You could keep your old corded speakerphone in your hallway by attaching it to an extension cord which you then plug into a hub 2 port, and hide the ext lead in trunking,providing phone is not miles away from your dv router of course. Just a thought 😀👍
I was moved over to DV back in September.
I have a seven-year-old Panasonic cordless set. Three handsets + answer phone set to answer after 5 rings. Base station sits in the living room, exactly the same place as before. SH2 is in the hall by the phone socket. I just unplugged my phone extension cable from the phone socket and plugged it into the back of the SH2 then rebooted the SH2. Not had any problems with it at all.
While I acknowledge concerns like the loss of phones during a power cut are legitimate, (I’m fortunate enough to have a good mobile signal), I must say people seem to be stressing over this far more than they need to. Operationally, most of you won’t notice any difference.
I think you may be pursuing the wrong complaint here.
If your broadband is unstable then you should be chasing BT to sort that out. Of course, you could use the impending change to DV as a pretext to apply pressure for them to fix the internet connection.
Ultimately worrying about DV without fixing the underlying broadband problem is a pointless exercise.
When the broadband cuts out is that at the hub or a wireless thing? The phone will plug direct into the hub and so should not be affected by any wireless issues.
@HHGTTGwrote:
Well when this does arrive, I have decided to keep my DECT cordless phone where it currently is i.e in another room from the Home Hub 6 and use a DV Voice adapter and pair this with the new Smart Hub 2 and plug my DECT phone into that rather than move the phone and answering phone base where the Hub is.
My good old corded speakerphone in the hall is in a position where's there is no main supply so again I will need to move it to a more unsuitable position and use a DV adapter on that. Or you could get all your extension sockets connected to the hub and use them as you are now. It really is a regressive process for a lot of people. It really isn't, it's just people looking for problems without considering the solutions.