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Anyone setup VOIP using the Linksys adaptor like this one, https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CQN4V6B1/?coliid=I19B9...
Do they work well are they easy to setup? Any advice appreciated.
Tim
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You might find it easier to get a preconfigured one from a VOIP provider such as A&A or Voipfone.
I have had a Cisco Spa112 which is similar for 10 years. It has been trouble free.
Michael Chare
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Do they work well are they easy to setup? Any advice appreciated.
Most VoIP adaptors have about 200+ options. Most of which you will ignore, but some of these may stop some phone handsets working or play tones you don't like or expect.
You need to tell us which VSP you are hoping to use with, as it doesn't necessarily make sense to buy this, or even the Grandstream. My elderly family have a Grandstream ATA working well with A&A voip service and using with Virgin Media broadband.
25 years of broadband connectivity since Sep 1999 trial - Live BQM
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Far too expensive, that's an unlocked Vonage device that's close to 20 years old, receiving no ongoing software support and if it's like the newer Sipura-based Cisco devices it's full of CVEs that won't be fixed.
An HT801 v2 is in the same pricing ballpark and was released recently so will be supported for longer.
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Do they work well are they easy to setup? Any advice appreciated.
Most VoIP adaptors have about 200+ options. Most of which you will ignore, but some of these may stop some phone handsets working or play tones you don't like or expect.
You need to tell us which VSP you are hoping to use with, as it doesn't necessarily make sense to buy this, or even the Grandstream. My elderly family have a Grandstream ATA working well with A&A voip service and using with Virgin Media broadband.
I plan to use A&A in October saw the grandstream V2 and it had a little note that it had the lowest returns whereas the Linksys was the opposite.
Tim
talktalkbusiness.net & freenetname
Asus RT-AC68U and ZyXEL VMG1312-B10A Bridge on 80/20 Meg Fibre
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Highest Sync: 79993/19661
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Far too expensive, that's an unlocked Vonage device that's close to 20 years old, receiving no ongoing software support and if it's like the newer Sipura-based Cisco devices it's full of CVEs that won't be fixed.
I fully agree, avoid.
An HT801 v2 is in the same pricing ballpark and was released recently so will be supported for longer. The original HT801 is what my family use with AAISP, and AA have a configuration guide for:
https://support.aa.net.uk/VoIP_Phones_-_Grandstream_...
Amazon have an original HT801 (UK stock) for £59.76, and a US import v2. Any idea of UK stockists for Banger?
25 years of broadband connectivity since Sep 1999 trial - Live BQM
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I plan to use A&A in October saw the grandstream V2 and it had a little note that it had the lowest returns whereas the Linksys was the opposite.
If the linksys has higer number of returns to me means avoid. Low returns is good on a non technically aware box shifter like Amazon. If you can find a UK spec v2 with UK mains plug that would be best, or see if AAISP will sell you a preconfigured one.
25 years of broadband connectivity since Sep 1999 trial - Live BQM
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Amazon have an original HT801 (UK stock) for £59.76, and a US import v2. Any idea of UK stockists for Banger?
You can have this for £50 delivered, I would check with the supplier though about the power supply situation as I think the PoE claim is inaccurate
https://www.best4systems.co.uk/grandstream-ht801-v2-...
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You might find it easier to get a preconfigured one from a VOIP provider such as A&A or Voipfone.
I have had a Cisco Spa112 which is similar for 10 years. It has been trouble free.
To me an ATA is yesterdays technology sold today at an inflated price; that said I do have a family member who uses one and it works just free and has been in service for several years.
Think about this for moment, you can buy a router with a built in ATA for a few pounds more or simply use a dedicated VoIP desktop phone. A popular setup is a Gigaset Base Station with the desired number of wireless handsets if that is affordble to the OP.
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To me an ATA is yesterdays technology sold today at an inflated price; that said I do have a family member who uses one and it works just free and has been in service for several years.
Think about this for moment, you can buy a router with a built in ATA for a few pounds more or simply use a dedicated VoIP desktop phone. A popular setup is a Gigaset Base Station with the desired number of wireless handsets if that is affordble to the OP.
Two challenges there, you may be using an ISP with a router that supports VoIP but it is hard coded to the ISP who want more than £10 a month for a "telephone service". Unless you are using a Fritz!Box there are very few general purpose home routers that have ATA function built in.
Many homes have DECT or similar set up that are working perfectly often with many handsets that cost £150 or more to put togther. Fro an ISP independent setup without buying new VoIP DECT handsets everywhere, the ATA is a very useful tool.
More likely if you are under 50 (not me!) the need for a "landline" equivalent phone has gone anyway.
25 years of broadband connectivity since Sep 1999 trial - Live BQM
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Think about this for moment, you can buy a router with a built in ATA for a few pounds more ....
And then you end up with a consumer grade router with an ATA, when you could have a professional router and a separate ATA
.... or simply use a dedicated VoIP desktop phone.
And then you end up with a phone, rather than a line.
As long as you know what you are getting and are happy with it, then no problem.
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Think about this for moment, you can buy a router with a built in ATA for a few pounds more ....
And then you end up with a consumer grade router with an ATA, when you could have a professional router and a separate ATA
.... or simply use a dedicated VoIP desktop phone.
And then you end up with a phone, rather than a line.
As long as you know what you are getting and are happy with it, then no problem.
The OP was going to buy the ATA - For the same outlay you could have a reasonable router (with ongoing firmware upgrades) and a built-in ATA.
With respect, buying a VoIP desktop phone (for the same price of the ATA) would obviously require having an account with a hosting provider like Voipfone where the option of porting in a number or obtaining a new number for that source is available.
The combination of a professional grade router and a separate ATA doesn't come cheap and in my book is not a good technical mix in any case.
It is true that a router supplied by an ISP may be locked to their DV offering but that is not always the case. If you purchase a router, then what it says on the tin of advertised features is what you have to play with.
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The OP was going to buy the ATA - For the same outlay you could have a reasonable router (with ongoing firmware upgrades) and a built-in ATA.
With respect, buying a VoIP desktop phone (for the same price of the ATA) would obviously require having an account with a hosting provider like Voipfone where the option of porting in a number or obtaining a new number for that source is available.
The combination of a professional grade router and a separate ATA doesn't come cheap and in my book is not a good technical mix in any case.
It is true that a router supplied by an ISP may be locked to their DV offering but that is not always the case. If you purchase a router, then what it says on the tin of advertised features is what you have to play with.
Well, if you really want a consumer grade router, go for it. Or if you want a phone rather than a line, go for a VoIP phone. Or if you want a professional grade router which is not trading off routing vs wireless vs phone,get a professional router and separate wireless adapter and ATA as required.
I am on my 10th router since about 1996, dictated by equipment failure 2x, support for other premises 2x change of technology 5x. If I had used VoIP for all that time, I could probably have managed with 2 ATAs. So I would be better off by not setting up voice on a router 8x simply by not committing to using a VoIP adapter on the router
Edited by DFScale (Sat 06-Sep-25 19:50:22)
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I have spotted this https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/146745640790?_skw=grandst...
Don't need the extra port but for the price and UK plug and the firmware is the same for the 1 port or 2 port version.
Tim
talktalkbusiness.net & freenetname
Asus RT-AC68U and ZyXEL VMG1312-B10A Bridge on 80/20 Meg Fibre
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Highest Sync: 79993/19661
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Anyone setup VOIP using the Linksys adaptor like this one, https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CQN4V6B1/?coliid=I19B9...
Do they work well are they easy to setup? Any advice appreciated.
Avoid those Linksys ATA’s at all costs! They are not made by Linksys, they are cheap Chinese clones with iffy firmware installed.
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Yes I sort of gathered they are not favoured. Am looking at some kind of Grandstream.
Tim
talktalkbusiness.net & freenetname
Asus RT-AC68U and ZyXEL VMG1312-B10A Bridge on 80/20 Meg Fibre
Speed Test
Highest Sync: 79993/19661
BQM
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These days I would avoid Linksys/Cisco VoIP devices as all SPAxxx series ATAs and phones no longer receive firmware updates and have a number of known vulnerabilities. The only Cisco ATAs currently supported are the ATA191 and ATA192, even with these you can only obtain firmware updates from Cisco if you have a valid support contract, so a Grandstream device is a better option.
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The only Cisco ATAs currently supported are the ATA191 and ATA192, even with these you can only obtain firmware updates from Cisco if you have a valid support contract, so a Grandstream device is a better option. They require a login, not a contract. Anybody can make a Cisco account.
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Interesting discussion. I have had an SPA112 for a couple of years and it works but I have had difficulties with it. For whatever reason, it frequently doesn't transmit the DTMF tones when you press a button so you end up not being able to navigate the menu at the remote end that so many organisations have these days.
I raised this with VOIP provider some time ago and after some tweaks it appears to work OK for a while, but the problem has recently stated happening again. I was advised by their tech that the problem is the ATA and that VOIP handsets like the Yealink would avoid the problem altogether. Of course, these are quite expensive. To test this, I tried a soft phone application on the PC and it worked perfectly fine, so the problem does seem to be the ATA.
I am in a bit of a dilemma myself as I would like to provide a reliable solution for my elderly parent and am undecided whether to go down the "Digital Voice" route or a proper VOIP provision.
In any any case, that was my experience with the Cisco SPA112. Back when I purchased the SPA112, I had also asked about the Linksys ATA boxes and the advice at the time was to avoid. From the previous comments on here I see that advice has not changed.....
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