Section 4 INSTALLATION & BASIC OPERATION
72
Your second call could be to our test line. It is set for Layer 3 DUAL/MONO transmit. It
may be called by a mono or a stereo unit, at either 56 or 64kbps set to L3 Mono Rcv
(only one call required) or L3 Stereo Rcv (both calls must be made) at 32kHz sample
rate.
The numbers are:
+1 216 781.9310
+1 216 781.9311
If you are able to call locally, but are unable to connect a long- distance call, you may
want to try another long distance carrier. Just as with voice lines, you may choose a
carrier on a per- call basis by prefixing the number with the 10XXX carrier selection
code.
Some carriers and codes that we’ve tried are:
❑
AT&T
10288
❑
MCI
10222
❑
Sprint 10333
You must dial the full number, including the 1 or 011 + country code following the
prefix.
If none of the foregoing helps, see section 5 (ISDN), section 8 (Detailed Menu
Reference), and section 10 (Advanced Problem Solving).
Dropping The Connection
To release the connection, press the <DROP> button.
Drop: [ BOTH LINES ]
<NO> or <DROP>
Zephyr tries to guess whether you want to drop one line or both, depending upon the
Xmt and Rcv modes. In this case, the modes are Stereo, and
BOTH LINES
has been
selected for you. If this is OK, just press the <
DROP
> button again to go ahead and do it.
If you wanted to be selective, you could have chosen
LINE 1
or
LINE 2
for the Drop
parameter before pressing the <
DROP
> button the by pressing the <
NO -
>botton.
IMPORTANT!
Be sure both lines are dropped, indicated by both Line lights
being extinguished. Phone charges can add up quickly on long
distance calls!
Summary of Contents for Zephyr
Page 13: ...Table of Contents 13 SECTION 1 QUICK RESULTS ...
Page 26: ...Section 2 INTRODUCTION 26 This page intentially left blank ...
Page 27: ...Section 2 INTRODUCTION 27 SECTION 2 INTRODUCTION ...
Page 38: ...Section 2 INTRODUCTION 38 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 39: ...39 SECTION 3 ZEPHYR AT A GLANCE ...
Page 52: ...Section 4 INSTALLATION BASIC OPERATION 52 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 53: ...Section 4 INSTALLATION BASIC OP 53 SECTION 4 INSTALLATION BASIC OPERATION ...
Page 84: ...Section 4 INSTALLATION BASIC OPERATION 84 ...
Page 85: ...Section 5 ISDN 85 SECTION 5 ISDN ...
Page 105: ...Section 6 NON ISDN NETWORKS 105 SECTION 7 AUDIO CODING ...
Page 118: ...Section 7 AUDIO CODING PRINCIPLES 118 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 119: ...Section 8 DETAILED MENU REFERENCE 119 SECTION 8 DETAILED MENU REFERENCE ...
Page 157: ...Section 9 REMOTE CONTROL 157 SECTION 9 REMOTE CONTROL ...
Page 176: ...Section 9 REMOTE CONTROL 176 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 177: ...Section 10 ADVANCED PROBLEM SOLVING 177 SECTION 10 ADVANCED PROBLEM SOLVING ...
Page 196: ...Section 10 ADVANCED PROBLEM SOLVING 196 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 197: ...Section 11 TECHNICAL INFORMATION 197 SECTION 11 DETAILED TECHNICAL INFORMATION ...
Page 219: ...Section 12 SCHEMATICS 219 SECTION 12 SCHEMATICS ...
Page 221: ...Section 13 MANUFACTURER S DATA SHEETS 221 SECTION 13 MANUFACTURER S DATA SHEETS ...
Page 223: ...Section 14 SPECIFICATIONS WARRANTY 223 SECTION 14 SPECIFICATIONS AND WARRANTY ...
Page 228: ...228 This page intentionally left blank ...
Page 229: ...Section 15 APPENDICES 229 SECTION 15 APPENDICES ...