Maybe you can suggest to them to run fiber between the buildings to improve 
data connectivity and then use the CAT6 for the phone line?

 

Thank you,

Brian Webster

www.wirelessmapping.com

 

From: AF [mailto:af-boun...@af.afmug.com] On Behalf Of Craig Baird
Sent: Friday, March 4, 2022 11:02 AM
To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] POTS line over IP network?

 

Thanks Daniel. This looks like exactly what I was looking for. I think I'll 
grab these and give it a try, if for nothing else than just to learn something 
new. If for some reason it doesn't work out, I can look at other options like 
running wire outside the building.

 

Craig

 

 

On Thu, Mar 3, 2022 at 12:38 PM Daniel White <dwh...@atheral.com> wrote:

I've not personally done this, but I'd be a Grandstream HT801 for the FXS port 
and a Grandstream HT813 for the FXO port would work.

This document outlines the config - 
https://www.grandstream.com/hubfs/Product_Documentation/Peering_HT8XX_with_HT813.pdf?hsLang=en

 


 photograph 
<https://atheral.co/wp-content/uploads/Atheral-Logo-Vertical-Grad-150px-x-86px.png>
 


Daniel White
Co-Founder


phone: +1 (702) 470-2770
direct: +1 (702) 470-2766

        
        

 <mailto:af@af.afmug.com> Chuck McCown via AF

March 3, 2022 at 11:06

I have done it with FXS to FXO ATAs.  

 

From: dmmoff...@gmail.com 

Sent: Thursday, March 3, 2022 10:55 AM

To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' 

Subject: Re: [AFMUG] POTS line over IP network?

 

Yeah.  The Linksys/Sipura SPA equipment could do that.  You’d get a device with 
the FXO port on one end (I think SPA3000) and then an ATA at the other end.  

I don’t think that feature set survived the transition to Cisco…..I’m afraid I 
don’t know the modern equivalent.

 

Adtran Total Access can do that too, but that’s an expensive solution for a 
gift shop.

 

Asterisk boxes with an FXO card on one end and FXS card on the other…..a little 
creativity with the dialplan and you’re off to the races.  That might be cheap 
enough, but this may not be practical for everyone.  I’m pretty certain it 
would work, it would just burn a lot of your time.

 

I’d hope somebody here knows the current good/cheap option, but I’m afraid I 
don’t.

 

 

 

From: AF  <mailto:af-boun...@af.afmug.com> <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf 
Of Craig Baird
Sent: Thursday, March 03, 2022 12:48 PM
To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group  <mailto:af@af.afmug.com> <af@af.afmug.com>
Subject: [AFMUG] POTS line over IP network?

 

Is anyone aware of a device that will take a POTS line from the telco, convert 
it to IP, and then somewhere on the network convert it back into a normal 
analog POTs line to plug into an analog handset?

 

Basically, I have a customer who owns a gift shop. They have a restaurant in a 
separate building behind the gift shop. Currently, they have a POTS line that 
is strung from the demarc, and across the ceiling of the gift shop. At the 
rear, it exits the gift shop and makes its way into the restaurant where it 
eventually plugs into a phone. They want to get rid of the wire that runs 
across the ceiling because it looks crazy stupid. Unfortunately, there's a 
reason the wire was originally run that way--there isn't really another way to 
get it to the restaurant without tearing a bunch of stuff apart (lack of attic 
and crawlspace). However, I do have an ethernet network in place between the 
two buildings, and can relatively easily get a wire from the demarc to a 
network switch.

 

So, what I'm envisioning is a pair of boxes. One of the boxes plugs into 
Ethernet has an FXS port to plug in the POTS line. The other box, also plugs 
into Ethernet and has an FXO port to plug in the phone. They see each other 
over the IP network, and magically transport the POTS line to where it needs to 
be.

 

Do such devices exist?

 

Craig

 


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 <mailto:dmmoff...@gmail.com> dmmoff...@gmail.com

March 3, 2022 at 10:55

Yeah.  The Linksys/Sipura SPA equipment could do that.  You’d get a device with 
the FXO port on one end (I think SPA3000) and then an ATA at the other end.  

I don’t think that feature set survived the transition to Cisco…..I’m afraid I 
don’t know the modern equivalent.

 

Adtran Total Access can do that too, but that’s an expensive solution for a 
gift shop.

 

Asterisk boxes with an FXO card on one end and FXS card on the other…..a little 
creativity with the dialplan and you’re off to the races.  That might be cheap 
enough, but this may not be practical for everyone.  I’m pretty certain it 
would work, it would just burn a lot of your time.

 

I’d hope somebody here knows the current good/cheap option, but I’m afraid I 
don’t.

 

 

 

From: AF  <mailto:af-boun...@af.afmug.com> <af-boun...@af.afmug.com> On Behalf 
Of Craig Baird
Sent: Thursday, March 03, 2022 12:48 PM
To: AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group  <mailto:af@af.afmug.com> <af@af.afmug.com>
Subject: [AFMUG] POTS line over IP network?

 

Is anyone aware of a device that will take a POTS line from the telco, convert 
it to IP, and then somewhere on the network convert it back into a normal 
analog POTs line to plug into an analog handset?

 

Basically, I have a customer who owns a gift shop. They have a restaurant in a 
separate building behind the gift shop. Currently, they have a POTS line that 
is strung from the demarc, and across the ceiling of the gift shop. At the 
rear, it exits the gift shop and makes its way into the restaurant where it 
eventually plugs into a phone. They want to get rid of the wire that runs 
across the ceiling because it looks crazy stupid. Unfortunately, there's a 
reason the wire was originally run that way--there isn't really another way to 
get it to the restaurant without tearing a bunch of stuff apart (lack of attic 
and crawlspace). However, I do have an ethernet network in place between the 
two buildings, and can relatively easily get a wire from the demarc to a 
network switch.

 

So, what I'm envisioning is a pair of boxes. One of the boxes plugs into 
Ethernet has an FXS port to plug in the POTS line. The other box, also plugs 
into Ethernet and has an FXO port to plug in the phone. They see each other 
over the IP network, and magically transport the POTS line to where it needs to 
be.

 

Do such devices exist?

 

Craig

 

 

 <mailto:cr...@xpressweb.com> Craig Baird

March 3, 2022 at 10:47

Is anyone aware of a device that will take a POTS line from the telco, convert 
it to IP, and then somewhere on the network convert it back into a normal 
analog POTs line to plug into an analog handset?

 

Basically, I have a customer who owns a gift shop. They have a restaurant in a 
separate building behind the gift shop. Currently, they have a POTS line that 
is strung from the demarc, and across the ceiling of the gift shop. At the 
rear, it exits the gift shop and makes its way into the restaurant where it 
eventually plugs into a phone. They want to get rid of the wire that runs 
across the ceiling because it looks crazy stupid. Unfortunately, there's a 
reason the wire was originally run that way--there isn't really another way to 
get it to the restaurant without tearing a bunch of stuff apart (lack of attic 
and crawlspace). However, I do have an ethernet network in place between the 
two buildings, and can relatively easily get a wire from the demarc to a 
network switch.

 

So, what I'm envisioning is a pair of boxes. One of the boxes plugs into 
Ethernet has an FXS port to plug in the POTS line. The other box, also plugs 
into Ethernet and has an FXO port to plug in the phone. They see each other 
over the IP network, and magically transport the POTS line to where it needs to 
be.

 

Do such devices exist?

 

Craig

 

 

 

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