Hi Another example of BT not listing all the issues that may occur and providing people with the information to know what to do or of course you cannot do anything. I only have a basic knowledge of things but I feel sorry for anyone who just uses it as a phone and as no idea of digital - copper etc . thanks again Malcolm
Some information that partly relies on historic conversations. Decades ago I worked on one of BT digital exchange systems. Digital exchanges were created to at least emulate the older exchange types. A largely forgotten new feature was to allow Multi Frequency Dialling as well as the older loop disconnect dialling. With this new feature many new handsets were sold and used by customers.
The new digital exchanges though had to operate with loop disconnect dialling as well. This was especially important for the many alarm systems that were connected (so I think I remember during a conversation).
Anyway when I had issues with my standard phones, I also tried to connect a Loop disconnect phone to the Hub and dial out via my fibre broadband. The result was Loop disconnect no longer works with FTTP via the hub. I am guessing it would have still worked on my old copper line, but cannot confirm that.
This information has been given in case it is relevant, particularly with alarm systems.
Hi. Thanks it seems some might work as BT tells you just to plug in. Mine sadly doesn't.
I have just used the male to male connection proposed in this discussion. I disconnected the incoming line as directed and all is well for me. I now have one BT Big Button 200 phone and a mains powered desktop amplicomms PowerTel 2880 phone working off the HomeHub 2 digital voice socket. Thank you to the Community.
Keith thanks for this.
I have FTTC, what's the best way to enable all BT socket after DV? My Hub2 is upstairs in the office but my burglar alarm which relies on a dial tone phone line is downstairs, hence why I would really like to enable the bt socket which my alarm is plugged in. Alternatively would a DV adapter work and how do I obtain this for free (as some of the posts in this forum seems to suggest) as I notice on BT website its priced at £14.99?
Thanks in advance!
You probably should check with your alarm provider, if your alarm system simply dials out when detecting a threat , then it’s not the most effective alarm ( cutting your phone line renders it useless ) , a historically more effective solution was ‘ABC’ type alarm (alarm by carrier ) like Redcare , where cutting the line was also detected as a threat , but AFAIK these are now few and far between , mainly replaced by alarms that use mobile networks to contact their monitoring centre.
Your alarm company should be aware of DV , and long term should be offering a replacement if your alarm relies on detecting 50v , making a PSTN call and isn’t compatible with DV.
Thanks very much. Did check with alarm company but would need a complete new box etc. This is expensive. I am sure I am not alone to pay the price of progress
Hi. The dv adaptor works with old phone type but not the alarm. Something to do with pulses or something. I got. One free as option was digital phone or adaptor . I failed with all options on community
Pulse dialling (loop disconnect) is no longer supported on all new digital connections. The alarm dialler should be using tone dialling, just like modern phones do. I am surprised they are still using pulse dialling, perhaps there is an option to change it, on the alarm unit itself?