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Standard User RayB1117
(newbie) Sat 02-Nov-24 10:53:19
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Airband/Voip


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I currently have BT broadband with BT with BT voip handsets. I'm thinking of moving to Airband(300mb full fibre). If I buy a Cisco ATA 192 will I be able to use my existing BT handsets or will I need new ones?
Is the Airband Talk plan service good or should i USE ANOTHER SERVICE?
Standard User DFScale
(member) Sat 02-Nov-24 11:26:12
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Re: Airband/Voip


[re: RayB1117] [link to this post]
 
An ATA [Analog Telephone Adaptor] is good for just one type of phone, an old school phone. You will need an RJ11 to BT adapter and depending on the phone itself, you might need one with a ring capacitor.

No idea on the Airband service, you will have to do your research. But a better idea is to find an independent VOIP supplier and migrate phone service to them before you leave BT. That way, when you change ISP, you have no migration of phone service to bother about, Your phones carry on working across the change of isp.
Standard User RayB1117
(newbie) Sat 02-Nov-24 11:30:08
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Re: Airband/Voip


[re: DFScale] [link to this post]
 
Thanks.


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Standard User Michael_Chare
(knowledge is power) Sat 02-Nov-24 11:49:26
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Re: Airband/Voip


[re: RayB1117] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by RayB1117:
I currently have BT broadband with BT with BT voip handsets. I'm thinking of moving to Airband(300mb full fibre). If I buy a Cisco ATA 192 will I be able to use my existing BT handsets or will I need new ones?
Is the Airband Talk plan service good or should i USE ANOTHER SERVICE?
If the hand sets are wired then yes but if they are Dect then no.

You would need a VOIP supplier such as Voipfone or A&A and you would have to pay for the service. If you wish to have Dect phones then the Gigaset N300 Dect base station can connect to the Ciso ATA works well with the Gigaset Dect phones.

If you don't want to have a wired phone then you don't need the Cisco ATA as the N300 can register with one (or more) VOIP suppliers.

I don't know anything about Airband and their VOIP service. I have used Voipfone and A&A Voip services for the past years. They can both likely supply you with preconfigured hardware if that would help.

Michael Chare
Standard User Taras
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Tue 12-Nov-24 10:47:39
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Re: Airband/Voip


[re: Michael_Chare] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by RayB1117:
I currently have BT broadband with BT with BT voip handsets. I'm thinking of moving to Airband(300mb full fibre). If I buy a Cisco ATA 192 will I be able to use my existing BT handsets or will I need new ones?
Is the Airband Talk plan service good or should i USE ANOTHER SERVICE?


if you wish to use the voip handsets, you will need either something like a FRITZ!Box or a Gigaset n300 or n510 or n610. The n300 and n510 will not recieve any more firmware updates.

The cisco ata 192 will not work directly with dect handsets, you would need a dect base station which would then connect to the 192. it would be better to go with a n300a/n510.

In reply to a post by Michael_Chare:
If you wish to have Dect phones then the Gigaset N300 Dect base station can connect to the Ciso ATA works well with the Gigaset Dect phones.


why do this - its utter madness, as you are proposing connecting a dect voip base station via its analog connected to another voip gateway.
Standard User candlerb
(knowledge is power) Tue 12-Nov-24 11:46:46
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Re: Airband/Voip


[re: DFScale] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by DFScale:
An ATA [Analog Telephone Adaptor] is good for just one type of phone, an old school phone. You will need an RJ11 to BT adapter and depending on the phone itself, you might need one with a ring capacitor.

No idea on the Airband service, you will have to do your research. But a better idea is to find an independent VOIP supplier and migrate phone service to them before you leave BT. That way, when you change ISP, you have no migration of phone service to bother about, Your phones carry on working across the change of isp.

I suggest you sequence this carefully:
1. First, get Airband installed *alongside* your BT service (don't use the one-touch switching service). Also get a VOIP service with a temporary number, and test it works the way you want.
2. Then, port your number to the VOIP provider. This will (or should) automatically terminate the BT broadband as well as the voice; but if for some reason it doesn't, you can terminate it separately.

This approach gives you continuous availability of both your phone number and your broadband.

Regarding the DECT handsets: if you carry mobiles anyway, then another alternative is to use Acrobits Softphone. The advantage of this over most SIP soft clients is that it uses Android and iOS native notifications to wake up the phone to receive calls, so it doesn't drain your battery in the background.

It costs around £7 (or a couple of quid more for Groundwire which adds some extra features like 3-way calling). It's a one-off cost with no ongoing charge, and can be installed multiple times if you have family sharing configured in your app store.

It's been on reduced price of about £4 for the last few days, but that might have ended now.
Standard User Michael_Chare
(knowledge is power) Tue 12-Nov-24 14:15:11
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Re: Airband/Voip


[re: Taras] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Taras:
If you wish to have Dect phones then the Gigaset N300 Dect base station can connect to the Ciso ATA works well with the Gigaset Dect phones.


why do this - its utter madness, as you are proposing connecting a dect voip base station via its analog connected to another voip gateway.
[/quote

You would do this if you also wanted to have a wired phone.

Michael Chare
Standard User Taras
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Tue 12-Nov-24 18:02:48
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Re: Airband/Voip


[re: Michael_Chare] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Michael_Chare:
You would do this if you also wanted to have a wired phone.


then just use a grandstream or cisco ata and not have the n300 if you have an existing phone system you wish to keep
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