Chapter 7
52

External and extension

phones 7

Connecting an external or

extension telephone 7
You can connect a separate telephone to
your machine as shown in the diagram below.
1 Extension telephone
2 External telephone
When you are using an external or extension
phone, the LCD shows Telephone
(MFC-440CN only) or Ext. Tel in Use
(MFC-660CN only).

Operation from extension

telephones 7
If you answer a fax call on an extension or an
external telephone plugged into the correct
socket on the machine, you can make your
machine take the call by using the Fax
Receive Code. When you press the Fax
Receive Code l51, the machine starts to
receive the fax.
If the machine answers a voice call and
pseudo/double-rings for you to take over, use
the Telephone Answer Code #51 to take the
call at an extension phone. (See F/T Ring
Time (Fax/Tel mode only) on page 43.)

If you answer a call and no one is on

the line: 7
You should assume that you're receiving a
manual fax.
Press l51 and wait for the chirp or until the
LCD shows Receiving, and then hang up.
Note
You can also use the Fax Detect feature to
make your machine automatically take the
call. (See Fax Detect on page 43)

Using extension telephones

(For U.K. only) 7
Your premises may already be wired with
parallel extension telephones, or you may
plan to add extension telephones to your line,
as well as your machine. While the simplest
arrangement is a straightforward parallel
connection, there are some problems with
this arrangement, the most obvious of which
is inadvertent interruption of a facsimile
transmission caused by someone picking up
an extension telephone to make an outgoing
call. Also, fax receive code may not operate
reliably in such a simple configuration.
This machine may also be set to make a
delayed transmission (i.e. a transmission at a
pre-set time). This pre-set job may coincide
with someone picking up an extension
handset.
These problems can easily be eliminated, if
you arrange modification of your extension
wiring circuit, such that extension devices are
connected ‘downstream’ of your machine in a
master/slave configuration (see fig. 2 on next
page). In this configuration the machine can
always detect whether a telephone is in use.
Thus it will not attempt to seize the line during
that time. This is known as ‘telephone off-
hook detection.’
The inadvisable configuration is shown in
figure 1, and the recommended master/slave
configuration is shown in figure 2.
1
2