12 C H A P T E R T W O

Converting Telephone Wall Outlets

There are three ways to convert to an RJ11 receptacle. The first two ways may require assistance from the telephone company. You can change the wall outlets from one RJ14 jack to two RJ11 jacks. Or, you can have an RJ11 wall outlet installed and slave or jump one of the phone numbers to it.

The third way is the easiest: Buy a triplex adapter. You can plug a triplex adapter into an RJ14 outlet. It separates the wires into two separate RJ11 jacks (Line 1, Line 2) and a third RJ14 jack (Lines 1 and 2). Plug the FAX/MFC into Line 2 of the triplex adapter.

Triplex Adapter

RJ14

RJ11

RJ14

Installing FAX/MFC, External Two-Line TAD,

and Two-Line Telephone

When you are installing an external two-line telephone answering device (TAD) and a two-line telephone, your FAX/MFC must be isolated on one line at both the wall jack and at the TAD. The most common connection is to put the FAX/MFC on Line 2. The back of the two-line TAD must have two telephone jacks: one labeled L1 or L1/L2, and the other labeled L2. You will need at least three telephone line cords, the one that came with your FAX/MFC and two for your external two-line TAD. You will need a fourth line cord if you add a two-line telephone.

1Place the two-line TAD and the two-line telephone next to your FAX/MFC.

2Plug one end of the telephone line cord for your FAX/MFC into the L2 jack of the triplex adapter. Plug the other end into the LINE jack on the left side of the FAX/MFC.

3Plug one end of the first telephone line cord for your TAD into the L1 jack of the triplex adapter. Plug the other end into the L1 or L1/L2 jack of the two-line TAD.

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Brother FAX1 570MC Converting Telephone Wall Outlets, Installing FAX/MFC, External Two-Line TAD Two-Line Telephone