Telecommunication Systems Division

??

DP5000-Series

Telephone User Guide

November 2007

Important! Toshiba Telecommunication Systems Division sells its products through Authorized Dealers. Our Dealers are certified in Sales and Technical Training for Toshiba products, and focus on providing the best possible customer experience. Dealer services include: network assessments, product recommendations, installations, and ongoing technical and sales support. Before making any changes or updates to their Toshiba Telecom product (hardware or software), Toshiba advises Businesses to contact their System's installing Dealer or an Authorized Toshiba Dealer in their area.

To locate a Toshiba Telecom dealer, visit: www.telecom.toshiba.com

Publication Information

Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc., Telecommunication Systems Division, reserves the right, without prior notice, to revise this information publication for any reason, including, but not limited to, utilization of new advances in the state of technical arts or to simply change the design of this document.

Further, Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc., Telecommunication Systems Division, also reserves the right, without prior notice, to make such changes in equipment design or components as engineering or manufacturing methods may warrant.

DP5000-UG-VA

Version A, November 2007

?? Copyright 2007

Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc.

Telecommunication Systems Division

All rights reserved. No part of this manual, covered by the copyrights hereon, may be reproduced in any form or by any means???graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including recording, taping, photocopying, or information retrieval systems???without express written permission of the publisher of this material.

Strata is a registered trademark of Toshiba Corporation. Stratagy is a registered trademark of Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc.

Trademarks, registered trademarks, and service marks are the property of their respective owners.

CAUTION! Do not use cleansers that contain benzene, paint thinner, alcohol or other solvents on the telephone's rubber feet. The color of the rubber may transfer to the desk or mounting surface.

TOSHIBA AMERICA INFORMATION SYSTEMS, INC. (???TAIS???)

Telecommunication Systems Division License Agreement

IMPORTANT: THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT (???AGREEMENT???) IS A LEGAL AGREEMENT BETWEEN YOU (???YOU???) AND TAIS. CAREFULLY READ THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT. USE OF ANY

SOFTWARE OR ANY RELATED INFORMATION (COLLECTIVELY, ???SOFTWARE???) INSTALLED ON OR SHIPPED WITH A TAIS TELECOMMUNICATION SYSTEMS PRODUCT OR OTHERWISE MADE

AVAILABLE TO YOU BY TAIS IN WHATEVER FORM OR MEDIA, WILL CONSTITUTE YOUR ACCEPTANCE OF THESE TERMS, UNLESS SEPARATE TERMS ARE PROVIDED BY THE SOFTWARE

SUPPLIER. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH THE TERMS OF THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT, DO NOT INSTALL, COPY OR USE THE SOFTWARE AND PROMPTLY RETURN IT TO THE LOCATION

FROM WHICH YOU OBTAINED IT IN ACCORDANCE WITH APPLICABLE RETURN POLICIES. EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE AUTHORIZED IN WRITING BY TAIS, THIS SOFTWARE IS LICENSED FOR

DISTRIBUTION THROUGH TAIS AUTHORIZED CHANNELS ONLY TO END-USERS PURSUANT TO THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT.

1.License Grant. The Software is not sold; it is licensed upon payment of applicable charges. TAIS grants to you a personal, non-transferable and non-exclusive right to use the copy of the Software provided under this License Agreement. You agree you will not copy the Software except as necessary to use it on one TAIS system at a time at one location. Modifying, translating, renting, copying, distributing, printing, sublicensing, transferring or assigning all or part of the Software, or any rights granted hereunder, to any other persons and removing any proprietary notices, labels or marks from the Software is strictly prohibited except as permitted by applicable law; you agree violation of such restrictions will cause irreparable harm to TAIS and provide grounds for injunctive relief, without notice, against you or any other person in possession of the Software. You and any other person whose possession of the software violates this License Agreement shall promptly surrender possession of the Software to TAIS, upon demand. Furthermore, you hereby agree not to create derivative works based on the Software. TAIS reserves the right to terminate this license and to immediately repossess the software in the event that you or any other person violates this License Agreement. Execution of the Software for any additional capabilities require a valid run-time license.

2.Intellectual Property. You acknowledge that no title to the intellectual property in the Software is transferred to you. You further acknowledge that title and full ownership rights to the Software will remain the exclusive property of TAIS and/or its suppliers, and you will not acquire any rights to the Software, except the license expressly set forth above. You will not remove or change any proprietary notices contained in or on the Software. The Software is protected under US patent, copyright, trade secret, and/or other proprietary laws, as well as international treaties. Any transfer, use, or copying of the software in violation of the License Agreement constitutes copyright infringement. You are hereby on notice that any transfer, use, or copying of the Software in violation of this License Agreement constitutes a willful infringement of copyright.

3.No Reverse Engineering. You agree that you will not attempt, and if you employ employees or engage contractors, you will use your best efforts to prevent your employees and contractors from attempting to reverse compile, reverse engineer, modify, translate or disassemble the Software in whole or in part. Any failure to comply with the above or any other terms and conditions contained herein will result in the automatic termination of this license and the reversion of the rights granted hereunder back to TAIS.

4.Limited Warranty. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED ???AS IS??? WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, TAIS AND ITS SUPPLIERS

DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THE SOFTWARE, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE WARRANTY OF NON-INFRINGEMENT OF THIRD

PARTY RIGHTS, THE WARRANTY OF YEAR 2000 COMPLIANCE, AND THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS

TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE IS WITH YOU. NEITHER TAIS NOR ITS SUPPLIERS WARRANT THAT THE FUNCTIONS CONTAINED IN THE SOFTWARE WILL MEET

YOUR REQUIREMENTS OR THAT THE OPERATION OF THE SOFTWARE WILL BE UNINTERRUPTED OR ERROR-FREE. HOWEVER, TAIS WARRANTS THAT ANY MEDIA ON WHICH THE

SOFTWARE IS FURNISHED IS FREE FROM DEFECTS IN MATERIAL AND WORKMANSHIP UNDER NORMAL USE FOR A PERIOD OF NINETY (90) DAYS FROM THE DATE OF DELIVERY TO YOU.

5.Limitation Of Liability. TAIS??? ENTIRE LIABILITY AND YOUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE REMEDY UNDER THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT SHALL BE AT TAIS??? OPTION REPLACEMENT OF THE MEDIA OR

REFUND OF THE PRICE PAID. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, IN NO EVENT SHALL TAIS OR ITS SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR ANY CONSEQUENTIAL,

SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR INDIRECT DAMAGES FOR PERSONAL INJURY, LOSS OF BUSINESS PROFITS, BUSINESS INTERRUPTION, LOSS OF BUSINESS INFORMATION/DATA, OR ANY

OTHER PECUNIARY LOSS OF ANY KIND ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE SOFTWARE, EVEN IF TAIS OR ITS SUPPLIER HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF

SUCH DAMAGES. IN NO EVENT SHALL TAIS OR ITS SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM BY A THIRD PARTY.

6.State/Jurisdiction Laws. SOME STATES/JURISDICTIONS DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OF IMPLIED WARRANTIES OR LIMITATIONS ON HOW LONG AN IMPLIED WARRANTY MAY LAST, OR

THE EXCLUSION OR LIMITATION OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES, SO SUCH LIMITATIONS OR EXCLUSIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU. THIS LIMITED WARRANTY GIVES YOU

SPECIFIC RIGHTS AND YOU MAY ALSO HAVE OTHER RIGHTS WHICH VARY FROM STATE/JURISDICTION TO STATE/JURISDICTION.

7.Export Laws. This License Agreement involves products and/or technical data that may be controlled under the United States Export Administration Regulations and may be subject to the approval of the United States Department of Commerce prior to export. Any export, directly or indirectly, in contravention of the United States Export Administration Regulations, or any other applicable law, regulation or order, is prohibited.

8.Governing Law. This License Agreement will be governed by the laws of the State of California, United States of America, excluding its conflict of law provisions.

9.United States Government Restricted Rights. The Software is provided with Restricted Rights. The Software and other materials provided hereunder constitute Commercial Computer Software and Software Documentation and Technical Data related to Commercial Items. Consistent with F.A.R. 12.211 and 12.212 they are licensed to the U.S. Government under, and the U.S. Government???s rights therein are restricted pursuant to, the vendor???s commercial license.

10.Severability. If any provision of this License Agreement shall be held to be invalid, illegal or unenforceable, the validity, legality and enforceability of the remaining provisions hereof shall not in any way be affected or impaired.

11.No Waiver. No waiver of any breach of any provision of this License Agreement shall constitute a waiver of any prior, concurrent or subsequent breach of the same or any other provisions hereof, and no waiver shall be effective unless made in writing and signed by an authorized representative of the waiving party.

12.Supplier Software. The Software may include certain software provided by TAIS suppliers. In such event, you agree that such supplier may be designated by TAIS as a third party beneficiary of TAIS with rights to enforce the Agreement with respect to supplier???s software.

YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE READ THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT AND THAT YOU UNDERSTAND ITS PROVISIONS. YOU AGREE TO BE BOUND BY ITS TERMS AND CONDITIONS. YOU

FURTHER AGREE THAT THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT CONTAINS THE COMPLETE AND EXCLUSIVE AGREEMENT BETWEEN YOU AND TAIS AND SUPERSEDES ANY PROPOSAL OR PRIOR

AGREEMENT, ORAL OR WRITTEN, OR ANY OTHER COMMUNICATION RELATING TO THE SUBJECT MATTER OF THIS LICENSE AGREEMENT.

Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc.

Telecommunication Systems Division5932

9740 Irvine Boulevard

Irvine, California 92618-1697

United States of America

DSD 020905

Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc.

Telecommunication Systems Division

End-User Limited Warranty

Toshiba America Information Systems, Inc., (???TAIS???) warrants that this telephone equipment manufactured by Toshiba (except for fuses, lamps, and other consumables) will, upon delivery by TAIS or an authorized TAIS dealer to a retail customer in new condition, be free from defects in material and workmanship for twenty-four (24) months after delivery, except as otherwise provided by TAIS in the TAIS warranty accompanying the products or posted on TAIS???s website. Products which are not manufactured by Toshiba but are purchased from Toshiba, will be subject to the warranty provisions provided by the equipment manufacturer, unless TAIS notifies the end-user of any additional warranty provisions in writing.

This warranty is void (a) if the equipment is used under other than normal use and maintenance conditions, (b) if the equipment is modified or altered, unless the modification or alteration is expressly authorized by TAIS, (c) if the equipment is subject to abuse, neglect, lightning, electrical fault, or accident, (d) if the equipment is repaired by someone other than TAIS or an authorized TAIS dealer, (e) if the equipment???s serial number is defaced or missing, or (f) if the equipment is installed or used in combination or in assembly with products not supplied by TAIS and which are not compatible or are of inferior quality, design, or performance.

The sole obligation of TAIS or Toshiba Corporation under this warranty, or under any other legal obligation with respect to the equipment, is the repair or replacement of such defective or missing parts as are causing the malfunc- tion by TAIS or its authorized dealer with new or refurbished parts (at their option). If TAIS or one of its authorized dealers does not replace or repair such parts, the retail customer???s sole remedy will be a refund of the price charged by TAIS to its dealers for such parts as are proven to be defective, and which are returned to TAIS through one of its authorized dealers within the warranty period and no later than thirty (30) days after such malfunction, whichever first occurs.

Under no circumstances will the retail customer or any user or dealer or other person be entitled to any direct, special, indirect, consequential, or exemplary damages, for breach of contract, tort, or otherwise. Under no circum- stances will any such person be entitled to any sum greater than the purchase price paid for the item of equipment that is malfunctioning.

To obtain service under this warranty, the retail customer must bring the malfunction of the machine to the attention of one of TAIS??? authorized dealers within the applicable warranty period and no later than thirty (30) days after such malfunction, whichever first occurs. Failure to bring the malfunction to the attention of an authorized TAIS dealer within the prescribed time results in the customer being not entitled to warranty service.

THERE ARE NO OTHER WARRANTIES FROM EITHER TOSHIBA AMERICA INFORMATION SYSTEMS,

INC., OR TOSHIBA CORPORATION WHICH EXTEND BEYOND THE FACE OF THIS WARRANTY. ALL

OTHER WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,

FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, AND FITNESS FOR USE, ARE EXCLUDED.

No TAIS dealer and no person other than an officer of TAIS may extend or modify this warranty. No such modifi- cation or extension is effective unless it is in writing and signed by the Vice President and General Manager, Telecommunication Systems Division.

WARRANTIES FOR NON-TOSHIBA BRANDED THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS

A valuable element of Toshiba???s product strategy is to offer our customers a complete product portfolio. To provide this value to our customers at the most optimal prices, we offer both Toshiba-branded and third-party manufactured products that support our Toshiba Strata CIX product portfolio. Similar to other resellers of software, hardware and peripherals, these third- party manufactured products carry warranties independent of our Toshiba limited warranty provided with our Toshiba-branded products. Customers should note that third-party manufacturer warranties vary from product to product and are covered by the warranties provided through the original manufacturer and passed on intact to the purchaser by Toshiba. Customers should consult their product documentation for third-party warranty information specific to third-party products. More information may also be available in some cases from the manufacturer???s public website.

While Toshiba offers a wide selection of software, hardware and peripheral products, we do not specifically test or guarantee that the third-party products we offer work under every configuration with any or all of the various models of the Toshiba Strata CIX. Toshiba does not endorse, warrant nor assume any liability in connection with such third party products or services. If you have questions about compatibility, we recommend and encourage you to contact the third-party software, hardware and peripheral product manufacturer directly.

This page is intentionally left blank.

Contents

ii

Strata CIX DP5000-series Telephone UG 11/07

iv

Strata CIX DP5000-series Telephone UG 11/07

vi

Strata CIX DP5000-series Telephone UG 11/07

Introduction

This user guide describes how to use the Toshiba DP5000-series telephones with the Strata CIX670, CIX200, CIX100, CIX100-S, and CIX40 telephone systems. These include:

???Strata DP5000-series digital telephones shown in Table 1 on Page 2.

???Strata Digital Add-on Modules.

???Strata Direct Station Selection (DSS) console.

Note Telephones and ADM models that include ???1??? in the model number are models that support the backlight feature.

Organization

???Chapter 1 ??? The Grand Tour provides an overview DP5000 digital telephones.

???Chapter 2 ??? The Basics covers the basic telephone functions.

???Chapter 3 ??? Feature Operations includes an explanation of Soft Key operations, an alphabetical feature list and LCD information.

???Chapter 4 ??? ADM/DSS Console explains features and functions of the Add-on modules.

???Chapter 5 ??? Headset and Handset Operation explains the interactions of these accessories with the DP5000-series telephones.

???Chapter 6 ??? User Programming explains how to program the Programmable Feature Buttons, such as setting One Touch buttons, changing Personal Speed Dial numbers, as well as other user programmable functions.

???Chapter 7 ??? Administrator Programming explains features and functions to be performed by an Administrator.

Introduction

How to Use This Guide

???Appendix A ??? References includes tables that support procedures in the Basic and Feature Operation chapters.

???Appendix B ??? Hardware Connections includes tilt angles and telephone wiring diagrams.

???Appendix C ??? Centrex Application describes the Centrex features which may be available with your Strata CIX system.

How to Use This Guide

This guide provides in-depth instructions for the DP5000-series telephones and their features. Most telephone users can use the ???Strata CIX DP5000-series Quick Reference Guide??? instead of this guide.

Conventions

Note Elaborates specific items or references other information. Within some tables, general notes apply to the entire table and numbered notes apply to specific items.

Important! Calls attention to important instructions or information.

CAUTION! Advises you that hardware, software applications, or data could be damaged if the instructions are not followed closely.

WARNING! Alerts you when the given task could cause personal injury or death.

viii

Strata CIX DP5000-series Telephone UG 11/07

Introduction

How to Use This Guide

Introduction

Related Documents/Media

Grey words within the printed text denote cross-references.

See Figure 10 In the electronic version of this document (Library CD-ROM or FYI Internet download), cross-references appear in blue

hypertext.

Related Documents/Media

Note Some documents listed here may appear in different versions on the electronically or in print. To find the most current version, check the version/ date in the Publication Information on the back of the document???s title page.

Refer to the following for more information:

???Strata CIX General Description

???Strata CIX DP5000-series Telephone Quick Reference Guide

???Strata CIX Installation and Maintenance Manual

???Strata CIX Programming Manual - Volume 1

???Strata CIX My Phone Manager User Guide

x

Strata CIX DP5000-series Telephone UG 11/07

The DP5000-series digital telephones connected to a Strata CIX telephone system include a wide selection of digital telephone models and matching digital add-on modules and a 60-button DSS Console. See Table 1 for more details.

Through dynamic soft key assignments, the LCD telephones provide easy access to frequently-used features by prompting specific tasks, providing Outside Line Identification, User Name/Number, Call Duration, Date/Time of Day displays, and Name and number displays of incoming callers.

The speakerphone on these telephones enables you to place and receive calls without lifting the handset.

The LCD telephones with 10 and 20 buttons are available with LCD backlight. To change the backlight settings, refer to Chapter 3 ??? Feature Operations.

The Grand Tour

The Grand Tour

The Grand Tour

The DP5000-series telephone upgrade options include:

Table 2 DP5000 Series Add-on Modules

10 Button ADM for DP5000-series

???LCD programmable key strip with back light

20 Button ADM for DP5000-series

??? Paper Key Strip

60 Button DSS for DP5000-series

??? Paper Key Strip

The Grand Tour

DP5000-series Telephone Overview

DP5000-series Telephone Overview

The illustration of the DP5000-series telephone shown below gives a general idea of the basic attributes found on most of these telephones. The positioning of the buttons varies per telephone model.

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

J

I K

20 Programmable Feature Buttons 4-Line LCD Telephone

Legend

A.Status LED (message and ringing)

B.LCD Display

C.Softkeys

D.Programmable Feature Buttons

E.Message Waiting LED Button

F.Microphone LED Button

G.Speaker LED Button

H.Volume

I.Hold Button

J.Microphone

K.Tilt stand

The Grand Tour

DP5000-series Telephone Overview

Fixed Buttons

The fixed buttons on the dial pad help perform standard functions quickly and easily.

Layouts

Fixed buttons are laid out differently on the DP5000-series telephones.

Single Line Telephone9-line LCD Telephone

Fixed buttons are located below the dial pad.

10 and 20 Button 4-line LCD Telephones

Fixed buttons are located on either side of the dial pad.

The Grand Tour

DP5000-series Telephone Overview

The Fixed buttons are described below.

The Grand Tour

DP5000-series Telephone Overview

Programmable Feature Buttons

Programmable Feature Buttons are programmed by the System Administrator and can be customized on a per user basis.

See Table 17 on page 110 for a list of Programmable Feature Buttons.

Note Programmable Feature Buttons are numbered bottom to top, left to right (shown right).

Key Strip

The key strips on the DP5000-series telephones and add-on modules are either electronic (programmable) or paper (refer to Table 1 and Table 2).

Programmable Feature Button

Layout

The Grand Tour

LCD

LCD

If your telephone has an LCD, use this section to learn more about its functions.

9-Line LCD Display

The LCD on the 9-Line LCD telephone (shown below) in idle state shows: Top to Bottom

Line 1 or the top line of the LCD will display your user name (if programmed) and your extension number.

Line 2 will show the Date and time.

Line 3 will show information related to your telephone set: VM New/Saved messages, Call Forward, or if a certain feature is enabled on your telephone set.

A plus sign + on the LCD indicates there is more data to display. Press SCRL to advance through the information.

Lines 4~8 will indicate Programmable Feature Button labels. Line 9 will display the Soft Keys (See ???Soft Keys??? on page 10).

DP5000 4-line LCD display in Idle Mode

The Grand Tour

Soft Keys

4-Line LCD Display

The LCD in it's idle state (shown right) displays:

Line 1 or the top line of the LCD will display your user name (if programmed) and your extension number.

Line 2 will show the Date and time.

Line 3 will show information related to your telephone set: VM New/Saved messages, Call Forward, or if a certain feature is enabled on your telephone set.

A plus sign + on the LCD indicates there is more data to display. Press NEXT to advance through the information.

Line 4 will display the soft keys available in idle state. Press DSPLY to switch from the Call Forward display to the User Name display.

Soft Keys

Softkeys (SK1 - SK4) refer to the four buttons directly below the LCD screen (shown right). Soft Keys dynamically change their functions and label depending on the state of the telephone. The dynamic feature associated with the Soft Key is displayed on the bottom line of the LCD display directly above each Soft Key button.

This chapter reviews the basic operations of the DP5000-series telephones. The instructions apply to all telephone models, except when noted otherwise.

Customizing Your Telephone

Volume Control

Note The Volume Control instructions for the Single Line Telephone are on the next page.

To adjust the handset volume

Press the Vol to increase volume and Vol to decrease volume during the call. When you hang up, the volume returns to the default setting.

To adjust the speaker volume for internal/external calls and background music

1.Press Spkr.

2.Press an extension button - you hear dial tone.

3. Press the Vol to increase volume and Vol to decrease volume. This volume setting applies to all calls until changed.

To adjust Ring Tone, Hands free Answerback and Speaker Off-hook Call Announce

Make sure the telephone is idle and the handset is on-hook. Press the Vol to increase volume and Vol to decrease volume. This adjusts volume for your telephone???s ring tone, Hands free Answerback and Speaker Off-hook Call Announce simultaneously.

The Basics

Customizing Your Telephone

To adjust handset Beep Tone

1.With the handset off-hook, dial the Beep Tone Adjustment Code #6101 (default code). You hear busy tone.

2. Press Vol or Vol to reach the desired level.

Volume Control for the Single Line Telephone

When you hang up, the volume returns to the default setting.

To adjust the speaker volume for internal/external calls and background music

1.Press Spkr.

2.Press an extension button - you hear dial tone.

3. Press the Vol to increase volume and Vol to decrease volume. This volume setting applies to all calls until changed.

To adjust Ring Tone

Make sure the telephone is idle and the handset is on-hook. Press the Vol s to increase volume and Vol t to decrease volume.

The Basics

Customizing Your Telephone

LCD Contrast

Available on backlit telephones and backlit add-on module.

To adjust the LCD contrast on the backlit telephones

1. Press and hold down the Mic button.

2. Press and release Vol or Vol repeatedly.

Note Holding the Vol button does not continue to change the setting. The button must be pressed for each step of contrast change.

To adjust the LCD contrast on the Add-on Module

1.Press Hold+3+6+9 (simultaneously).

2.Press Contrast + button to increase contrast.

3.Press Contrast - button to decrease contrast.

4.Lift the handset off-hook / on-hook to save settings.

Note Holding the softkey does not continue to change the setting. The softkey must be pressed for each step of contrast change

Brightness Control

Available on backlit telephones and backlit add-on module.

To change the LCD back light brightness

1.Press Hold+3+6+9 (simultaneously).

2.Press Bright softkey to increase brightness.

3.Press Dim softkey to decrease brightness.

4.Lift the handset off-hook / on-hook to save the settings.

Note Use the Bright and Dim buttons in steps 2 and 3 on the 10 button LCD Add-on Module.

The Basics

Customizing Your Telephone

Backlight On/Off

Available on backlit telephones and backlit add-on module.

To change Backlight Settings

1.Press Hold+3+6+9 (simultaneously).

2.Press the Mic button.

3.Use table below to choose preferred settings.

4.Press Hold to save settings

Note FB1 is the lower left key, FB2 in the next up, FB3 is above FB2, and FB4 is above FB3.

The Basics

Keystrip Labels

Keystrip Labels

Available on 9 Line LCD telephone and 10 Button LCD Add-on Module

To program LCD Keystrip Labels

1.Dial #9876 (or press the flexible Program button)

2.Press the Speaker button.

3.Press the button you wish to label.

4.Use the dialpad to enter the label.

5.Press the button labeled in step 3 to save the setting.

6.To label another button, repeat steps 3-5.

7.To exit User Programming mode lift the handset off-hook / on-hook.

Ring Tones

To set distinctive ringing

1.Press #9876 to enter User Programming Mode.

2.Press a Line or extension button. The LED is steady green.

3.You can press Hold to switch between internal and external pitch. (Internal = station calls within your system; external = outside line calls.)

4.Enter the two-digit pitch number (see Table 5 on page 16).

5.Press the same button that you pressed in Step 2 (Line or extension). Two beeps is a confirmation tone and ???DATA PROGRAMMED??? displays on your LCD.

6.Lift the handset off-hook/on-hook to save settings.

The Basics

Ring Tones

Dial Pad and Button Beeps

Digital telephones can emit a ???beep??? whenever a dial pad or feature button is pressed. The ???beeps??? are On by default. Follow these steps to turn the ???beeps??? On or Off.

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press 0.

3.Press Programmable Feature Button 1 (FB1) to toggle On/Off. FB1, LED On: buttons beep.

FB1, LED Off: buttons do not beep.

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.You must also go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

For Single Line Telephone

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press 0 1.

3.Press Msg to toggle On/Off. Msg LED On: buttons beep.

Msg LED Off: buttons do not beep.

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.You must also go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

The Basics

Ring Tones

Speakerphone/Microphone Sensitivity Adjustment

When you are using the speakerphone, high ambient noise levels may cause the party you are talking with to be to cut off frequently. If this happens, follow these steps to lower the sensitivity of the microphone on a DP5000-series telephone. The default is normal sensitivity.

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press 0.

3.Press Programmable Feature Button 3 (FB3) to toggle On/Off. FB3, LED On: Lower sensitivity

FB3, LED Off: Normal sensitivity

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

The Basics

Telephone Terminology

Telephone Terminology

When making or receiving calls on your DP5000-series telephone you may experience one or more of the following call features depending on how your telephone is configured.

???Line ??? is synonymous with trunk which is the line that connects you to the PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network). Line can be:

???a button on your telephone set designated for outgoing calls

???your DN button followed by dialing 9.

???Automatic Line Selection (ALS) ??? ALS is engaged on outgoing calls. Lift the handset or press Spkr to hear dial tone, the steady green Line LED indicates ALS in enabled. The second line of the LCD will display the method of dialing available, followed by the digits dialed.

???Ringing Line Preference ??? Answer any incoming call by lifting the handset or pressing Spkr. There is no need to press the ringing line button to answer the call when ringing line preference is enabled.

???Tone First Signaling ??? Internal incoming calls only: telephone rings in standard ring tone, lift handset or press Spkr to answer call.

???Voice First Signaling ??? Internal incoming calls only: a long tone is heard, followed by the caller's voice, this will automatically engage the Spkr to allow for hands free communications. Lift the handset if desired (for privacy). When Voice First Signaling is enabled the telephone does not ring on internal incoming calls.

???Hot Dialing ??? Dial a telephone number from the dialpad, the telephone automatically selects a line, shown with a green LED, and turns on the Spkr and Mic LED's. When Hot Dialing is not turned on the handset should be lifted or Sprk should be pressed in order to make a call.

The Basics

Making a Call

Making a Call

There are three ways to originate a call from the telephone:

Handset

1.To make a call, lift the handset, then dial the number.

A line may be automatically selected or choose a line manually. Dial tone is heard through the handset. The Speaker and Microphone LEDs do not light.

Digits display as they are dialed. Call progress tones (Ringback Tone, Busy Tone, etc.) are heard through the handset.

2.When connected, continue using the handset or switch to speakerphone by holding down Spkr and placing the handset in the cradle.

Spkr Button

1.To make a call, press Spkr.

A line may be selected automatically or choose a line manually. The extension or Line button lights (depending on system programming). Dial tone is heard through the speaker. The Speaker and Microphone LEDs light.

2.Dial the number.

Digits display as they are dialed. Call progress tones (Ringback Tone, Busy Tone, etc.) are heard through the speaker.

3.When connected, continue using the speakerphone or lift the handset to continue the conversation.

Hot Dialing

1.To make a call using Hot Dialing, start dialing the number.

The extension button, Spkr and Mic LEDs light. Digits display as they are dialed. Call progress tones (Ringback Tone, Busy Tone, etc.) are heard through the speaker.

2.When connected, continue using the speakerphone or lift the handset to continue the conversation.

The Basics

Making a Call

Dial Directory

This feature is supported on DP5000-series telephones with an LCD display running on CIX R5.1 (or higher) software. Calls can be made by selecting a name from the alphabetical telephone directory.

2. Choose the directory you wish to access and use the dial pad to enter the name.

Notes

???If a directory is not selected and a name is entered, all directories will be searched.

???To enter names from the dial pad, press the dial pad button associated with the letter to be entered. Press the button once for the first letter, twice for the second letter, etc. Left and Right Soft Keys are available to move the cursor.

3.Press Find to start the directory search.

4.Press Next to move forward through the directory.

5.Press Back to move backwards through the directory.

6.Press Call to connect to the directory entry selected.

7.Press Cncl to quit the directory search.

The Basics

Answering a Call

Answering a Call

There are several ways to answer a call:

Handset

When the telephone is programmed for Ringing Line Preference, pick up the handset and the telephone automatically answers the ringing line.

... or press the button associated with the ringing line (flashing green LED).

Speaker

When the telephone is programmed for Ringing Line Preference, press Spkr and the ringing line is answered.

... or press the button associated with the ringing line (flashing green LED). Once connected, continue using the speakerphone or lift the handset.

Handsfree Answerback

With speakerphone enabled, the telephone may be programmed for Handsfree Answerback. The called party hears a single long tone, followed by the caller???s voice. Begin hands free conversation. If Handsfree Answerback were not programmed, the called party could hear the calling party speak but would not be able to answer them without answering the call manually.

Notes

???The extension LED flashes green, the Microphone LED lights steady red and the Speaker LED flashes Red.

???In order to perform any additional functions with this call (like a transfer or hold) the call must be properly answered to gain full call control. Perform the same steps you normally would to answer a call: press the Spkr button, the flashing DN button or lift the handset.

???Handsfree MIC setting needs to be enabled by your System Administrator.

The Basics

On a Call

On a Call

While on a call you can perform the following:

Switching Between Handset and Speakerphone

Press Spkr and place the handset on-hook to switch from handset to speakerphone mode.

Take the handset off-hook to switch from speakerphone to handset mode.

Microphone (Mic/Mute) Button

This button toggles between Mic and Mute. When Mic button is lit, handsfree communication is supported, when Mic is pressed again and light is off, Mute is enabled and mutes both the microphone and the handset.

Hold

To place a call on hold, press Hold. Your LCD shows the line on hold. The held Line???s LED flashes green while appearances of the line at other stations flash red.

???To return to the held call, press the flashing held Line button.

???If you do not return to the held call within a specified time, it rings back to your telephone. The call remains camped-on to your station.

???If the held party hangs up, the call is released.

???See the Call Pickup section to pick up a call on hold from another extension.

Exclusive Hold

This feature enables you to place a call on hold so that only you can retrieve it.

While on a call, press Hold twice. That line???s LED flashes green while appearances of the line at other stations are steady red (in use).

The Basics

On a Call

Automatic Hold

This features enables you to move from one Line button to another Line button without pressing Hold.

Check with your System Administrator to make sure this setting is turned on. If Automatic Hold is not enabled, calls will drop when moving from one line to another without pressing Hold.

While on a call, press another extension button to receive/originate a new call. The accessed line???s LED flashes (in-use). The first call is put on hold and your extension???s LED flashes.

Consultation Hold

1.While on a call, press Cnf/Trn. The call goes on hold.

2.Dial another line.

3.Transfer the call or return to the held call by pressing its Line button.

The Basics

On a Call

LED Indicator Details

Each line and Programmable Feature Button has a LED next to it which indicates the status of the line or feature associated with the button. Line LEDs light red or green and flash at varying rates to indicate call status (see Table 6).

Note LEDs on the telephone flash at different speeds depending on the function performed. Flash rates can be found under ???LED Indicator Details??? on page 24.

This chapter gives you more details about your DP5000-series telephone???s advanced functions. An alphabetical list of supported features has been compiled in this chapter for fast and easy reference.

Account Code Calls

Account Codes (Forced or Voluntary) can be used for a variety of reasons including billing, tracking, and line restriction applications. Account Codes are assigned in the system as a fixed length (default is six digits) and are recorded by the system, along with the details of the calls, which can be printed on a Station Message Detail Recording (SMDR) report.

Verified/Non-Verified Account Codes

Verified Account Codes ensure that the system checks the account code you entered against a list created by the System Administrator. If the code is not in the list, the call will not go through.

Non-Verified Account Codes must be a uniform length but any digits are accepted. Account Codes and Lengths are setup and managed by the System Administrator.

Forced Account Codes

Some applications require you to enter an Account Code. These Forced Account Codes may be verified or non-verified, depending upon the application, but in either case, the caller must enter a code before proceeding.

To dial using Forced Account Codes

1.Place a call in the normal method.

If the call requires an Account Code, a burst of tone (Success Tone) is heard after dialing the telephone number alerting you to enter the Account Code.

2.Enter the account number.

When the number of digits designated for account codes has been entered, the number will be checked against the verified list, if chosen, and the call will continue as normal. If the number of digits entered for the account code is not reached or the verified code does not match, then re-order tone is heard and the call is rejected.

You can bypass Forced Account Code requirements with three emergency numbers, including 911. See your System Administrator for these numbers:

Feature Operations

Account Code Calls

Voluntary Account Codes (Verified/Non-Verified)

Voluntary Account Codes are optional. They can be entered during a call and are used for tracking selected calls using Station Message Detail Report (SMDR) call detail recording option.

If the system is set for Verified Account Codes, station users must enter a specific code when entering the Voluntary Account Code(s) or the code is not validated for the SMDR call report. This does not affect the call.

There are two ways to dial using a Voluntary Account Code:

To dial using the Account Code button

Note This will require a Programmable Feature Button to be programmed on your telephone set with the Account Code feature (#46).

1.After accessing a Central Office (CO) line, press the Account Code button. LCD telephones prompt you to ???ENTER ACCOUNT CODE NOW.???

2.Enter the account code digits. The LCD prompt disappears upon entry of the first account code digit. After the account code is entered, the time indicator is restored to the LCD.

3.If your station is set for Verified Account Codes, you hear a confirmation tone when the code is valid. If the code is invalid, you hear two short tones.

4.Enter the Account Code. Your conversation is not interrupted.

To enter an Account Code using access codes

Note It???s a good idea to warn the other party that you will be disconnected momentarily when you enter the access code. Once the code is entered, you will be connected again.

1.After accessing a CO line, press Cnf/Trn. Once you press Cnf/Trn, your call is interrupted; you and the other party cannot hear each other. You will hear feature dial tone.

2.Dial #46. LCD telephones prompt you to ???ENTER ACCOUNT CODE NOW.???

3.Enter the account code digits. The prompt disappears upon entry of the first account code digit. After the account code is entered, the connection is restored and the LCD shows the time.

Feature Operations

Advisory Messages

Advisory Messages

Advisory messaging enables you to store an informative message for LCD telephones that call your telephone. The messages can be up to 16 characters long. The Strata system provides a number of predefined messages, shown in the table below. Message numbers 5~9 can be defined by your System Administrator.

To set an advisory message

1.Go off-hook or press your extension button to hear dial tone.

2.Press #411

3.Enter Message number (see table above)

4.Enter additional digits if required.

5.Go on-hook or press Spkr to release the line.

To clear the registered message

1.Go off-hook or press your extension button to hear dial tone.

2.Press #412.

3.Go on-hook or press Spkr to release the line.

Feature Operations

Alarm Notification Button

Alarm Notification Button

The Alarm Notification Button must be setup by your System Administrator on your station.

When the Alarm Notification button displays

Call your System Administrator.

This button stops displaying when the alarm clears or when you press the flashing button. If the alarm has not been cleared the Alarm Notification Button starts flashing every 10 minutes.

Automatic Busy Redial

After reaching a busy outside number, you can activate Automatic Busy Redial so that the system automatically redials the number at regular intervals. The system repeats the redial until the destination is no longer busy. Check with your System Administrator to see if this feature is setup for your telephone.

Automatic Busy Redial is not attempted while your station is busy, but continues to time-out. The system inserts a pause (P) on your LCD before redialing the number.

To activate Automatic Busy Redial

1.When you reach a busy number, press Auto Busy Redial or Cnf/Trn + #441. The LED flashes red. You hear confirmation tone.

2.Hang up or press Spkr. The system redials, up to five to 20 times, every 30 to 180 seconds (depending on system programming). Your telephone receives ring tone when Automatic Busy Redial dials the number and it is available. The extension and Spkr LEDs flash green.

3.Lift the handset or press Spkr and wait for the party to answer. If you do not pick up the handset or press Spkr within recall timeout (five to 60 seconds) after a connection is made, you hear a muted ring for another 30 seconds, then the call disconnects.

To cancel Automatic Busy Redial

Press Auto Busy Redial or extension + #442.

Feature Operations

Automatic Callback

Automatic Callback

When you reach a busy station, you can set Automatic Callback to have the system monitor the busy extension and notify you when it becomes idle.

Automatic Callback can place you in queue for an available outside line, if you reach a line group in which all lines are busy. When a station or line becomes available, the system rings your telephone; when you answer the system automatically rings the intended destination. The amount of time the system will wait for an idle destination is set in system programming. Automatic Callback is also known as ???CO Line Queuing.???

To set Automatic Callback

1.If you hear busy tone after dialing an outside line access code or a station number, press Auto Callback or 4. Busy tone stops, followed by success tone, then busy tone resumes.

2.Hang up. You can make other calls while waiting.

3.When the called station or outside line becomes idle, your telephone rings and you will see a fast flashing LED.

???If you called a busy station, the extension LED flashes green (incoming call) and the called number displays.

???If you called a busy outside line, the extension LED flashes green (incoming call rate). The seized line???s number displays.

4.Answer within about three rings (can be programmed to ring up to three minutes) to prevent the callback from being cancelled. After you answer, you hear success tone, and the LED flashes green (in-use).

If you hear a busy tone after answering a callback, the called party is already on another call or the line has already been seized or has received an incoming call. Your request is not cancelled. You will be called again the next time a line becomes idle.

If you were attempting to make an outside call, the telephone number is automatically dialed, including the account code or override codes that were used.

To cancel ACB

Press Auto Callback or extension button + #431.

Feature Operations

Background Music

Background Music

You can set background music over your telephone speaker or over external speakers. At least one music source must be connected to your system. Up to 16 different music sources can be applied to the Strata CIX/CTX system: the first source is Quiet Tone, all others can be music or recorded information.

To enable background music on your telephone speaker

Press BGM. LED turns on.

Or press an extension button + #490 + n + #, where n is the music source 1~15.

To cancel background music on your telephone speaker

Press BGM. LED turns off.

Or press an extension button + #491.

To change the BGM source (1~15) assigned to the BGM button

Press an extension button + #9876 + BGM + n + BGM, where n is the music source 1~15.

To enable background music over your external paging speakers

Press an extension button + #492 + n + #, where n is the music source 1~15.

To cancel background music over your external paging speakers

Press an extension button + #493 + Spkr.

Feature Operations

Call Forward

Call Forward

There are two types of Call Forwarding that you can set. One is System Call Forward (set in System Programming) which automatically directs calls to a predefined location, such as Voice Mail. See your System Administrator to determine or change your System Call Forward destination.

The other type is Station Call Forwarding. You can use Station Call Forwarding to replace your System Call Forward destination with a custom Call Forward setting made from your station.

System

System Call Forward directs calls to a destination preset by an Administrator for each telephone, commonly set to voice mail.

To turn on System Call Forward for your telephone, press #620. Confirmation tone (three short tones) and display shows ???DATA PROGRAMMED.??? This indicates the data is set.

To turn off System Call Forward for your telephone, press #621. Confirmation tone (three short tones) and display shows ???DATA PROGRAMMED.??? This indicates the data is set.

Station

Station Call Forward enables you to assign Call Forward destinations for each extension on your telephone that will override the telephone???s System Call Forward settings. Each extension can be independently setup to Station Call Forward to a unique destination. You can set a Programmable Feature Button to perform any Call Forward function - see ???Programming Feature Buttons??? on page 84 for more details. Call Forward must be set prior to receiving the call.

The following calls to your station can be forwarded:

???Internal calls

???Auto Attendant calls

???Outside lines that ring only your station

???Transferred internal or incoming line calls

Feature Operations

Call Forward

Station Call Forward Categories

You can set Call Forward for the following categories of calls. Within these categories, you can use five different types of Call Forward Settings (as detailed in the next section).

???Call Forward Any Call ??? Forwards any call, whether an internal call or incoming line call.

???Call Forward - Incoming Line ??? Forward incoming line calls only.

???Call Forward Any Call - Set for Another Station ??? Enables you set forwarding of all calls for another telephone within your telephone system.

???Call Forward - Incoming Line Set for Another Station??? Enables you to set forwarding of incoming line calls for another telephone within your telephone system.

Notes

???Call Forward Any Call and Call Forward-Incoming line can be set simultaneously on a telephone. This allows incoming lines calls to be forwarded to a different destination than all of the other types of calls.

???Call Forward destinations can be set to internal destinations or an outside telephone number.

???You can change your forwarding destination from outside the system using the DISA feature. See your System Administrator for DISA telephone numbers and security code access.

Call Forward Settings

???Call Forward All Calls ??? Forwards all calls immediately.

???Call Forward Busy/Do Not Disturb ??? Forwards calls immediately when your extension is busy or in Do Not Disturb (DND) mode.

In Tone-first systems with multiple lines, Call Forward Busy forwards calls only when all line appearances are in use. In Voice-first systems, Call Forward Busy forwards all calls any time your telephone is in use.

???Call Forward - No Answer ??? Forwards unanswered calls after a preset number of rings. The preset number of rings can be set on a per user basis.

???Call Forward Busy/Do Not Disturb/No Answer ??? Forwards all calls when you are busy, in DND mode or when you don't answer a call within a preset number of rings.

???Call Forward Cancel ??? Cancels the set Call Forward feature. Notice that each category of Call Forward has a different code for canceling.

Feature Operations

Call Forward

Station Call Forward Procedures

Table 15 on Page 105 contains Call Forward Button sequences. You can do a Call Forward function by entering the button sequence as described or by programming a Programmable Feature Button to perform the sequence. See ???Programming Feature Buttons??? on page 84 to program a Programmable Feature Button.

To use the Call Forward button sequence

Follow the instructions in Table 17 on Page 110, shown under the ???Button Sequence??? heading. Some features require additional input, such as:

???Dest. Ext. or Telephone No. ??? Call Forward destination numbers can be

internal extension numbers or outside telephone numbers. If the destination is an outside number, enter the access code used for dialing out (such as 9) + the telephone number + #. The CIX accepts destination numbers of up to 32 digits.

???Timer ??? Enter the number of seconds (08~60) your telephone should ring before forwarding the call. (This is the Call Forward-No Answer timer.)

???Call Forward Pass Code ??? A four-digit Call Forward pass code can be setup by your System Administrator and will allow one station to activate the call forward setting for another station. Users must enter the Call Forward pass code for the station to be forwarded.

Note In Table 15 on Page 105, (tone) refers to three short tones used as a confirmation tone and will play at that point in the sequence to confirm your input was accepted.

Feature Operations

Call Forward

Call Forward Examples

To set your telephone to Call Forward Busy-No Answer to an internal extension number

Press your extension button + #6041 + 3000# + 10

#6041 = Call Forward Access Code sequence 3000# = Internal Extension Number

10 = Ring time in seconds before Call Forwards

To set another telephone to Call Forward Busy-No Answer to an outside destination number after a set time

Press your extension button + #6042 + 1234 + 1111 + # + 9 +1 949 5873000 + # + 08

#6042 = Call Forward Busy No Answer Access Code sequence 1234 = Other telephone???s extension number

1111 = Call Forward Passcode for other telephone + #

9 = Outside Line Access Code

1 949 5553000 = 1 + Area Code + Telephone Number

# = Must press after entering an outside destination number 08 = Ring time in seconds before Call Forwards

Feature Operations

Call Park Orbits

Call Park Orbits

The Call Park feature enables you to hold a call temporarily in a location other than your telephone. These areas are called orbits. You or another telephone user can retrieve a parked call from its orbit by specifying the orbit number. You can specify one of 20 General Park Orbits (7000~7019) or a valid extension number within the system.

Once you have parked a call in an orbit, you can:

???Hang up and retrieve the parked call at a later time

???Originate another call

???Access a voice paging device to announce the parked call for pickup from another station

If you park a call and it is not retrieved, it will recall to the parking station and one of the following occurs:

???If your station is idle when the system Call Park recall timer expires, the parked call automatically recalls to your station.

???If your station is busy, the parked call camps on.

If you have an LCD telephone, you can let the system automatically select an available orbit number which displays on your LCD.

To park a call

1.While on a call, press Park in Orbit or press Cnf/Trn + #33. The LED flashes green (consultation-hold). If you were on an extension during the call, and you have line button on your telephone, the line LED will flash until the call is picked up (depending on programming).

2.Specify the Park Orbit using one of the following:

???Press * and the system automatically selects a General Park Orbit between 7000~7019. The chosen orbit appears on the LCD.

???Enter a valid extension.

???Press # and the system automatically selects your extension as the orbit.

3.Hang up. The caller???s extension or line number and the orbit number are shown. If the parked call is not retrieved within a specified time, the call rings back to your telephone. When a parked call recalls your telephone, the LCD shows the line or extension that is recalling and the orbit number.

Feature Operations

Call Pickup

To retrieve a parked call

1.Press Park in Orbit or press your extension button + #32.

2.Enter the Orbit Number where the call is parked or # for the extension from which

you are calling. You cannot use * to retrieve a parked call. The extension LED flashes at the in-use rate when the call is retrieved.

Call Pickup

You can pick up a call that is ringing another station???s extension, a call placed on hold at another station and other types of calls. When you pick up an internal call, the calling station and the called station displays on your LCD.

Group Pickup

Two or more stations can be assigned to a pickup group, there are a total of 32 pickup groups available. You can easily pick up ringing calls on other extensions. Ringing calls include: new, transferred, internal, or external calls. You will have the ability to pick up calls for other extensions in your group and other groups as well. See your System Administrator for group assignments.

Ringing, Page or Held Call Pickup

This feature picks up ringing or held calls, including Group Page and All Call Page calls. If these types of calls occur at the same time, the pickup priority is station-to- station and then Page calls in the order of occurrence. In some systems, this feature can be applied to pick up All Call Page exclusively.

Feature Operations

Call Pickup

To perform Call Pickup

Press the buttons shown in the table below for the desired Pickup feature.

Notes

???The Primary extension number is the directory number by which the telephone set is defined. Other, non-primary extension numbers may also appear on the telephone. By convention, the Primary extension number is assigned to the first button (on the bottom left-hand side) of a multi-button telephone.

???If more than one call is on hold, the call on the telephone???s lowest button number is picked up.

???Ringing calls are picked up over held calls as a priority.

Feature Operations

Call Transfer

Call Transfer

Call transfer allows a call to be directed from one telephone to another on the CIX.

External transfers to telephone numbers or network extensions off the CIX are also supported, please check with your System Administrator to see if this is enabled.

There are two types of call transfer:

???Blind transfer ??? The call is directly transferred to another extension without announcing the call or waiting to see if the caller is available.

???Supervised transfer ??? The call is ???supervised??? during the transfer process so the call can be announced to the receiving party before completing the transfer. A supervised transfer also allows the person originating the transfer to take back or cancel the transfer.

To perform Call Transfer Immediate

1.While on a call, press the TRNS Soft Key.

2.Dial the extension where you wish to transfer the call.The call rings the destination station and your telephone returns to the idle state. If your telephone does not go idle, the destination may be located in a remote node, so you need to hang up to return to idle state.

To transfer using the Cnf/Trn button

1.While on a call, press Cnf/Trn. Your Line LED flashes green and you hear internal dial tone.

2.Dial the extension where the call will be transferred. You can remain on the line and announce the call or hang up to complete a ???blind transfer.???

Note If the privacy option has been disabled, then if you use a Line button when you

transfer the call, the LED will flash red until the receiving party answers. While the LED is flashing, you can press the Line button to return to the call. If the

receiving party answers the call, the LED turns solid red and you cannot reconnect to the original caller.

During call transfer, you can connect all three parties by pressing the Cnf/Trn button or by pressing the JOIN soft key. This allows the three parties to talk together.

3.Transfer with Camp On: If the station to which you want to transfer the call is busy, you may hang up and the transferred trunk or station will be camped on to the busy destination.

Feature Operations

Call Waiting

To transfer a call directly to Voice Mail (VM)

1.While on a call, press Cnf/Trn.

2.Enter #407.

3.Enter the VM mailbox number (usually the same as the extension number) + #.

4.Hang up and the caller is connected to the VM mailbox. This feature does a blind transfer to VM.

To transfer a call directly to VM with a DSS button

1.While on a call, press Cnf/Trn.

2.Press the DSS button programmed to the voice mail number.

3.Hang up and the caller is connected to the VM mailbox.

Call Waiting

You can answer a call that is transferred to your station, even when your station is busy. When another call is camped onto your station, you hear two Camp-on tone beeps and the extension or Line LED flashes red (on-hold).

If a call is sent to your station when busy, and your station does not have an extension button available to receive the call, two camp-on tone beeps are sent to your telephone. You must disconnect or transfer the existing call to answer the waiting call.

To answer a waiting call by placing the current call on hold

Press Hold. The existing call is placed on hold. The camped-on line rings your station (the Line LED flashes green - incoming call)....or if your telephone has the Auto Hold feature, just press the flashing extension button.

You are connected to the transferred call. The extension or Line LED flashes green (in-use).

Note See your System Administrator to find out if you have Auto Hold.

To answer a waiting call by disconnecting or transferring the current call

Hang up or transfer the existing call; the camped-on call rings your station. The camped-on line rings your telephone and the Line LED flashes green (incoming call).

...or press the flashing extension or Line. The existing call is placed on hold. The camped-on line rings your station (the Line LED flashes green - incoming call). This disconnects the current call and connects you to the transferred call. The extension or Line LED flashes green (in-use).

Feature Operations

Caller ID

Caller ID

Incoming calls to your extension with Caller ID can be recorded into a rolling list that is saved on your telephone. The call information is placed in the list along with the number, name (if provided), time and date of the call, and status of the call (answered, abandoned, or redirected). You can access this list from an LCD telephone with a flexible Caller ID button.

To view saved Caller ID information

1.When your station is idle, press the Caller ID button.

The Caller ID LED lights green and the latest record displays.

2.Use the soft keys (Next, Prev, Call or Exit).

Note Caller ID is displayed when a call is first answered and will be displayed for the first 15 seconds of the telephone call.

Conference Calls

You can conference together up to eight parties (including yourself) - with up to six parties being external network lines. The actual number of conference parties with acceptable volume levels depends on the local and far end telephone line conditions.

The person who initiates the conference call is the Master. If, after the conference is established, the Master exits the conference, the first station to have been added to the conference becomes the Master.

To conference calls

1.While on a call, press Cnf/Trn. You hear dial tone and your Line LED flashes green.

2.Call another station or outside line.

3.When the called party answers, press Cnf/Trn. If you receive a busy tone or no answer, press Cnf/Trn again to return to the original connection.

All parties are conferenced. If the second call was placed on a Line that appears on your telephone, the LED also flashes green.

4.Repeat steps 1~3 until all parties are added or the maximum number of parties is reached.

Note When the Master of the conference hangs up, the control is automatically transferred to the first internal station added to the conference call. If no other internal stations are included in the conference call, the call will be disconnected.

Feature Operations

Conference Calls

To transfer conference control

1.Complete Steps 1 and 2 above to add the line to which you wish to transfer conference control. See previous Note.

2.Announce the call and hang up to transfer it. This station now becomes the conference Master with the ability to add or delete parties.

To hold a conference call

If you are the Conference Master, press the Hold button once (or twice for Executive Hold) to place the conference call on hold. The other parties can continue with the conference. Music-on-hold is suppressed and your extension LED flashes green. You can rejoin the conference at any time by pressing your extension button. When you return, you retain Master status.

Adding Voice Mail to a Conference

The Conference Master can add voice mail to a conference. This feature enables participants in a conference to listen to or leave a voice mail message during a conference call.

To add Voice Mail to a conference call (performed by Conference Master)

1.Press Cnf/Trn to place the current call on Consultation Hold.

2.Dial the voice mail (VM) extension number, then enter the VM mailbox and security code. This adds the voice mailbox to the conference.

3.Press Cnf/Trn to reconnect to the original party. (You can continue to add conference members by pressing Cnf/Trn and dialing another extension.)

Now, all parties in the conference can listen to or record a message to this voice mailbox. Only the Master can control the VM with touchtones or Soft Keys.

Feature Operations

Conference Calls

Supervising a Tandem Call

1.While talking on an outside call, press Cnf/Trn. You hear dial tone. The extension LED flashes (conference rate).

2.Dial an outside telephone number.

3.After the party answers, press Cnf/Trn. The extension LED flashes (in-use rate) and all parties are conferenced.

If you receive a busy tone or if the station does not answer, press the flashing extension button to return to the original connection.

4.Press Cnf/Trn and hang up. The extension LED flashes (exclusive-hold rate) and the two lines are connected. The LED turns Off when the parties hang-up.

5.To supervise a tandem call, press the extension button. If the parties have finished, hang up...or if the parties are still talking, press Cnf/Trn and hang-up. Both Line LEDs turn Off and the connection is released.

If your telephone company provides automatic disconnect supervision, the connection will release automatically when the parties hang up. If not, the lines must be supervised to be disconnected.

Conference Add/Split/Join/Drop

If you initiate a conference with two or more parties, you can continue to add outside callers to conference; or you and another member of the conference can leave (Split) the conference for a private conversation. During this time, other conference members remain connected.

You can then Join both of you back into the conference, or you can Drop (disconnect) the member you are connected to. This feature is performed with Soft Keys if you have a LCD phone or with a Split button programmed on one of your Programmable Feature Buttons.

This feature also works for remote stations which are connected through Strata Net QSIG.

Important! You must be a conference master to perform the Add, Split and Drop features. The conference master is the person that initiates the conference call. If that person drops from the conference, the first person added to the conference becomes the conference master.

Feature Operations

Conference Calls

To add an Incoming call to the Conference

1.Place the first caller/Conference on hold.

2.Answer the incoming ringing call.

3.While speaking to the incoming caller, press Cnf/Trn button.

4.Press the blinking DN where the first caller/Conference was placed on hold.

5.Press Cnf/Trn twice to join all parties together.

To Split from a conference

1.While in a conference call on a DP5000-series phone, press the SPLT (Split) soft key or Split button.

2.Press the NEXT soft key until you see the extension number for the party that you want to Split out of the conference.

3.You can return both yourself and the other Split party back into the conference by pressing JOIN.

RTRN terminates a feature operation and returns to the previously displayed state.

To Drop the Split party from a conference

Press the DROP Soft Key. The party that you are talking to privately (the party which you have Split from the conference) will be disconnected (Dropped) and you will rejoin the conference.

If you are in a three-way conference and Split with one of the parties, the remaining party will essentially be ???on hold??? until you return to the conference.

Feature Operations

Direct Inward System Access (DISA)

Direct Inward System Access (DISA)

Outside callers with touch tone telephones can call in to lines programmed for Direct Inward System Access (DISA) and dial an extension or outgoing line without going through an attendant or operator. Check with your System Administrator to see if this features is available for your telephone.

1.From outside the system, dial the public telephone number assigned to DISA. The call will be answered and you will hear system dial tone.

If you do not dial within 10 seconds, the line disconnects.

2.When you hear dial tone, dial an extension or an outside line.

3.If you dial an outside destination, you may need to enter a security code provided to you by the System Administrator. When you hear the tone, enter the security code. If accepted, the call will proceed.

4.If you receive busy tone and you want to dial another number while the station is still ringing, press * and repeat Step 2.

Direct Station Selection Buttons (Hotline)

This optional feature enables you to use a DSS button to connect directly to another station???s line extension. The DSS LED shows the status (idle/busy) of the station and/ or the station???s primary extension. For example, a station???s DSS button LED shows busy (light steady red) when the station is:

???busy on a call on any button

???idle but all appearances of the station???s extension are in use by other stations. When the station is in DND, the LED flashes red.

To connect directly to another station???s extension

1.When connected to a line or another station, press DSS.

The original party is put on-hold. You can call a station even if the DSS LED shows busy (steady red).

2.Announce the call...or transfer the call by hanging up or pressing Release.

Note You can transfer the call to an idle or busy station.

Feature Operations

Do Not Disturb

Do Not Disturb

If your station is in Do Not Disturb (DND) mode, internal, external and transferred calls do not ring your station and Off-hook Call Announce calls are denied. You can continue to make calls while in the DND mode. When originating a call in DND mode, you will hear a short burst of interrupted dial tone followed by continuous dial tone. You can start dialing at any time during either tone.

If you put your Primary extension into DND mode, all calls to that telephone are rejected. If your extension is set for Call Forward-Busy or Call Forward-Busy/No Answer, the call is redirected to the forwarding destination immediately.

If you put an extension other than the Primary extension into DND, only calls to that extension on your telephone will be blocked. Appearances of that extension on other telephones continue to ring.

To activate DND on your Primary extension

Press Do Not Disturb or #6091 (hear Success Tone). The LED lights steady red and DND mode is activated for the entire station.

To activate DND on a non-Primary extension

Press the desired extension appearance and Do Not Disturb or #6091 (hear Success Tone). The LED lights steady red and DND mode is activated for that extension on your telephone.

To deactivate DND

Press Do Not Disturb or #6092 (hear Success Tone). The LED lights goes out and DND mode is de-activated.

Feature Operations

Door Lock(s)

Setting DND for Another Extension

To activate DND for another extension

Enter #6191 (hear Entry Tone) + the Primary extension of the remote extension + the pass code + # (hear Success Tone). This sets DND as if activated by the Primary extension on the target telephone.

To deactivate DND for another extension

Enter #6192 (hear Entry Tone) + the Primary extension of the remote extension + the pass code + # (hear Success Tone). This removes DND from the target telephone.

To change your DND Pass Code

Enter #670 (hear Entry Tone) + ext. no. (hear Entry Tone) + old pass code + # (hear Entry Tone) + new pass code + # (hear Success Tone).

If you activate DND while a call is ringing, the ringing stops. The LED continues to flash on your telephone and ring on other appearances.

Door Lock(s)

If you have locked doors in your facility that can be controlled through the Strata CIX system, you may be able to unlock these doors by using your telephone???s Unlock Door button(s). The Unlock Door button(s) is programmed to unlock a specific door.

Check with your System Administrator to find out the locations of your system???s door phones and record them below.

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

To unlock a door

Press the specific Unlock Door button or #12 + the Door Lock Number (see above table). The door unlocks for three~30 seconds (set in system programming). The Unlock Door LED is lit while the door is unlocked.

Feature Operations

Door Phone(s)

Door Phone(s)

Door phones can be used to call phones selected in system programming. When a door phone calls, you hear a distinctive ringing tone, one or five times (set in system programming). You can also call a door phone and monitor the surrounding area.

LCD telephones display the door phone name ID when calls are made to or from door phones.

The number of possible door phones varies by Strata CIX system, 01~24 maximum for larger systems. Check with your System Administrator to find out the names and locations of your system???s door phones and record them below.

To answer a door phone call

When you hear a door phone call ringing, lift the handset or press the ringing button. A door phone call sounds like chimes (high/low). The extension LED flashes green (in-use) and you are connected to the door phone.

...or to pick up door phone calls ringing someone else???s telephone, press your extension + #5#5 + directory number of the ringing phone.

Feature Operations

Emergency Call

To call/monitor a door phone

1.With the handset off-hook, press an extension button. You hear dial tone and the LED flashes green (in-use).

2.Press #15 (hear three tone bursts), then enter the door phone number (01~24, depending on system size). A two-way talk-path exists between your telephone and the door phone. The door phone will not ring. You can audibly monitor the area around the door phone.

To call from a door phone

1.Press the door phone button and then release it. You hear a distinctive ringing tone???one or five times (set in system programming).

2.When answered, speak at a normal voice level in the direction of the door phone.

Emergency Call

To make an emergency call, dial 911 or Access Code + 911. This depends on off-hook preference set up for your telephone.

Note Check with your System Administrator for the Access Code because this code may be different from the one used to get an outside line.

Emergency Monitoring Station

Your system may have one digital telephone assigned as an emergency monitoring station. If your telephone has this assignment, your line LED will flash green when someone makes a 911 call. When you answer the call, you can listen in and participate in the conversation. See your System Administrator for more information on this feature.

Feature Operations

Emergency Ringdown

Emergency Ringdown

If a station remains off-hook for a programmable period, it can be automatically treated as an Emergency Call and directed to an emergency destination. The station may have partially dialed a number or have dialed no digits at all. Each station is programmed with its specific emergency ringdown destination.

A station number or a group pilot number can be specified as an emergency ringdown destination. In a private network, the station or pilot number must be in the same network node. Remote emergency destination and door phones are not permitted.

Language Codes

This feature enables you to change the language sent from the Attendant Console or from a PC. See your System Administrator to find out if your telephone is programmed with the ability to change languages.

To change the Language Display

Enter the Change Language access code #495 + the Language Code (see below). 1: English date format ??? MM/DD (/YY)

2: British English ??? DD/MM (/YY)

3: French ??? DD/MM (/YY)

4: Spanish ??? DD/MM (/YY)

Feature Operations

Message Waiting

Message Waiting

Message Waiting is shown on the Msg button which will flash red when there are messages waiting. The waiting message indicators can come from the voicemail system or they can be internal messages sent from other extensions.

The messages from other extensions are notifications that someone has called your extension and wants you to call them back.

An extension can receive up to three Message Waiting indications, one additional indicator will always be reserved for the voicemail system.

Note If there are Phantom DN's (PhDN's) programmed on an extension, each PhDN can receive up to three message waiting indicators.

Responding to a Lit Msg LED

1.Press Red flashing Msg button. The telephone will dial the message source (the voicemail or another extension). See Note below.

2.When call is finished, hang up and the message waiting indicator will be cleared.

3.If the Msg LED continues to flash, there are additional messages to check, repeat steps 1-2.

Voicemail devices have a short delay in turning off the message waiting indicators.

To manually turn off the Msg LED, press your extension button, then enter #409. Repeat this sequence until all the messages are cleared.

Notes

???If there is a + on the LCD, press the Next Soft Key to scroll through the messages sent to that extension.

???To see who has sent you messages, or to retrieve the messages, press the flashing Msg button.

Feature Operations

Message Waiting

Turning On/Off MW LED on Another Extension

When an extension is called, the calling party can choose to send a message to the called party. This is a notification to say that a call has been missed and the calling party would like to be called back.

By sending a message to another extension you turn on their Msg LED.

1.Dial an internal extension. You may hear ringing or busy tone.

2.Press Msg or 7. The Msg LED flashes red on the called telephone. At your telephone, the Msg LED lights steady red and the LCD shows the station number where the Message Waiting light was sent to.

If you decide to cancel the Message Waiting light at this point, press Msg or 7

again while ring-over tone is playing and the light will be cancelled, or if you want to cancel the message later, call the telephone you set the message on and press 7 twice.

3.Press Spkr. Your Msg LED turns Off. The Msg LED on the called telephone flashes until the called party presses the flashing Msg button which calls you back.

4.Turn off the Message LED.

The two ways to turn Off a Message LED are

Method 1

1.Press #64 plus the extension number that has the message light set.

2.Press Spkr or hang up to end the call.

Method 2

1.Dial the extension that has the Message LED on.

2.Press 77

3.Press Spkr or hang up to release your telephone.

Feature Operations

Microphone Cut-Off

Microphone Cut-Off

This feature prevents callers from monitoring the sounds near your telephone when

your telephone receives a Handsfree Call or cuts-off the telephone microphone while on a speakerphone call. When the feature is ON, the Microphn Cut-off LED lights

steady red and the Mic and Spkr LEDs do not light when your telephone is called. When the feature is OFF, the Microphn Cut-off LED is not lit and your microphone works. The Microphn Cut-off functions on Handsfree Answerback and speaker

OCA calls for privacy.

To turn the microphone ON/OFF

Press Microphn Cut-off to toggle between ON/OFF.

Feature Operations

Off-hook Call Announce

Off-hook Call Announce

Off-hook Call Announce (OCA) enables you to complete a call to a busy digital telephone. Your telephone must be programmed to either announce automatically or to announce after you press a button on your dial pad. The destination telephone must be programmed to accept an OCA. The announcement may be delivered over the handset or the speaker.

Handset OCA can operate on any digital telephone. Speaker OCA requires the addition of a special circuit board inside the speakerphone.

To make an OCA call

Manual ??? Dial an extension. When you hear busy tone, press 5 and, after one long tone, you can talk through the speaker of the destination telephone. The person you are calling has answering options described below.

Automatic ??? If your telephone and the extension you are calling have been programmed for Automatic OCA, you can talk through the speaker of the destination telephone without hearing the busy tone and without dialing 5.

To answer a Handset OCA call

While you have a call in progress, you hear one tone in your handset to indicate that a second station is calling.

Press Mic to toggle between the new and original callers.

You talk to the new caller for as long as you hold down Mic. When you release the button, you return to the original caller. In both cases, neither caller can hear the other. Your LCD indicates which station or CO line you are connected to.

To answer a Speaker OCA call

1.While you have a handset call in progress and you hear one tone, this indicates that a second station is calling. The second caller connects to the speaker in your telephone. The Spkr LED flashes and the Mic LED lights. You will be speaking to the first caller through your handset and the second caller through the microphone.

2.To turn off your microphone speaker to the second party, you can press Mic or Microphn Cut-off; the Mic LED turns Off. You will no longer be talking to the second caller, although he/she can still speak through your speaker.

3.Press Mic or Microphn Cut-off again to reconnect to the second caller. You can toggle as often as you choose. If you do not want the first caller to hear your conversation with the second caller, cover the mouthpiece of your handset.

Feature Operations

Override Calls

Override Calls

The available override features are:

???Busy Override

???Do Not Disturb Override

???Executive Override

???Destination Restriction/Traveling Class Override

???Class of Service Override

???Privacy Override

Busy Override

Ring Over Busy Override enables you to send a muted ring tone to a busy station to indicate a call is waiting. The Busy Override (BOV) muted ring can be programmed for each station to be two muted rings only or continued muted rings until the call is answered. This option applies to the station receiving the muted ring. The muted ring can be sent to the telephone speaker or to the telephone handset/headset and speaker.

To use Busy Override

After reaching a busy station, press 2. A muted tone is heard at the busy station, indicating that a call is waiting. The station number displays.

Do Not Disturb Override

Do Not Disturb (DND) Override lets you send a call waiting tone or ringing to a station in DND mode to indicate that a call is coming in. Your telephone may be programmed to block DND Override from other telephones. Your station???s LCD shows the station you have called is in the DND mode.

OCA is possible to DND stations from stations that are programmed for DND Override.

To use DND Override

After reaching a station in DND mode, press 2. A tone signal is heard at the DND station, indicating a call is coming in. On your station, the LCD shows the station number you have overridden.

Your LCD displays DND OVR DENY, if the station you called denies DND Override.

Feature Operations

Override Calls

Executive Override

Executive Override enables you to enter an established conversation. Your telephone can also be programmed to block Executive Override from other telephones.

To perform Executive Override

After reaching a busy station, press 3

...or, if you have an LCD telephone, use the OVRD Soft Key.

You enter a conference with the busy station and the party to whom he was talking. The called parties may hear an optional tone signal prior to your entering the conversation.

Your LCD displays EXEC OVR DENY, if the station you called denies Executive Override. If you do not have Override privileges, you will camp on.

Destination Restriction/Traveling Class Override

Enables a station user to override the Destination Restriction or Traveling Class of a particular telephone by entering a pre-determined account code.

To use Destination Restriction or Traveling Class Override

1.Press 471. Confirmation tone plays and the LCD shows ???Enter OVR Code.???

2.Enter the trunk access code or LCR access code.

3.Dial the external telephone number.

Class of Service Override

By dialing a Class of Service (COS) Override code, a user can change a station???s set of privileges to one associated with the override code. When the call is terminated and another is attempted from the same station, the original COS is applied. This allows selected users to override restrictions that are placed on any telephone in the system.

To perform Class of Service Override

1.Access a Primary or Phantom DN. You hear dial tone and the LED flashes at the in-use rate.

2.Press #471. Dial tone stops. Your LCD prompts you to enter a code.

3.Enter the COS Override Code (four digits). You hear dial tone.

4.Dial a telephone number.

Note For security reasons, the override codes are only available on a selected basis. See your System Administrator.

Feature Operations

Paging

Privacy Override

This feature enables you to enter an established call on a line you share with another telephone. Up to two station users can enter an existing Central Office (CO) line-to- station call (i.e., up to three stations can be connected to a CO line). You can also use this feature if the station that is already connected to the CO line is in the Privacy Release mode.

Station users with Privacy Release can allow stations with the shared button appearance to enter their conversations, even if the station entering the conversation is not programmed for Privacy Override. (see ???Privacy??? on page 59.)

Paging

Station users can make page announcements to telephones and external speakers. Check with your System Administrator to find out the zone numbers for various paging groups.

To make a Page Announcement to telephones or external speakers

1.Lift the handset, press your extension button and enter a paging access code.

2.Make your announcement, then hang up.

To make a Group Page

Press Group Page and enter the Group number (01~16)

...or press extension + #31 and enter the zone number.

Answering a Page

To answer a Group Page, lift the handset off-hook, dial #5#36 and enter the Page Zone number (01~08, depending on your telephone system).

To answer an External Page Zone, lift the handset off-hook, dial #5#36 and enter the Page Zone number (01~08, depending on your telephone system).

Feature Operations

Paging

All Call Page

You can make an All Call Page to telephones assigned to the ???All Call Page Group.??? Stations are assigned to the ???All Call Page Group??? in system programming.

To make an All Call Page

1.With the handset off-hook, press All Call Page

...or dial #30. This pages all telephones in the All Call Page Group but, depending on system programming, you may or may not page external speakers.

2.Make your announcement then hang up.

To answer an All Call Page

1.Lift the handset off-hook, dial #5#36.

2.Enter the Page Zone Number (01~08, depending on your telephone system).

Emergency Page

An Emergency Page overrides Group Pages or All Call Pages to telephone and external paging devices.

To make an Emergency Page, lift the handset off-hook, dial #37.

To make an Emergency Page to a group, lift the handset off-hook, dial #38 and enter the Group number.

Feature Operations

Privacy

Privacy

Privacy controls the ability of more than one person to use the same extension or CO line at the same time. Privacy applies to multiple appearances of extensions, Phantom extensions, outside Lines and outside Line Group buttons. The application of Privacy to individual telephones is controlled in system programming.

By default, the system is private. If you are in a conversation, another telephone with an appearance of the line on which you are talking cannot intrude unless that telephone has been programmed for Privacy Override. In that event, the other telephone may enter and leave the conversation at will. If all users are provided with Privacy Release in Class of Service, the system will function as non-private.

Your telephone may be equipped with a Privacy Release and/or a Privacy on Line button. On a normally private telephone, Privacy Release allows other

appearances of you line to join the conversation. On a normally non-private telephone, Privacy on Line allows you to exclude others. The Privacy condition may be

toggled at any time during a conversation. At the end of the conversation, the line???s privacy condition returns to its original state.

To use Privacy Release

While on a CO line call, press Privacy Release. The LED lights red. The outside line flashes at all appearances. When another station user enters the outside

line call by pressing a common outside Line, the Privacy Release LED turns Off. To add a third station, press Privacy Release again; the process repeats.

To set/cancel Privacy

Press Privacy on Line to set privacy. The LED lights steady red. Others are blocked from entering your outside line calls when they press a common Line

...or press Privacy on Line again to cancel the feature. The LED turns Off.

Redial

Use this button to redial the last number dialed from your telephone.

To redial the last number, press Redial or *0.

Feature Operations

Speed Dial

Speed Dial

Speed Dial (SD) enables you to dial a sequence of up to 32 digits with a shorter code. Dial sequences can include telephone numbers, authorization codes, passwords feature activation codes and pauses. Speed Dial may be used to originate a call or invoked after a call is established. There are two types of Speed Dial:

???System SD ??? All telephones in your system can share a list of up to 800 System Speed Dial numbers under the exclusive control of the System Administrator. In some cases, System Speed Dial enables you to reach numbers that you would not be allowed to dial directly from your telephone.

???Station SD ??? Your System Administrator allocates a block of up to 100 personal SD numbers (10 per telephone). You have exclusive use of them and you can create and change them from your own telephone.If you have a 9-Line LCD telephone, you can assign names to your station SD numbers to appear on the Personal SD Directory display (see your System Administrator or use the procedure for ???Storing Personal Speed Dial Names??? on page 63.)

To use personal Speed Dial

1.See your System Administrator to check how many personal Speed Dial numbers are allocated to your telephone and if you have Speed Dial capabilities enabled on your telephone.

2.Setup / Store your personal Speed Dial numbers.

3.Assign names to personal Speed Dial numbers (on supported models).

Making a Call Using Speed Dial

There are two ways to begin a Speed Dial Call.

1.Press Spdial on a DP5000-series digital telephone

...or press the * button on any telephone.

2.Dial the Station or System Speed Dial Number. Station Speed Dial numbers occupy numbers 100~199. System Speed Dial numbers occupy numbers 200~999.

Feature Operations

Speed Dial

nnn= 200~999 System SD numbers

1.Stations must be assigned/enabled Speed Dial capabilities in system programming by an Administrator in Program 200-30 (System SD) and Program 200-35 (Station SD).

2.If your telephone does not have a Spdial button, press the * button, then dial the three digit Speed Dial bin number (nnn).

Storing a System/Station Speed Dial Number

1.Dial #66. The display shows ???SPEED DIAL??? and you hear Entry Tone.

2.Dial the Station Speed Dial number (100~199) or System Speed Dial number (200~999). The LCD shows your digits and you hear Entry Tone.

3.Dial the telephone number to be stored + #. Include any required access and area codes. The LCD shows ???SPEED DIAL??? + the Speed Dial Number + destination + #. You hear Success Tone.

4.Lift handset.

5.To enter another number repeat steps 1-4. Refer to Table 9 below.

Example: To store a Station Speed Dial number to Speed dial location 100, dial

#66 + 100 + 99495833000 + #

1.Stations must be assigned/enabled Speed Dial capabilities in system programming by an Administrator in Program 200-30 (System SD) and Program 200-35 (Station SD).

2.Refer to Table 10 on page 62 to see how to enter*and # into a speed dial phone number.

Feature Operations

Speed Dial

Advanced Speed Dial Operation

Special Characters

SD numbers may include 0~9, #, * and Pause. For an example on how to use special characters, see page 87.

Table 10Phone Number Dial String Characters

Long SD Numbers

Up to 32 digits can be stored in one SD location. If you exceed 32 digits, the excess digits are automatically stored in the next sequential SD location. If SD 100 contains 40 digits, then 8 of those digits would be stored in SD 101. If you save other digits to SD101 they will over-write the eight digits automatically stored there.

Feature Operations

Speed Dial

Storing Personal Speed Dial Names

You can store names with Personal Speed Dial numbers. These names will display as Soft Keys, that can be used for dialing from the telephone LCD directories.

Notes

???Speed Dial locations must be assigned to your telephone by your System Administrator before you can store names. Your System Administrator can also associate names with Station Speed Dial numbers.

???Only the Administrator telephone can store System Speed Dial numbers.

To assign Station Speed Dial names

1.Enter User Programming Mode by dialing #9876 or, press Program.

2.Press Spdial. ???SPEED DIAL MODE??? displays on the LCD.

3.Enter a Speed Dial location number (100~199 for personal speed dial or 200~999 for System speed dial, depending on system programming).

4.Enter the telephone

number to be stored. If you normally a dial line access code (such as 9) and/or and area code, enter the codes before the telephone number.

5.Press Spkr, then input the name that will appear in the Personal SD directory (nine characters max).

You can enter alphanumeric characters from the dial pad (shown right and in Table 11).

Refer to the table for other characters.

5859

Notes

???To store #, press *#

???To store *, press **

Feature Operations

Speed Dial

programmed.

7. Go off hook. The telephone exits User Programming Mode.

8. Test the Personal SD entry by pressing the Personal SD Soft Key. Look for the name in the entry and press the Soft Key associated with that name.

Feature Operations

Tone First / Voice First Signalling

Tone First / Voice First Signalling

To determine the signalling on the telephone circuit.

Tone First Signalling

When the telephone rings and the called party must press Spkr or lift the handset in order to receive the call.

Voice First Signalling

The telephone does not ring when it is being called, rather a long tone is heard, followed by the caller's voice coming through the speaker. This method automatically starts in a hands free mode and allows both parties to speak with each other.

Note The calling party has control over whether Tone First or Voice First Signaling is being used. The ability to switch between the two is setup by the System Administrator.

To change the signalling method while placing the call

1.Enter the extension number

2.Press 1 to turn on Tone First Signaling.

3.Press 2 to turn on Voice First Signaling.

Feature Operations

Tone/Pulse Dialing

Tone/Pulse Dialing

With some older Central Offices, you may have to make calls on outside lines programmed for rotary dial pulses. This feature enables you, while on these lines, to switch to tone dial to access remote equipment (such as an answering machine) requiring touchtones.

Note With ISDN calls, when Tone Dial Select is pressed, all of the digits entered after that point will be sent with touchtones.

To change Tone Dialing

1.Access an outside line.

2.Dial a telephone number.

3.While on the call, press Tone Dial Select. Although the outside line is programmed for rotary dial pulses, access the outside line and dial the telephone number like any other call described in this user guide.

The Tone LED lights steady red and you are able to send touchtones with your dial pad. The feature is cancelled when the call is completed.

Feature Operations

Uniform Call Distribution

Uniform Call Distribution

Uniform Call Distribution (UCD) provides ACD-like service based on the simplified Distributed Hunt feature. Incoming calls are answered by Voice Mail as the Auto Attendant function or they can be directly routed to the UCD (Distributed Hunt) Pilot number. The caller will dial the UCD Pilot station in response to a prompt. The call will go to the next agent or, if all agents are busy, the call will camp-on to the Distributed Hunt pilot and ring-back tone or Music-on-Hold (MOH) will be sent.

This feature distributes incoming calls to available agents. Agents must be logged into the group to receive UCD calls. The following illustration shows the typical call flow for this service.

1.Agent logs into the UCD group.

2.CIX receives a call from PSTN or extension.

3.The call is routed to voice mail which provides the initial greeting using the auto attendant service.

4.The voice mail can be configured to prompt callers to enter the destination number or to route the call to the pre-determined destination.

5.The voice mail transfers the call to the UCD pilot group.

6.According to the hunting rule (distribute), the call is delivered to an idle agent who logs in to this hunting group.

If no agent is available in the hunting group, the call is queued to the UCD pilot group. The caller may hear the Music on Hold (MOH) or Ring Back Tone (RBT) depending on the configuration. If the call cannot be answered within the preconfigured time, the call is routed to an overflow destination.

Feature Operations

Uniform Call Distribution

Login/Logout

Login and Logout is controlled by the Login key assigned to the agent phone (see Strata CIX Programming Manual, Volume 1 for details). The Log status is displayed on the Login key as shown below

???Login - Key is On Steady

???Logout - Key is Off

The Login/Logout feature is applied to the call which terminates to UCD pilot only. Therefore, the call can terminate to agent Prime or Phantom PDN directly even if the agent is in Logout state. Also, Login/Logout can be activated by an access code. The default numbering plan is shown below.

where DN = the Directory number of the agent station.

This chapter provides an overview of the optional units that can be connected to the DP5000-series telephones (except the Single line telephone).

Add-on Modules

The following Add-on modules provide additional buttons:

???10 Button LCD Module, up to two supported per telephone.

???20 Button Add on Module with paper keystrip, up to two supported per telephone.

???Digital Direct Station Selection (DSS) Module with 60 buttons and Paper Keystrip, up to three supported per telephone.

ADM

Buttons and LEDs

The 10 button LED add on module and the 20 button keystrip add on module have programmable feature buttons that can be assigned as CO Line, Directory Number, DSS, One Touch Speed Dial or any other programmable feature.

When a Programmable Feature Button is programmed as a DSS button or a Line button, it will have an LED that provides a status of the outside line or station assigned to it. The DSS button acts like a speed dial button to a specific extension.

???A station or line shows steady red when in use by others; green when in use by your extension.

???A DSS LED will flash red while making a call and turn intermittently green once connected.

???An outside Line LED is green when the outside line is in use by your extension. It is red if it is in use by another telephone user.

ADM/DSS Console

ADM

Adding an ADM

For installation instructions, please refer to the Strata CIX Installation & Maintenance. Please read the caution, if you are connecting the ADM with the telephone or moving the telephone with the ADM.

CAUTION! Unplug the line cord from the DP5000-series telephone before attaching the ADM. Plugging the ADM cable in while the DP5000-series telephone is powered will damage or impair the functionality of the telephone, ADM or both.

Brightness Control

To change the Brightness Control for a 10 button LCD add on module, refer to ???Brightness Control??? on page 13.

Keystrip Labels

To label the keystrip buttons on the 10 button LCD add on module, refer to ???Keystrip Labels??? on page 15.

ADM/DSS Console

DSS Console

DSS Console

The 60 button Direction Station Selection (DSS) Console operates operates alongside a digital telephone to provide 60 (up to 180) additional buttons (shown right).

The 60 programmable feature buttons can be assigned as CO line, extension, DSS, One Touch Speed Dial or any other flexible feature.

The DDM5060 console uses dual red and green LEDs to show call and feature status.

DSS Buttons

DSS buttons can appear on both the ADM and DSS Console. Each DSS button is associated with a particular station in your telephone system. DSS buttons can transfer an outside call to the associated station or make a direct call to the associated station.

The DSS LED lights steady red when the station associated with the DSS button is ringing, busy on a call, or is idle, but all appearances of the station???s extensions are busy or in-use by other stations. When the associated DSS button is in the Do Not Disturb mode, the LED blinks red at a slow rate.

DSS buttons cannot directly call station Phantom extension numbers, Distributed Hunt Group Directory Numbers, or ACD Groups. DSS buttons may be configured as One Touch Buttons that may be programmed to call these destinations.

Calling a Station

To call a station???s extension from either a DSS console or a ADM, press the DSS associated with the station.

A station call with a DSS button can be made on-hook or off-hook, and with Voice First or Tone signaling. After pressing the button, treat the call like any other station call made from a digital telephone.

ADM/DSS Console

DSS Console

Transferring to an Idle Station

You can transfer internal or outside calls to an idle station from either a DSS console or a ADM.

To transfer a call to an idle station

1.Press the DSS button corresponding to the station to be called.

The call is placed automatically on hold. The Line or extension LED flashes green at double the on-hold rate, and the DSS LED flashes green. You hear a single ring tone. (If using the Tone signaling mode, you hear successive ring tones.)

2.Announce the call.

With Tone signaling, you would have to wait for the called station to answer before announcing the call.

3.Hang up.

The call rings the called station when you hang up. While the called station is ringing, the DSS LED is steady red, and the Line LED flashes green at the on-hold rate or if on a extension button, it goes idle.

When the called station answers the call, the DSS LED stays steady red, and the Line LED becomes steady red.

4.If the station does not answer before a period set in system programming, the call recalls your station.

ADM/DSS Console

DSS Console

Call Transfer with Camp-on

You can transfer a call to a busy station from either a DSS console or an ADM. Use the DSS to transfer the call, even though the DSS LED associated with the station you are ???transferring to??? is red.

To transfer call to a busy station

1.Press DSS corresponding to the busy station to be called.

You may hear a busy tone. The original caller is placed automatically on hold. The Line or extension LED flashes green at double the on-hold rate, and the DSS LED remains steady red.

2.Hang up.

The call rings the called station once with the camp-on tone. While the called station is receiving this tone, the Line LED flashes green (on-hold rate) or if you are on a extension button, it goes idle. The [DSS] LED remains steady red.

When the called station answers the transferred call, the Line LED becomes steady red. The [DSS] LED remains steady red.

Note If the busy station is in the Do Not Disturb mode, the call will not transfer, but will recall your telephone immediately.

If the call is not answered after a specified Recall time set in system programming, camp-on is cancelled and the transferred call rings back.

Call Answering (Outside Line)

If your ADM or DSS console is equipped with a Line button, you can answer outside line calls from the ADM or DSS console as you would from a digital telephone.

To answer an incoming outside line call to a ADM or DSS Console, press the flashing Line.

Speed Dial

Your ADM or DSS console may be equipped with SD (Speed Dial) buttons that can be programmed to dial telephone numbers or to access features. SD buttons on either the ADM or DSS console function like SD buttons on digital telephones.

ADM/DSS Console

DSS Console

Paging

You can make an announcement page to a group of telephone speakers selected in system programming with All Call Page on the DSS console. SD (if programmed) on either the DSS console or the ADM can be used for page announcements. See ???All Call Page??? on page 58.

Call Forward Override (DSS Override)

Either the DSS buttons on your DSS console or the associated telephone can be set in system programming to ring stations that are in the Call Forward mode, instead of being forwarded. Usually the console???s telephone is the unit activated to perform this function. Among other applications, this feature can be used to notify a person who forgets to deactivate the Call Forward feature after returning to the office.

To override call forward with the console???s associated telephone

1.Press Cnf/Trn or extension button.

2.Dial the station number set for call forward.

Make the call as you would from any other station. This procedure assumes your station has a typical program setting.

To override call forward with your DSS Console

Press the station DSS button set for Call Forward.

Night Transfer Button

This button enables a pre-programmed station to place the system into Day, Day2 or Night Mode. See your System Administrator for information on the settings for Day, Day2 or Night Mode. These modes will transfer calls to a designated location or voice mailbox, depending on programming.

1.Press Night Transfer.

2.Press the desired Mode number:

???Press 1 for Day Mode (LED remains off).

???Press 2 for Day2 Mode (LED flashes red).

???Press 3 for Night Mode (LED is solid red).

This page is intentionally left blank.

Headset and Handset Operation 5

The DP5000-series telephone come standard with a built-in headset interface.

Recommended Headsets

For an extensive list of recommended and supported headsets please visit Toshiba's website at www.telecom.toshiba.com

Important! If you experience any electrical interference when using a wireless headset, please follow headset manufacturer's recommendations or ensure the headset base unit is at least six inches from your telephone.

Headset and Handset Interactions

When headset is connected and handset is off hook, you can use handset only. When headset is connected and handset is on hook, you can use headset.

The handset and headset cannot be used simultaneously.

Headset and Handset Operation

AUTO or CARBON Setting

AUTO or CARBON Setting

There exist two types of headsets: ECM and Carbon. The default setting on the telephones is AUTO. When the headset is connected to the Headset Modular Connector of the telephone, the AUTO setting enables the headset I/F current detector to determine which headset type is connected (EMC or Carbon). If the current is marginal using a carbon headset (only) and performance is not good, change the setting to CARBON.

To change the setting from Auto to Carbon

Telephones: All except the Single Line Telephone

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Spdial.

3.Press FB3 to toggle On/Off. FB3, LED On: CARBON FB3, LED Off: AUTO (default)

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Telephones: Single Line Telephone

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Spdial and press 3.

3.Press Msg to toggle On/Off. Msg LED On: CARBON

Msg LED Off: AUTO (default)

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Headset and Handset Operation

AUTO or CARBON Setting

To change the headset transmit level to Low or Normal

Telephones: All except Single Line Telephone

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Spdial.

3.Press FB2 to toggle On/Off. FB2, LED On: Low

FB2, LED Off: Normal (default)

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit program mode.

Telephones: Single Line Telephone

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Spdial and press 2.

3.Press Msg to toggle On/Off. Msg LED On: Low

Msg LED Off: Normal (default)

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Headset and Handset Operation

Headset Transmit Level Adjustments

Headset Transmit Level Adjustments

To set the level of the Headset Transmitter for DP5000-series telephones

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press #.

3.Set the headset transmit level using FB1, FB2 and FB3. For Single Line Telephone (SLT), use 1,2,3 and Msg. See table below.

Headset Transmit Level

Note ON means LED ON; OFF means LED OFF

4.Press Hold.

5.Go Off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Headset and Handset Operation

Handset Level Adjustments

Handset Level Adjustments

Change the Carbon setting if a Carbon type handset or headset is connected to the handset jack. This feature is not available on the Single Line Telephone (SLT).

To change the Carbon Setting

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Spdial.

3.Press FB1 to toggle On/Off.

FB1, LED On: Carbon type handset

FB1, LED Off: DP5000 ECM handset (default)

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

To adjust the Handset Transmit Level for DP5000-series telephones

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Redial.

3.Set the level using FB1, FB2 and FB3.

For Single Line Telephone, use 1,2,3 and Msg. See table below.

Handset Transmit Level

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go Off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Headset and Handset Operation

Handset Level Adjustments

To adjust the Handset or Headset Receiver Level for DP5000-series telephones

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Redial.

3.Set the level using the buttons shown in the table below.

Handset / Headset Receiver Level

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go Off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

To adjust the Handset Side Tone Level for DP5000-series telephones

Note This feature is not supported on the Single Line Telephone.

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Redial.

3.Set the level using the buttons shown in the table below.

Handset / Headset Side Tone Level

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go Off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

User programming allows you to customize your LCD telephone. You will be able to:

???Enter numbers in your personal Speed Dial list

???Program One Touch and Programmable Feature Buttons

???Register Call Forward assignments

???Assign Message Waiting Keys

???Assign the background music (BGM) source to be played over the telephone???s speaker

User Programming

Programming Feature Buttons

Programming Feature Buttons

You can use the User Programming Mode (described below) for customizing your

DP5000-series display telephone without the aid of an Administrator or Service Technician. The User Programming mode is accessed with a Program button

assigned to a Programmable Feature Button or through an access code. User Programming enables users to customize these features:

???Programmable Feature Buttons ??? The DP5000-series telephones have 10 or 20 Programmable Feature Buttons to which the user can assign any one of approximately 50 different features. Once a Programmable Feature Button is programmed, press the button anytime you need to use the feature.

Note Directory number and external line buttons cannot be added or deleted, but their ring tones can be individually changed. See ???Ring Tones??? on page 15.

User Programming Mode

To enter User Programming Mode, press the Program button

...or dial #9876. ???USER PROG MODE??? appears on your LCD. The Program LED is steady green.

To exit User Program Mode Lift the handset off-hook / on-hook.

Programmable Feature Button Codes

Programmable Feature Buttons are the unassigned buttons on your keystrip that can be used to store features. The number of available Programmable Feature Buttons depends on your telephone model and how the buttons are preassigned by the System Administrator.

The following steps enable you to program features onto Programmable Feature Buttons.

User Programming

Programmable Feature Button Codes

Setting/Changing a Programmable Feature Button???s

Function

1.Press #9876 to enter User Programming Mode.

2.Press Hold.

3.Press the Programmable Feature Button to set or change.

4.Enter the Programmable Feature Button Code (see Table 12), plus any optional parameters.

5.Press the same Programmable Feature Button (flashing) to save the setting. ???DATA PROGRAMMED??? appears on your LCD.

Table 12 Programmable Feature Button Codes

User Programming

One Touch Buttons

One Touch Buttons

One Touch buttons can be used for storing frequently used features or dialed numbers, such as Speed Dial numbers (use Speed Dial Codes to store additional numbers). One- touch buttons can be preassigned to your telephone ??? your System Administrator can help you identify them.

If you do not have a One Touch button, but you have an available Programmable Feature Button, you can convert the Programmable Feature Button to a One Touch button. Perform the procedure called ???Setting/Changing a Programmable Feature Button???s Function??? on page 85 (in Step 4, enter the access code for One Touch button). Once you have created a One Touch button, you can change the function by using the following procedure.

Changing a One Touch Button

1.Press #9876 to enter User Programming Mode.

2.Press the One Touch button to be set.

3.Enter the digits or special buttons for the function to be dialed. You can include the following in the dial string:

???Dial pad digits 0~9.To program special characters, see Table 13.

???A maximum of 32 characters.

???Station and System Speed Dial index numbers can be entered. The Speed Dial index number will automatically dial out on the extension or Line programmed on the One Touch button with the associated Speed Dial index number.

???Function buttons, except One Touch or a Program button.

???Handset hooking (on-hook/off-hook) cannot be recorded.

4.Press the One Touch button to save the entry.

We suggest labelling the One Touch button on your button strip.

Example of Special Character Usage

To create a One Touch for Park and Page under one button, program the following sequence under the One Touch button.

CNF #33***HOLD FB1 #30

CNF ??? puts the caller on hold and gets new dial tone. #33 ??? code to park call

** ??? this special character outputs a single * which will select an available orbit and display the selected orbit on the phone.

*HOLD ??? This special character is a Stop. The dial string pauses and enables the user to view the selected orbit on the display. The dial string will restart from this point when the One Touch button is pressed again.

FB1 ??? gets new dial tone on the PDN

#30 ??? code for All Call Page which allows the user to page the location of the orbited call.

To Use a One Touch Button

Press the One Touch button.

Setting/Changing a Personal Speed Dial Code

See ???Storing a System/Station Speed Dial Number??? on page 61.

User Programming

Feature Codes

Feature Codes

Feature Access Codes are entered as a sequence on your telephone to use a particular feature. For an example of Call Forward, see ???Call Forward Examples??? on page 35.I

User Programming

Feature Codes

User Programming

Feature Codes

User Programming

Feature Codes

1.If you have ???hot dialing,??? you do not need to press Ext. button as part of the sequence.

2.Stations must be assigned/enabled SD capabilities in system programming by an Administrator in Program 200-30 (System SD) and Program 200-35 (Station SD).

3.Refer to Table 10 on page 62 to see how to enter * and # into a speed dial number.

4.If your telephone does not have a Spdial button, press the * button, then dial the three digit Speed dial number (nnn).

This page is intentionally left blank.

This appendix contains some of the functions that can be performed using Administrator Mode.

Important!

???These functions require Strata CIX 5.1 or higher system software.

???To access the Admin mode, the telephone must be enabled for these functions in system programming using eManager. Refer to ???Strata CIX Programming Manual, Volume 1??? for eManager programming.

Functions

Use the Soft Keys on the telephone to program the following functions in Administrator mode:

???Phone Name ??? enter the Extension (PDN) name for any telephone in the Strata

CIX

???Door Name ??? enter door phone name

???System SD/Name1 ??? system speed dial names

???Station SD/Name1 ??? station speed dial names for any telephone in the system

???CO Line Name ??? CO line names

???DNIS Name ??? DNIS names

???Phone Key Label ??? button names on the electronic telephone key strips

???LM Key Label ??? button names on the Add-on module key strip

1The Admin telephone mode allows speed dial names to be programmed, but the actual speed dial numbers are programmed using the speed dial programming procedures described in the User Guide.

Administrator Programming

Administrator Mode

Administrator Mode

To access Administrator Mode, your station must be enabled for administrative access.

If Mode soft key is not available when telephone is idle, the telephone set does not have Administrative access.

To enter Administrator Mode

1.Press Mode soft key.

2.Press ADMN soft key. The ???Password??? prompt appears. Enter the password (0000 ??? default).

3.Press Hold.

Follow the steps below to perform the following Administrator functions in Administrator Mode.

Phone Name

1.Enter Administrator Mode

2.Press Hold.

3.Enter the DN ID number. This is the extension number (PDN) of the telephone.

4.Enter the Phone Name that corresponds with that DN ID.

5.Press Hold to register the name and move on to the next Phone name entry.

6.Press RTRN softkey.

7.Repeat steps 1~4 to program additional names.

Administrator Programming

Administrator Mode

Door Name

Door Phone should be setup and programmed within the Strata CIX before a Door Name can be assigned.

1.Enter Administrator Mode.

2.Press Next, display shows Door Name

3.Press Hold, display shows Door Phone Number.

4.Enter the Door Phone number (01~24).

5.Enter the Door Phone name

6.Press Hold to save the name.

7.Repeat steps 4~6 to enter another Door Phone name.

System SD/Name

1.Enter Administrator Mode.

2.Press Next twice until display show System SD/Name.

3.Press Hold, display shows IDX

4.Enter three digit Speed Dial Index (000~799).

5.Enter the Speed Dial name/label.

6.Press Hold to save your changes

7.Repeat steps 4~6 to label additional Speed Dials.

Phone Key Label and LM Key Label

See Chapter 4 ??? ADM/DSS Console.

Administrator Programming

Administrator Mode

Station SD/ Name

1.Enter Administrator Mode.

2.Press Next three times, display will show Station SD/Name

3.Press Hold, display shows DN ID

4.Enter the DN number of the station whose speed dial you wish to label, display will show DN XXXX IDX

5.Enter the two digit Speed Dial number you wish to program, display shows DN XXXX IDX 01

6.Enter the name/label of this Station Speed Dial.

7.Press Hold to save your changes.

8.To label additional Speed Dials for this extension, repeat steps 5~7.

9.To label Speed Dials for another extension, press Rtrn, display will show DN ID and repeat steps 4~7.

CO Line Name

1.Enter Administrator Mode

2.Press Next four times, display will show CO Line Name.

3.Press Hold, display will show CO Line.

4.Enter the CO line number whose name you wish to change (001~264), if you enter 001 display will show CO Line 001

5.Enter the name/label for the CO Line

6.Press Hold to save your changes.

7.Repeat steps 4~6 to change addition CO Line names.

DNIS Name

1.Enter Administrator Mode.

2.Press Next five times, display will show DNIS Name.

3.Press Hold, display will show ILG (Incoming Line Group)

4.Enter the ILG number whose name you wish to change (001~128), if you enter 001 display will show ILG 001

5.Enter the name/label for the ILG.

6.Press Hold to save your changes.

7.Repeat steps 4~6 to change addition ILG names.

Administrator Programming

System Features

System Features

The following are system features that require Administrator setup using the DP5000- series telephone. For eManager programming refer to the Strata CIX Programming Manual, Volume 1.

Direct Inward System Access (DISA) Security Code

The Direct Inward System Access feature is used when calling into your system from the outside. This feature is available on certain CO lines and from the built-in Auto Attendant. Assignments are made by the system programmer. CO lines can be DISA lines in the Day, Day 2, or Night mode, or any combination of these modes.

If a caller enters the system via a DISA line or built-in Auto Attendant, the caller can then access another line to place an outgoing call through the system, in which case the outgoing line call is charged as a call made from the CIX system. To prevent unauthorized outgoing calls through the system using the DISA feature, enter a DISA security code as shown in the following steps.

CAUTION! Whenever the built-in Auto Attendant is installed, the DISA security code should be used (and changed periodically) to prevent unauthorized access of outgoing CO lines via the Auto Attendant DISA access feature.

To change the DISA security code

1.Press DN + DISA Security Access Code (see note). A confirmation tone is heard.

2.Dial the existing DISA security code (1-15 digits).

3.Press #, confirmation tone is heard.

4.Enter the new DISA security code + #, confirmation tone is heard and display shows Data Programmed.

5.Lift handset off-hook and on-hook to end session.

Administrator Programming

System Features

To cancel the DISA security code

CAUTION! Canceling the DISA security is very dangerous and allows your telephone system to be open to hackers and could result in unauthorized long distance telephone calls. Perform the following steps with caution.

1.Press DN + DISA Security Access Code (see note). A confirmation tone is heard

2.Dial the existing DISA security code (1-15 digits)

3.Press #, confirmation tone is heard.

4.Press # again, this will allow the DISA feature to be used without a security code.

5.A confirmation tone is heard and display shows Data Programmed.

6.Lift handset off-hook and on-hook to end session.

Note The DISA Security Access Code needs to be defined in the Strata CIX by the System Administrator through eManager as it is not set in the default database.

Administrator Programming

Date and Time Setting

Date and Time Setting

This operation is possible from the Administrator station or attendant consoles and enables you to set the date, time, and day.

To set the date

1.With the handset on-hook, press a DN + the access code assigned in eManager. A confirmation tone is heard.

2.Enter the date (YYMMDD).

3.Press Redial.

A confirmation tone is heard.

4.Press Spkr.

The telephone returns to the idle mode.

To set the time

1.Press DN + the access code assigned in eManager, with the handset on-hook. A confirmation tone is heard.

2.Enter the time (HHMMSS) in the 24-hour clock format.

Note H=hour, M=minute and S=seconds. Use leading zeros: 060530 = 6:05AM and 30 seconds; 143045 = 2:30PM and 45 seconds.

3.Press Redial.

You hear a confirmation tone.

4.Press Spkr.

The telephone returns to the idle mode.

Administrator Programming

Telephone Programming Mode

Telephone Programming Mode

To place your telephone in Programming Mode A

Press 3+6+9+Hold simultaneously. The LCD displays ???DP PROGRAM MODE??? and ???SELECT=???. Your phone will not ring if it receives a call while in Programming Mode.

To exit from Programming Mode A

Go Off-hook and On-hook or wait for 30 seconds for Programming Mode to automatically time out.

Initialize Telephone Settings

This function resets all Programming Mode option settings to their default setting.

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Mode soft key.

3.Press Msg button.

4.Press Hold.

5.Press Vol s button.

6.Press Msg

7.Press Hold

8.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Administrator Programming

Telephone Programming Mode

Call Waiting and Camp-on Ring Tone Over Handset/

Headset Option

Call Waiting and Camp-on tones are sent to a busy telephone???s speaker to indicate that a call is waiting. Call Waiting and Camp-on Tones can be sent, as an option, to the telephone handset or headset, in addition to the speaker. Follow these steps to turn handset/headset Call Waiting and Camp-on tone On/Off for a DP5000-series telephone. The default is Off.

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press 0.

3.Press Feature Button 4 (FB4) to toggle On/Off. FB4, LED On: Call Waiting tone

FB4, LED Off: No Call Waiting tone

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Initialize or Adjust LCD Contrast

To initialize LCD Contrast for the LCD Telephones

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press Mode soft key.

3.Press Msg button so that the Msg LED is On.

4.Press Hold. This sets the LCD lightness/darkness contrast to the default setting.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

To adjust LCD Contrast for the LCD Telephones

Press and hold down the Mic button while you press and release Vol s or Vol t repeatedly.

Each time you press Vol s or Vol t, the contrast increases or decreases. There are a total of 13 different contrast levels available.

Administrator Programming

DKT2000 Mode On/Off

DKT2000 Mode On/Off

Before a cordless telephone (DKT2204-CT or DKT2304-CT) can share a digital station port with a DP5000-series telephone set, the port must be programmed into 2000 mode. If the mode is not changed to 2000-mode, the DP5000 phone will not work and the display will be blank. Also see CIX Installation and Maintenance Manual for additional information.

In 2000-mode:

???Only 16 characters by two lines display on the LCD.

???LCD Programmable Feature Button does not work

???Spdial button does not work

Step 1: Turn DKT2000 Mode On/Off

Important! Change the mode on DP5000-series telephone before connecting a DKT2204-CT or DKT2304-CT.

1.On the DKT3x00 telephone, press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press #.

3.Press FB7. LED On = 2000 telephone. LED Off = 5000-series telephone.

4.Press Hold.

5.Lift the handset to exit programming mode. Wait a few seconds for the telephone to reset itself.

Step 2: Connect Cordless Telephone to DP5000-series Telephone

The cordless telephone (base station) will connect to the digital station port and then in turn the DP5000 phone will connect to the cordless base station.

Administrator Programming

Single Line Telephone

Single Line Telephone

The Single Line Telephone is the smallest telephone set in the DP5000-series family. This telephone has some variations on button functionality compared to the other DP5000-series telephones. These differences are detailed here.

Buttons

Some of the fixed buttons are a little different from the other DP5000-series telephones.

Message (Msg) ??? This button is used to call back the station or voice mail device that activated the LED.

Flexible (Flex) ??? Works as a Redial button by default. This button can also be programmed as a Programmable Feature Button.

Off-hook ??? This button works as a PDN

that can be used to answer and make calls. Message

Flexible

Off-hook

Speaker

Administrator Programming

Single Line Telephone

Redial / Feature Button Activation / Deactivation

The Flex button has been set to act as a Redial button by default. However, you can reprogram the Flex button to work as Programmable Feature Button, as it set in system programming. These steps enable you to change how the button functions.

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press 0 7.

3.Press Msg to toggle On/Off

Msg LED On: Flex button works as Programmable Feature Button (FB3)

Msg LED Off: Flex button works as a Redial button.

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Note If you program the Flex button to work as Programmable Feature Button 3, you can press *0 to redial.

Msg / Feature Button Activation / Deactivation

Your Msg button has been set by default to work as a Msg button; however, you can reprogram it to work as Programmable Feature Button.

1.Press 3+6+9+Hold (simultaneously).

2.Press 0 8.

3.Press Msg to toggle On/Off.

Msg LED On: Msg operates as Programmable Feature Button (FB2)

Msg LED Off: Works as a Msg button.

4.Press Hold to set the option.

5.Go off-hook, then on-hook to exit the program mode.

Note Please see your System Administrator to have Features assigned to the Flex or Msg buttons, this will be done through eManager.

This Appendix contains table that support some of the feature operations.

Call Forward

Table 15 Call Forward Procedure

Call Forward Any Call - Internal and Incoming Line Calls:

Forwards any call, whether an internal call or incoming line call.

References

Call Forward

Call Forward - Incoming Line Calls:

Forward incoming line calls only.

Call Forward Any Call - Set for Another Station:

Enables you to set call forwarding for another telephone within your telephone system. You will need the other telephone???s Call Forward pass code in order to do this. Call Forward Pass Codes are created in system programming.

References

Call Forward

Table 15 Call Forward Procedure (continued)

Call Forward - Incoming Line Call - Set for Another Station:

Enables you to set forwarding of incoming line calls for another telephone within your telephone system

References

Call Forward

Change Call Forward Pass Code:

Your telephone must be enabled in programming to have the ability to change pass codes.

Press ext. button + #670 (tone) + dial the dest. ext. no. (tone) + old pass Change Pass Code ##

code + (tone) + new pass code (tone) +

References

Soft Keys

Soft Keys

The table below is a list of soft key labels that appear on the LCD telephones. Press

the soft key button associated with the label to activate the feature (SK1, SK2, SK3 and SK4).

References

Button Labels

Button Labels

The button labels in Table 17 are for the Programmable Buttons on the telephone. Programmable buttons are the unmarked buttons on the telephone keystrip.

References

Button Labels

References

Button Labels

Table 18 Programmable Feature Button Labels (continued)

DP5000-Series Telephone Tilt Angles

The DP5000-series telephones, except the Single Line Telephone have three tilt positions built into the base. There is also a tilt stand extension that adds an additional 20 degrees of tilt. When the telephone is sitting on a desk or table there are a total of six different angles of tilt available. When wall mounted there are two angles available. The Single Line Telephone base is fixed at 15 degrees. See figures on the next page.

Hardware Connections

DP5000-Series Telephone Tilt Angles

DP5000-Series Desk-top Tilt Angle With Tilt-Stand Extension

Hardware Connections

Wiring

Wiring

The connectors on the DP5000-series telephones are identified with icons. The connector icons and their meaning are shown below.

Connectors

ADM Line Cord Ext. Speaker Headset Handset

The DP5000-series telephones include the special long-tail handset cords required to fit the new tilt bases.

DP5000-series Telephone Wiring

Hardware Connections

Wiring

When the tilt stand extension is used, simply remove the line cord from under the rear cable clip. This will allow the tilt stand extension to deploy without strain on the line cord.

Your system may be equipped with the Centrex Application, which enhances its feature capability when installed behind a Centrex or PBX system. Your telephone may have access to one or more of the enhanced Centrex features listed below:

Flexible Directory Numbering

A station???s extension can be three or four digits. It is, therefore, possible to match a station???s extension and Centrex line extension number. Dial the entire station number when indicated.

Note Some access code numbers may have been changed to avoid system numbering plan conflicts.

Centrex Feature Buttons

You can access some Centrex features by pressing a pre-programmed Feature Button on your telephone, instead of dialing a Centrex access code. The Centrex access code, including the necessary flash and/or pause sequence, is activated when the button is pressed. See your Centrex or PBX operations manual for specific details.

Ringing Repeat

The distinctive ring patterns available in your Centrex system are automatically repeated with your digital telephone, enabling you to answer appropriately for either outside, inside or callback calls.

Centrex Application

Delayed Ringing

Delayed Ringing

Outside line or Centrex line(s) can be programmed for a 12-second and/or 24-second ring delay at stations to permit alternate answering conditions. Answer the line when your telephone is ringing.

Index

A

about this book conventions, viii

how to use this guide, viii organization, vii

related documents, x access codes, 61, 85, 88 account codes, 26, 85, 88

calls, 25 forced, 25

verified/non-verified, 25 administrator

functions, 93 advisory messaging, 90 all call page, 58 alphanumeric entry, 63 answer a call, 21 answering calls, 19 attendant console, 88 automatic

busy redial, 85, 88 callback, 30

callback cancel, 85, 88 hold, 23

line selection, 18 automatic hold, 23

B

background music (BGM), 31, 85, 88

busy override, 55 button

feature, 104 flexible, 103 labels, 110 off-hook, 103 programming, 85

buttons Cnf/Trn, 8

DSS on ADMs and DSS consoles, 72 fixed, 6

Hold, 8

one touch, 86 Redial, 7 speed dial, 7

C

caller ID, 41 call forward

access codes, 85 any call, 33 override, 75 station, 32 system, 32

call hold, 22 calling, 19 call park, 88

orbits, 36

call pickup, 37, 85, 88

Index

D ~ F

held calls, 89

call waiting, 40, 56, 101 Camp-on ring tone, 101 centrex

application, 119 feature buttons, 119

class of service override, 56

Cnf/Trn, 8 CO line

call transfer, 39 CO line name, 96 CO line queuing, 45 conference

calls, 41, 89 hold, 23 split/join/drop, 43 voice mail, 42

D

date and time setting, 99 day/day 2/night modes, 97 deactivation, 104

delayed ringing, 120 dial directory, 20 dial pad, 63

direct inward system access (see DISA) directories, 63

direct station selection buttons, 45

DISA, 97

security code, 89, 97 distinctive ringing, 15 DKT2000 mode on/off, 102 DNIS name, 96

do not disturb, 46, 89 override, 55

door lock, 47

control, 89 door name, 95 door phone, 48 calling, 89

drop, 43 DSS, 45

buttons on ADMs and DSS consoles, 72 call answering, 74

call forward override, 75 calling, 72

console, 72 night transfer, 75 paging, 75 speed dial, 74 transferring, 73

E

emergency call, 89 page, 58

emergency call, 49 emergency ringdown, 50 exclusive hold, 22 executive override, 56

F

feature access codes, 88 feature button activation, 104 flash, 85, 89

flexible button, 103 flexible buttons

codes, 85

flexible directory numbering, 119 forced account codes (verified/non- verified), 25

G

group pickup, 37

H

handset calling, 19 handsfree answerback, 21 Hold, 8

hold, 22

line hold, 36, 39 hot dialing, 18, 19

I

indicators LED, 24

ISDN

buttons, 66, 112

J

join, 43

L

language changes, 89 language code, 50 LCD contrast, 101

LCR

dialing out, 89 LED indicators, 24 line

automatic selection, 18 ringing preference, 18

line button, 39

M

making a call, 19 message waiting, 51, 89 message waiting light

on another telephone, 52

Index

G ~ P

on phantom ext/MW, 52 messaging

advisory, 90 Mic button, 7, 22, 54

microphone, 7, 19, 22, 53, 54 microphone cut-off, 53, 54, 85, 111 mute, 7, 22

N

names

storing speed dial, 63 names (entering), 63 network access, 90

night ring answer, 90 night transfer button, 75

O

off-hook, 103

off-hook call announce (OCA), 54, 90 one touch button, 86, 87

override

access codes, 90 busy, 55

call forward (DSS), 75 class of service, 56 do not disturb, 55 executive, 56

privacy, 57 travelling class, 91

override calls, 55

P

paging, 37, 75

access codes, 85, 90 park, 88

park in orbit, 36 park in orbit, 36

Index

R ~ V

pickup, 37

pick up group calls, 37 privacy, 59

override, 57

private network access, 90 programming

buttons, 85 programming mode, 100

R

redial, 7, 104

repeat last number dialed, 90 ringing

distinctive settings, 15 line preference, 18

ringing line preference, 21 ringing repeat, 119

S

signaling tone, 18

voice first, 18 soft keys, 28 speakerphone, 22

special characters for speed dialing, 62 speed dial, 7, 60, 86

access codes, 61, 85, 91 names, 63

personal, 87 station, 96 system, 95

speed dial (DADM or DSS), 74 Spkr button, 19

answering, 21 split, 43

start application, 91 station

speed dial/name, 96

storing speed dial names, 63 system

features, 97

speed dial/name, 95

T

telephone buttons, 103

single line telephone, 103 telephone settings, 100

Tilt Angles, 115 tone???pulse dialing, 66 tone signaling, 18 travelling class override, 91

two (tandem) CO line connection, 43

U

uniform call distribution (UCD), 67 user programming, 83, 85, 91

V

voice first signaling, 18 voice mail

access codes, 91 conference, 42 volume control, 24, 91

voluntary account codes (verified/non- verified), 27