138 CHAPTER 3: DEVICE CONFIGURATION
which extension 1077 is to appear. On the 1088 telephone, buttons 10,
11, and 12 are configured as bridged extension buttons. On the 1099
telephone, buttons 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 are configured as bridged extension
appearances for extension 1077.
If a call is made to extension 1077, it can be answered using any of the
following buttons:
Extension 1077 (primary telephone) — button 4
Extension 1088 (secondary telephone) — button 10
Extension 1099 (secondary telephone) — button 3
Secondary telephone 1099 has only two extension appearances for the
1099 extension because button 3, by default an extension appearance
for the local telephone, has been used as a bridged appearance of
extension 1077.
The primary telephone has buttons 1, 2, and 3 as local appearances of its
own extension (1077). If multiple calls arrive at this telephone, they
appear on buttons 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8, followed by 1, 2, 3.
Buttons 1, 2, and 3 on the 1077 telephone are not defined as bridged
extension appearances. Therefore, they do not appear on either of the
secondary telephones. If the owner of the 1077 telephone makes a call
using any of these buttons, there is no indication (status light) of the call
on either secondary telephone. If there are five active calls on the 1077
telephone, and a sixth call is made to that extension, it rings only on the
1077 telephone, on the first unused button in the 1, 2, 3 group).
Defining Bridged
Extensions
The process of defining bridged extensions involves:
Defining Bridged Extensions on a Primary Telephone
Defining Bridged Extensions on a Secondary Telephone
Defining Bridged
Extensions on a
Primary Telephone
On a primary telephone, you can define from 1 to 11 buttons as bridged
extensions. The buttons do not have to be next to each other.
To define the bridged extensions for the primary telephone:
1Select NBX NetSet > Device Configuration > Telephones.
2Select the primary telephone from the scroll list.