To ensure trouble-free transmission, all of the components in the ISDN system (LANCOM VoIP routers, upstream and downstream ISDN PBXs and ISDN terminal devices) have to use the same ISDN timing. In the LANCOM VoIP router, an ISDN interface in TE mode can take on the timing of the ISDN line. The TE interface enables the device itself to behave like a terminal device. In NT mode, the LANCOM VoIP router can pass on the on this timing over the ISDN interfaces to any connected terminal equipment or downstream ISDN PBXs. The NT interface enables the device itself to behave like an exchange.
A number of ISDN interface settings are available for specifying the ISDN interface which is to supply the ISDN timing to the LANCOM VoIP router, which in turn passes on the timing to the devices at the NT interfaces.
- Automatic: If no interface has been manually selected for the timing, the device automatically searches for a TE interface to supply the timing. To ensure that the timing is synchronous, the TE connectors constantly try to keep the connection activated. This ensures that the timing continues to be supplied even if one of multiple TE lines should be shut off. If none of the TE connectors supply a timing, then the timing system runs "freely" and uses the internal timing of the LANCOM VoIP router.
- DSS1 timing: This setting takes on the ISDN timing from this connection, and this is used by the LANCOM VoIP router and further devices connected over the NT interface. In this way, the timing can be switched through in parallel to an existing ISDN PBX at a point-to-point connection. Apart from passing on the ISDN timing, the interface is not active.
- DSS1 NT reverse or DSS1 NT point-to-point reverse: When all ISDN interfaces are operated in NT mode, the timing system runs "freely" because there is no TE interface to take on the ISDN timing. If in this case the ISDN connections are connected, for example, to an ISDN PBX which is being supplied with ISDN timing from another source, then interference to the transmission may arise because the timing of the LANCOM VoIP router is not synchronous to that of the PBX. In such cases, the reverse setting allows the ISDN timing to be taken from an NT-mode interface, so ensuring that the LANCOM VoIP router runs synchronously with the overall system.