Panasonic ICX Manual

Page of 91
ICX-50-200
ICX (International) issued October 2000
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Section 200 - General Description      
Chapter 3 - System Features      
❢ Pilot Terminal hunting. When a call is directed to the pilot number of the hunt group, 
Member #1 is tried first. Hunting proceeds forward through the sequential members to the 
end of the hunt group. If Member #20 (last member) doesn’t answer, the call then returns to 
Member #1 again, and the hunt cycle is repeated until a member answers the call.
❢ Pilot Distributed hunting. When a call is directed to the pilot number of the hunt group, the 
next sequential member after the member who received the last call, is tried first. Hunting 
then proceeds forward from that member, through the sequential members to the end of the 
hunt group. If Member #20 (last member) doesn’t answer, the call then goes to Member #1, 
and hunting proceeds forward through the hunt group again. The hunting cycle (Member #1 
thru Member #20) repeats until a member answers the call.
❢ Circular hunting. This is for direct calls to member extensions (no pilot number involved). 
Starting at the member extension receiving the call, hunting proceeds forward through the 
sequential members to the end of the hunt group. If Member #20 (last member) doesn’t 
answer, the call then goes to Member #1, and hunting proceeds forward through the hunt 
group again. The hunting cycle (Member #1 thru Member #20) repeats until a member 
answers the call.
❢ Switchback hunting. This is also for direct calls to member extensions (no pilot number 
involved). Starting at the member extension receiving the call, hunting proceeds forward 
through the sequential members to the end of the hunt group. It then returns to the receiving 
(originally called) member, and hunts backward through the members to the beginning of the 
hunt group. Then it returns to the receiving member again, and hunts forward. This return-
forward/return-backward hunt cycle repeats until a member answers the call.
The number of hunt groups available depends on how many cabinets you specify in 
programming (12 hunt groups per cabinet). Each hunt group can have its own unique 
characteristics such as hunting method, no-answer timeout/destination, etc. In other words, via 
programming you can control how long a Member will ring before the call moves to the next 
Member, and also how long before (or whether) the call will be transferred out of the Hunt Group 
to an extension or to another Hunt Group.
Benefits:
  Allows calls to be distributed among a group of extensions where a group of people 
answer the same calls.
  Voicemail systems use hunt groups to distribute calls.
Applications:
  Customer service departments, sales & marketing divisions, technical support 
groups, etc.
MULTIPLE DIRECT INWARD DIAL (DID) ASSIGNMENT 
Description:
This feature allows a DID number to ring on more than one telephone through the use of virtual 
ports. Also, one telephone can have multiple DID numbers assigned to it.
Benefits:
  Improves coverage of DID numbers and allows more flexibility in how an end-user 
can program the numbers.
Applications:
  Executive suites, travel agencies, answering services