Telos Zephyr Xport User Manual

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ZEPHYR 
XPORT 
USER’S GUIDE 
 
 
CHAPTER 3 - THE DETAILS 
 
15
 
3 The Details 
By now your Xport should be up and running. In this section, we assume you have 
gotten to know your Xport by going through the Quick Start procedure and brief tour 
covered in Section 2 (Getting Started). 
In this section, we'll explain more about how the mixer works, cover more about using 
the Auto Dial function, as well as how to use a cell phone for transmission when a 
telephone line is not available. Finally, we'll show you how you can transmit audio from 
your computer to the Xport using Ethernet. 
3.1 Telephone Connections 
3.1.1 POTS 
POTS LINE JACK 
This is for connection to "Plain old telephone service" (analog loop- start) lines. The line 
inserted into this jack is the most critical part of an Xport installation. It can mean the 
difference between the remarkable quality of aacPlus and falling back to a voice grade 
Phone call. Here are some pointers to reliably achieve success: 
 
DO 
DON'T 
Use a line directly from the Telco. 
Connect the Xport to an "analog port" off a PBX (or a 
"modem port" of an office telephone). This may work as a 
last resort, but you will almost certainly see reduced quality 
in this case. 
Check the jack first with a telephone. If you hear 
silence, or nothing but a buzz or hum, it is not an 
analog line (or it is not working) and you should not 
connect the Xport to it. If you can dial out using this 
phone, you can connect the Xport. If the line has lots of 
noise or static you should try to locate a better. 
Connect the Xport to a jack that is feeding an office phone 
with more than 2 lines, or fancy advanced features, without 
testing the jack with an analog phone first. These jacks are 
generally proprietary protocols, and will only work with 
phones from the manufacturer of that telephone system. 
They might even cause damage to your Xport. 
Use Category 3 (or higher) twisted pair cables when a 
long connection cable is required. Keep modular "flat" 
cables to less than 10 feet (3 meters) in length. 
Use more than 10 feet (3 meters) of modular "flat" cable to 
connect Xport to the telephone jack. Don't route telephone 
cable near sources of interference such as motors or 
transmitter coax feeds. 
Make sure to unplug or disconnect other devices (such 
as fax machines, telephones, ringers, etc) sharing the 
line you will be using.  
Leave other devices connected to the line. At the very least, 
you will experience an interruption if some other telephone 
tries to use the line. However, even when not in use, these 
can degrade performance. 
Check the quality of the wiring from the phone room to 
the jack. Wire the jack using twisted pair (Category 3 or 
higher) cable. Alternatively, plug directly into the 
Network Interface. 
Use a jack wired with older cloth, or the old 
red/green/black/yellow untwisted cable. Your 
performance will probably be sub- par in these cases.