QUESTION Helping friend get migrated to VOIP

kameleon

Member
Joined
Jul 22, 2009
Messages
111
Reaction score
15
I am currently helping a friend of mine move his company phone system to a VOIP solution. The last I dealt with anything VOIP related was almost 10 years ago when I helped setup the asterisk box at my employer then. So I am a little rusty but have been doing tons of reading. I need some clarification and pointers on a few things though.

Currently they have Comcast phone service going into an old Nortel PBX. We are planning on ditching all that and going straight VOIP phones on the desks. I picked up some Obi1022 phones to place at each desk as I wanted to get them something that would work with just about everythign under the sun including Google Voice.I also picked up a obi202 ata so I could use google voice partially or in full as per one of nerdvittles recent posts.

They have 3 phone lines currently:
  • Main line/incoming number
  • Secondary line/mostly used for outgoing calls
  • Fax line.
We are trying to keep the monthly fees to a minimum so I was wanting to utilize Google Voice as much as possible with some fail over. Is the GV/obi202/PIAF solution solid enough for a small business (5 users)?

I am probably going to ditch the second/outgoing line as it is basically useless in this setup. However I need to figure out the fax part. They do still use a fax machine to send/receive faxes as they still have clients that mandate that usage. Any ideas here? Could I use the second port of the obi202 for this functionality or is there a way to move it to the PIAF server and make it all digital?

I know I have a few more questions but that is a good start.
 
I use t38fax.com for our outgoing faxes with a grandstream fxs gateway. It connects to t38 directly, not thru our pbx. Works perfectly. They list 'certified' devices and the device settings to use .
We use a cloud inbound fax server, but it should work both ways. I tried a Obi fax gateway, but it always failed with one retail pharmacy.
Good luck chasing Google voice. It's fine for home hobby, but for a business it's not worth the hassle.
Get wards Vitelity 4 inbound did special. Have your primary roll over if busy to Vitelity.
 
Just be super careful with the fax. It doesn't work reliably in my experience, though others say it's note a problem (Ward included). You can use the fax service from t38fax.com, or vitelity has a service as well called Fax enable which works decently for a few dollars a month.
 
Good luck chasing Google voice. It's fine for home hobby, but for a business it's not worth the hassle.
Get wards Vitelity 4 inbound did special. Have your primary roll over if busy to Vitelity.

I was actually thinking of porting their main number to GV and just have it set as a number forwarder similar to how I have it on my cellphone, someone calls my GV # and it is forwarded to whatever I want including my cell. In this case I would have it ring to a few different DIDs for redundancy. Sound about right? That way in the future they won't have to worry about number portability and all that jazz.
 
The trouble with faxing is the network path, some VSP's do a fair job doing fax over g711 (Vitelity and FlowRoute come to mind) BUT, g711 is a horrible transport protocol over any network connection that is not either a POTS or a T! (PRI or T1 TDM circuit) .

T38 is a good answer, but Asterisk as yet does a lousy job of T38 it has a rudimentary connector to a tif file (both ways) but any failure is mortal.

Hylafax and FreeSwitch have much better T38 termination, if you are using debian then

apt-get install t38modem

and then RTFM, you are less lucky with RedHat based OS's

Then Hylafax will gracefully handle faile faxes, email to fax , fax to email or printer or pretty much anything you can dreamup.

In Summary,


FAX over VOIP is a pain, and ASterisk is probably your worst choice,.
FAX over T38 is robust but needs some manual configurartion
FAX over GV might or might not work now or very soon.
 
Take a look at faxsipit.com
setup the account
configure the ata
connect to the lan
connect fax machine
done
 
Take a look at faxsipit.com
setup the account
configure the ata
connect to the lan
connect fax machine
done

Looks interesting but no mention of a price anywhere. About what is the cost associated with this service?
 
Not sure of current price for the ata
around $10 p/month/did
about $0.04 /min outbound
3000 min inbound $0.00
 
Take a look at faxsipit.com
setup the account
configure the ata
connect to the lan
connect fax machine
done

FaxSIPit is whitelabled as Vitelity's Fax Enable I believe. The Vitelity service is $120 for the ATA, and .03 cents a minute, and $2.99 a month for the DID.
 
We have all of our fax lines through vitelity and it just works. I have never had a fax that would not go through on their fax service.
 

Members online

No members online now.

Forum statistics

Threads
26,688
Messages
174,412
Members
20,259
Latest member
Fadeek86
Get 3CX - Absolutely Free!

Link up your team and customers Phone System Live Chat Video Conferencing

Hosted or Self-managed. Up to 10 users free forever. No credit card. Try risk free.

3CX
A 3CX Account with that email already exists. You will be redirected to the Customer Portal to sign in or reset your password if you've forgotten it.
Back
Top