G
Gavin Henry
Guest
Hi,
Would this work where the source is of lower impedance than what the pbx
expects?
Thanks.
Would this work where the source is of lower impedance than what the pbx
expects?
Thanks.
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It's just a bog standard headphone connector/cable, the sort you'd plug"Gavin Henry" <ghenry@ghenry.co.uk> wrote in message
news:VJ6dnY117eeOW-rVnZ2dnUVZ8uCdnZ2d@posted.plusnet...
Hi,
Would this work where the source is of lower impedance than what the pbx
expects?
Thanks.
What is the connection? Is it 2WEM, 4WEM, POTS? What's the loop length?
If it's a short loop, and you get the levels correct, it shouldn't matter.
Bob
As long as you can set the signal amplitude to what you want, the impedanceHi,
Would this work where the source is of lower impedance than what the pbx
expects?
Thanks.
Hi,"Gavin Henry" <ghenry@ghenry.co.uk> wrote in message
news:_PudnbAHKppwU-rVnZ2dnUVZ8q2dnZ2d@posted.plusnet...
BobW wrote:
"Gavin Henry" <ghenry@ghenry.co.uk> wrote in message
news:VJ6dnY117eeOW-rVnZ2dnUVZ8uCdnZ2d@posted.plusnet...
Hi,
Would this work where the source is of lower impedance than what the pbx
expects?
Thanks.
What is the connection? Is it 2WEM, 4WEM, POTS? What's the loop length?
If it's a short loop, and you get the levels correct, it shouldn't
matter.
Bob
It's just a bog standard headphone connector/cable, the sort you'd plug
into a mp3 player etc.
"600ohms" refers to the characteristic impedance of a twisted pair of
standard telephony wire at audio frequencies. It doesn't sound like you're
interfacing directly with a twisted pair circuit, so its characteristic
impedance doesn't apply to what you're doing.
If you can provide some more details then we can help you make the right
decision.
Bob
Will do!"Gavin Henry" <ghenry@ghenry.co.uk> wrote in message
news:4-udnSxVrYKAd-rVnZ2dnUVZ8v3inZ2d@posted.plusnet...
BobW wrote:
"Gavin Henry" <ghenry@ghenry.co.uk> wrote in message
news:_PudnbAHKppwU-rVnZ2dnUVZ8q2dnZ2d@posted.plusnet...
BobW wrote:
"Gavin Henry" <ghenry@ghenry.co.uk> wrote in message
news:VJ6dnY117eeOW-rVnZ2dnUVZ8uCdnZ2d@posted.plusnet...
Hi,
Would this work where the source is of lower impedance than what the
pbx expects?
Thanks.
What is the connection? Is it 2WEM, 4WEM, POTS? What's the loop length?
If it's a short loop, and you get the levels correct, it shouldn't
matter.
Bob
It's just a bog standard headphone connector/cable, the sort you'd plug
into a mp3 player etc.
"600ohms" refers to the characteristic impedance of a twisted pair of
standard telephony wire at audio frequencies. It doesn't sound like
you're interfacing directly with a twisted pair circuit, so its
characteristic impedance doesn't apply to what you're doing.
If you can provide some more details then we can help you make the right
decision.
Bob
Hi,
Thanks. On proprietry PBX and some Open Source ones, they can either serve
up music for when a call is on hold from local storage or an external
source. Most PBXes can take input sources in the range of
600 Ohm to 20K.
The appliance I am looking at is:
http://www.pikatechnologies.com/english/View.asp?x=608
and its audio chip is:
http://www.asahi-kasei.co.jp/akm/en/product/ak2306lv/ak2306lv.html
The appliance states an output impedance of 100 Ohm:
http://outgoingftp.pikatech.com/appliance/1.0/Docs/html/hardware_appliance/frames.html?frmname=topic&frmfile=index.html
But the chip can be set to provide different outputs.
Thanks.
Gavin,
Thanks for the additional info. I'm not sure what your whole hookup is, but
if this Pika device is the source for the music-on-hold signal then its
output impedance is fine for driving your PBX. Even if the PBX says it takes
"input sources in the range of 600-20Kohms", in reality, it will work with a
source of ANY output impedance as long as you get the levels correct.
I'd say just hook it up, get the levels right, and then go out and have some
fun.
You know, since I started computers late, around 2000 (actually did a
From my experience, PBXs will take just about anything as their MOHHi,
Would this work where the source is of lower impedance than what the pbx
expects?
Thanks.