Comdial and FXT Especificaciones Pagina 136

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Station Hunting Operation
When a system station user makes an intercom call to the hunt group pilot extension, the system rings the
first available station within the hunt group (based on the group’s selected hunting method). This ringing
appears on the station’s personal intercom. The system ignores all call announce settings as all intercom
calls into a hunt group are treated as voice announce block calls. If the station does not answer the call
within the programmed call advance time limit, the system rings the next station of the group. If no station
answers within the programmed overflow time, the call rings the designated overflow destination.
When a line rings at a hunt group, it rings at the first available station within the group (based on the
group’s selected hunting method). As the ringing line appears at the station, it follows the FXT conventions
for line appearances. If the station does not answer the call within the programmed call advance time limit,
the system rings the next member station. If no station answers within the programmed overflow time, the
system sends the call to the designated overflow destination.
The FXT supports a maximum of 32 hunt groups. Each hunt group can include the maximum number of
stations that the system can support; however, due to system memory limitations, all hunt groups cannot
contain all stations simultaneously. Since the system makes a total of 32 Kbytes of memory available for
station hunt groups, you can use the following formula to determine possible station hunt group capacities.
[32768 Kbytes] – [(Stations per group) x (2) + (220 bytes of memory)] = memory remaining for next hunt
group
Station Message Detail Accounting (SMDA)
For details, see the discussion titled SMDA Reports.
Station Message Detail Recording (SMDR)
Station message detail recording provides a record of the incoming and outgoing calls handled by the system on
selected lines. This record provides information for accounting and traffic analysis studies. When enabled,
SMDR is invoked automatically. The SMDR feature generates a call record for printing as soon as it is
collected by the system. The call record is presented as ASCII data in an eighty-column format to a serial data
port located on the CPU board. SMDR requires customer-provided equipment such as a printer or other
compatible data recording device.
6 – 82 General Description
GCA40–215 General Description
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