Gestetner 3245e Operating Guide

Page of 568
Advanced Transmission Features
96
4
Polling Transmission
Use Polling Transmission when you
want to leave an original in the ma-
chine's memory for others to pick up.
The message will be sent when the
other party calls you up.
There are three types of Polling
Transmission.
Free Polling Transmission
Anybody can poll the message
from your machine. The machine
sends it regardless of whether Poll-
ing ID's match.
Default ID Polling Transmission
The message will only be sent if the
Polling ID of the machine trying to
poll your message is the same as
the Polling ID stored in your ma-
chine. Make sure that both ma-
chines' Polling IDs are identical in
advance.
Override ID Polling Transmission
You must enter an Override Poll-
ing ID unique to this transmission.
This ID overrides that stored in the
Polling ID. The user must supply
this ID when they poll your ma-
chine and if the IDs match, the
message is sent. Make sure that the
other end knows the ID you are us-
ing in advance.
Limitation
❒ Polling Transmission is allowed
only if the receiver's machine has
the Polling Reception feature.
❒ Free Polling and ID Polling Trans-
mission allow only one file to be
stored in memory.
❒ Personal ID Polling Transmission
allows a file to be stored in memo-
ry for each ID; a total of up to 200
files for varying IDs can be stored.
❒ Before using “Default ID Polling”
and “Override ID Polling”, you
need to program the polling ID.
❒ A polling ID may be any string of
four numbers (0 to 9) and charac-
ters (A to F) except 0000 and FFFF.
Note
❒ Usually, you can only send using
ID Polling Transmission to ma-
chines of the same make that sup-
port the Polling Reception
function. However, if the other
party's fax machine supports the
"SEP" feature, you can still carry
out polling transmission with an
ID.
❒ The communication fee is charged
to the receiver.
A
Set your original and select any
scan settings you require.
Transmission
Request
Transmitter
(This machine)
Receiver
ND1X01E7
Chapter4  Page 96  Thursday, January 27, 2000  1:55 PM