-Connect,73
USB Modem for S8700 Multi-Connect,73
USB port,125
V
VoIP Media Module (MM760),50
W
WAN 1 port,125
WP-1217A Power Supply,173
WP-91153 AC power,333
Index
W
354 Hardware Guide for Avaya Communication Manager
December 2003

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