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LOOP-START TRUNKS:
POTENTIAL-PROBLEMS
The most common application for
The Problem of Glare
Perhaps, at least once in your life, you’ve picked up your home phone to make a call. only to hear a startled voice saying “hello?” instead of dial tone. This is called glare. Glare is the most obvious problem associated with
When a call for a given
In a low traffic, single line, residential telephone situation this problem is uncommon, and sometimes it's even amusing. Even though the connection is made without warning in a residential situation there are only a few people that the incoming caller could be trying to reach. The problem, however, is more noticeable with higher traffic, multiline key systems. But since most key systems are relatively small and typically have close human supervision over line status and selection, these problems are usually identified and resolved quickly.
With a PBX, such as MERLIN LEGEND CS, the problem of glare becomes more serious and comples. Since ringing current is the only way that the central office can signal the PBX of an incoming call, and since the PBX typically asssumes that a facility is available until it receives the first cycle of ringing current, it's possible for the PBX to try to place an outgoing call on a
A PBX trunk typically carries much higher levels of both incoming and outgoing traffic (more tails per hour) than a residential telephone line, so glare is statistically more likely to occur on a PBX trunk. Meanwhile, the ordinary station users on a PBX exercise little direct supervision over the individual trunks in the system.
On the simplest LEGEND system, one without Automatic Route Selection (ARS), a station user would typically lift the handset and hear dial tone from the PBX. The user would then dial an access code to a trunk or group of trunks, and wait for dial tone from the CO. It is at this point that the user might suddenly say “hello” to an unexpected incoming caller.
Features such as ARS magnify the problem. When the LEGEND system is administered for ARS the PBX is a “slenderized” system. It holds the digits that are dialed, selects the appropriate trunk, and then goes off- hook. LEGEND then waits two seconds on this trunk (under normal circumstances this is long enough to obtain dial tone from the CO), and then dials the telephone number. Notice that LEGEND doesn’t actually recognize dial tone, and it cannot recognize glare, it just waits two seconds and dials.