Cisco 2-Port Analog DID Voice Interface Card Datasheet

Add to My manuals
15 Pages

advertisement

Cisco 2-Port Analog DID Voice Interface Card Datasheet | Manualzz

DATA SHEET

HIGH-DENSITY DIGITAL VOICE/FAX NETWORK MODULES

FOR CISCO 2600XM/2691/2800/3700/3800

IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules for the Cisco 2600XM, Cisco 2691, Cisco 2800,

Cisco 3700 and Cisco 3800 Series Multiservice Access Routers

The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules are the latest addition to the Cisco Systems

®

IP Communications suite of solutions. The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules deliver high-density digital voice connectivity, high-density WAN connectivity, analog voice connectivity, and conferencing and transcoding capability in a network module form factor. The network modules provide enterprises, managed service providers, and service providers with the ability to directly connect the public switched telephone network (PSTN), traditional telephony equipment (such as private branch exchange (PBX), key systems, analog telephones, and fax machines), and WAN to Cisco

®

2600XM, Cisco 2691, 2811, 2821, 2851, Cisco 3700 Series and Cisco 3800 Series Access Routers for either IP

Communications capabilities or pure toll bypass. The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules flexibly operates within two different Cisco AVVID (Architecture for Voice, Video and Integrated Data) IP Telephony environments—the Cisco CallManager system with Survivable Remote Site Telephony (SRST) or Cisco CallManager Express. The network modules can be integrated with these IP

Telephony solutions in a Multiservice Access Router, to provide a complete IP Communications solution for full service branch customers.

Figure 1. NM-HDV2-2T1/E1 with a 2-Port FXS VIC

Cisco IP Communications solutions provide the means for integrating voice and data allowing users to take advantage of services such as IP telephony, integrated services, and toll-bypass. These solutions allow enterprises, managed network service providers, and service providers to reap the advantages of IP telephony such as lower operating costs and increased productivity. Cisco IP Communications solutions also enable packet voice technologies including voice over IP (VoIP) (including H.323, Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP), and Sessions Initiation

Protocol (SIP), voice over Frame, voice over ATM (including AAL2 and AAL5 adaptation layers).

The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules are an integral part of the Cisco IP Communications offering, delivering a versatile combination of digital voice, analog voice, and data capabilities in a single network module form factor. They not only provide the IP telephony gateway to Cisco AVVID architectures for calls to and from the PSTN and the WAN, but also allow enterprises to deploy networks with existing traditional telephony equipment until they are ready to migrate to IP telephony. Features include high-density digital voice and WAN connectivity up to four T1/E1 ports, analog voice connectivity up to four ports, and up to 50 conferencing and transcoding sessions. Enterprises can now deploy all these rich features on a single network module, enabling connectivity to the PSTN, traditional telephony equipment such as PBXs, key systems, analog telephones, fax machines, and the enterprise WAN.

This product supports three network module versions, with the option of zero, one, or two built-in T1/E1 ports, as shown in Table 2. Each built-in port can be conveniently software-configured to support either T1 or E1 operation. Each network module also supports a single

VIC/VWIC slot that can be fitted with a Cisco voice/WAN interface card (VWIC) or voice interface card (VIC). The Cisco VICs are daughter

All contents are Copyright © 1992–2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. Important Notices and Privacy Statement.

Page 1 of 14

cards that install into the network modules and provide the interface to the PSTN and to telephony equipment (PBXs, key systems, fax machines, phones). The Cisco VWICs are daughter cards that provide the interface to the PBX, PSTN, and/or WAN. Figure 1 shows a NM-

HDV2-2T1/E1 with two built-in T1/E1 ports and a VIC2-2FXS in the VIC/VWIC slot.

Cisco VWICs supported include 1- and 2-port T1 and E1 interface cards with optional drop-and-insert capability along with a G.703 interface card option. These cards cover a full range of digital voice and WAN connectivity options. A variety of VIC options are supported including 2port foreign exchange station (FXS), direct inward dial (DID), foreign exchange office (FXO), E&M (ear and mouth) analog interface cards, 4port FXS and 4-port FXO cards and a 2-port ISDN Basic Rate Interface (BRI) digital interface card providing -40V phantom power. These cards cover the entire range of analog connectivity options along with user-side and network-side digital BRI connections. Please see Table 3 below for details on options supported.

The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules are used with the new PVDM2 Packet Fax/Voice DSP modules, providing scalability from 4 to 120 channels and featuring the latest digital signal processing technology. A maximum of four PVDM2s can be installed on each NM-HDV2 network module. The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules that are deployed on the Cisco 2811, 2821, 2851 and 3800 Integrated Services Routers can also be conveniently used with the onboard PVDM2 DSP modules.

Enterprises can conveniently select the minimum number and density-type PVDM2s depending on the voice channels they are deploying, and scale the number of PVDMs as they expand. These new PVDM2 can be configured for high-, medium- or flex complexity via software. Flex complexity is the default configuration, and in this mode, the network module will dynamically negotiate the appropriate codec (medium or high) on a call-by-call basis depending on the PVDM2s available.

PVDM2s on a NM-HDV2 module or on the mother board (on the 2811, 2821, 2851, and 3800 series Integrated Services Routers) can be shared across multiple IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules. Please see Table 4 below for a list of PVDM2 modules supported.

Enhanced Cisco conferencing and transcoding features on the IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules are available. The network modules provide a hardware-based conference resource at branch offices to facilitate multiparty conferences, thereby reducing the costs of delivering conferencing resources across the WAN. Transcoding resources within the same network module further reduces bandwidth consumption and costs by compressing traffic across the WAN, and enabling communications between devices that support different codecs. Up to 50 eight-party G.711 ad-hoc conferences, and up to 32 eight-party multicodec (G.711/G.729) ad-hoc conferences can be supported on a single IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Module.

The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules are integrated in the Cisco 2600XM, Cisco 2691, 2811, 2821,

2851, Cisco 3700 Series, and Cisco 3800 Series Access routers and are interoperable with the full range of Cisco IP Communications solutions—including Cisco IP phones, Cisco CallManager, Cisco CallManager Express, Cisco Unity software, Cisco Unity Express, Cisco IP

Contact Center (IPCC), and Cisco IPCC Express. Up to four network modules can be configured in a Cisco 3745 or 3845 Access Router, supporting up to 480 voice channels in medium complexity codec. The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Module combined with Survivable Remote Site Telephony (operating with Cisco CallManager) or Cisco CallManager Express in a Multiservice Access

Router makes an ideal single-box communications solution for IP telephony in branch offices. Table 5 lists the maximum number of network modules that are supported on a Multiservice Access Router.

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 2 of 15

IMPORTANT FEATURES AND BENEFITS

Table 1. The IP Communications Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules Provide a Wide Range of Features and Benefits

Product Features

Rich set of features are delivered on a single network module form factor

Tightly integrated into the Cisco

Multiservice Access Routers

Benefits

Features such as data WAN connectivity, high-density digital voice connectivity, analog voice connectivity and conferencing/transcoding are supported on a single network module form factor, allowing customers to utilize other network module slots for other applications. A single NM-slot platform can be deployed for small offices, providing a cost-effective solution for IP telephony.

The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice Network Modules are tightly integrated into the Cisco Multiservice Access Routers, providing a single IP communications solutions for the full-service branch office. The Cisco Multiservice Access Routers run Cisco IOS Software, incorporating advanced quality-of-service (QoS) features, intelligent network queuing, and standards-based encapsulation providing efficient direct transport of both voice and fax over IP,

Frame Relay, and ATM networks.

Analog and digital voice connectivity are supported in a single network module, enabling customers to efficiently provide flexible and reliable connectivity to public or private switched telephone networks, and phones, faxes, PBXs, and key systems.

Efficiently provides analog and digital voice connectivity to the PSTN and traditional office equipment

Integrated data WAN and digital voice connectivity

Voice and WAN data is integrated on the same T1 interface, providing a cost-effective way of delivering PSTN and data WAN access for small branch offices.

Supports higher-densities of digital voice connectivity

Displays next-generation robust, scalable and powerful digital signal processor (DSP) technology

Supports up to a maximum of four T1/E1 ports in a single network module slot for digital voice connectivity, ideal for offices deploying toll bypass (transporting voice and fax traffic across the

WAN to reduce or eliminate toll charges).

Features the latest digital signal processing technology that can support higher call densities per

DSP, and more flexibility in channel allocation per DSP. Up to four PVDM2 slots are supported per network module, providing scalability of 4-120 channels per network module. These DSPs can be shared among multiple IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Modules that are installed in a Multiservice Access Router. DSPs on the motherboard on the Cisco 2811,

2821, 2851, 3825 and 3845 Integrated Services Routers can also be used with the NM-HDV2 network modules.

The convenient built-in ports can be easily configured for either T1 or E1 operation, providing flexibility when ordering, provisioning and in multi-national enterprise deployments.

Built-in and easily-configurable T1/E1 ports

Scalable and flexible for enterprise office requirements of any size

The IP Communications High-Density Network module is supported on the Cisco 2600XM, 2811,

2821, 2851, Cisco 2691, Cisco 3700 Series and Cisco 3800 Series Access routers, providing a broad range of selection depending on branch office sizes and communications needs. The network module can be reused as the platforms scale, delivering investment protection.

There are various applications for the IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Module. In the application below, Cisco

CallManager at headquarters delivers the call control for IP phones at the branch offices (Figure 2). Each branch office is enhanced with SRST to maintain basic telephony services at the branch office if the WAN goes down or connectivity to the Cisco CallManager is lost. The IP

Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Module is integrated into the Cisco Full Service Branch Office routers located at the branch office. There is frequent voice communication between branch offices, and the PSTN. As a result, voice calls between offices are VoIP and are routed over the WAN for telephony cost savings. The NM-HDV2-2T1/E1 is used to deliver T1 WAN access for both voice and data connectivity. Calls to external parties are placed through T1 PSTN access. In addition, the VIC/VWIC slot on the NM-HDV2-2T1/E1 is populated with a VIC-4FXS/DID to connect to analog phones and fax machines.

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 3 of 15

Figure 2. IP Telephony Application using NM-HDV-2T1/E1 (with a VIC-4FXS/DID), and SRST in a Full-Service Branch

Table 2. Cisco IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Module

Module

NM-HDV2

Description

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/fax Network Module

NM-HDV2-1T1/E1

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/fax Network Module with one Built-in T1/E1 port

NM-HDV2-2T1/E1

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/fax Network Module with two Built-in T1/E1 ports

Application

Supports a VIC/VWIC slot that can fitted with either digital or analog/BRI voice/WAN interface cards. Supports a maximum of 60 channels of digital voice, or four channels of analog voice in medium complexity codec. Must be used with up to four PVDM2 Packet Fax/Voice DSP modules.

Includes a built-in T1/E1 port and a VIC/VWIC slot that can be fitted with either digital or analog/BRI voice/WAN interface cards. Supports a maximum of 90 channels of digital voice, or 30 channels of digital voice and four channels of analog voice in medium complexity codec. Must be used with up to four PVDM2

Packet Fax/Voice DSP modules.

Includes two built-in T1/E1 ports and a VIC/VWIC slot that can be fitted with either digital or analog/BRI voice/WAN interface cards. Supports a maximum of 120 channels of digital voice, or 60 channels of digital voice and four channels of analog voice in medium complexity codec. Must be used with up to four PVDM2

Packet Fax/Voice DSP modules.

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 4 of 15

Table 3. VIC/VWIC Options for the IPC High-Density Digital Voice Network Modules

VIC/VWIC Options for the IPC High-Density

Digital Voice NM

VIC2-2FXS

Description

2-port FXS voice/fax interface card

VIC-4FXS/DID

VIC2-2FXO

VIC2-4FXO

VIC2-2E/M

VIC-2DID

VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

VIC-1J1

VWIC-1MFT-T1

VWIC-2MFT-T1

VWIC-2MFT-T1-DI

VWIC-1MFT-E1

VWIC-2MFT-E1

VWIC-2MFT-E1-DI

VWIC-1MFT-G703

VWIC-2MFT-G703

4-port FXS voice/fax interface card (Note: The

DID feature is not supported at this time)

2-port FXO voice/fax interface card [universal card for all countries]. Also supports analog

Centralized Automated Message Accounting

(CAMA) on any port.

4-port FXO voice/fax interface card [universal card for all countries]. Also supports analog

CAMA on any port.

2-port E&M voice/fax interface card

2-port DID (direct inward dial) voice/fax interface card

2-port BRI voice/fax interface card (configurable for either network or terminal side)

Single-Port J1 Voice Interface Card

1-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-T1 (Voice and

WAN)

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-T1 (Voice and

WAN)

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-T1 with drop and insert (Voice and WAN)

1-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-E1 (Voice and

WAN)

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk- E1 (Voice and

WAN)

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-E1 with drop and insert (Voice and WAN)

1-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-G703 (WAN only)

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-G703 (WAN only)

Application

FXS port is used to connect directly to phones, fax machines, and key systems. Generates battery polarity reversal and caller ID.

FXS port is used to connect directly to phones, fax machines, and key systems. Generates battery polarity reversal and caller ID.

FXO port is used to connect to PBX or key system, or to provide off-premise connections to PSTN. Supports battery reversal detection and caller ID. These VICs can be software configured to work in all countries. Also used to connect to analog CAMA trunk to provide dedicated E-911 service (North America only).

FXO port is used to connect to PBX or key system, or to provide off-premise connections to PSTN or PTT. Supports battery reversal detection and caller ID. These VICs can be software configured to work in all countries. Also used to connect to analog

CAMA trunk to provide dedicated E-911 service (North America only).

Use to connect to PBX or key system as tie lines.

Use to provide off-premise direct-inward-dial connection from CO

(central office) Serves only incoming calls from the PSTN.

Supports caller ID.

Use to connect as network side or user side to PBX or key system as off-premise connections (ISDN voice BRI). Supports

Patent Pending flexible L2 and L3 configurations

Use to connect to Japanese Private Branch Exchanges (PBXs) using J1 standard interface.

Use to connect to PBX, PSTN, or WAN using T1 standard interface.

Use to connect to PBX, PSTN, or WAN using T1 standard interface.

Use to connect to PBX, PSTN, or WAN using T1 standard interface and provide channel drop and insert capability.

Use to connect to PBX, PSTN, or WAN using E1 standard interface.

Use to connect to PBX, PSTN, or WAN using E1 standard interface.

Use to connect to PBX, PSTN, or WAN using E1 standard interface and provide channel drop and insert capability.

Use to connect to WAN using unframed G.703 standard interface.

Use to connect to WAN using unframed G.703 standard interface.

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 5 of 15

Platform

2600XM

2691

2811

2821

2851

3725

3745

3825

3845

Table 4. PVDM2 Packet Fax/Voice DSP Type and Density Supported on the IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax

Network Module

Module

Name

Description Numbe r of

DSPs

1

PVDM2-8

PVDM2-16

PVDM2-32

PVDM2-48

PVDM2-64

8-channel Packet Fax/Voice DSP

Module

16-channel Packet Fax/Voice DSP

Module

32-channel Packet Fax/Voice DSP

Module

48-channel Packet Fax/Voice DSP

Module

64-channel Packet Fax/Voice DSP

Module

1

2

3

4

6

12

18

24

1. High-complexity codecs supported are: G.711, G.726, G.729, G.723.1, G.728, GSM-EFR and Fax Relay.

2. Medium-complexity codecs supported are: G.711, G.726, G.729a, GSM and Fax Relay.

8

16

24

32

Table 5. Maximum Network Modules Allowed per Platform

Maximum Channels in High-Complexity

1

Codec

4

Maximum Channels in Medium-Complexity

2

Codec

4

Maximum

Channels in

G.711 codec

8

16

32

48

64

4

2

4

1

1

2

Maximum Number of IPC High-Density Digital Voice/Fax NMs Allowed

1

1

1

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 6 of 15

Table 6. IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice/Fax Network Module Feature Summary

Feature

IP Telephony Voice

Gateway

Toll Bypass

Voice over Packet

Transport

Call Control Signaling

ITU Standard Voice

Codecs

Telephony Interface

Signaling Support

Description and Benefits

Integrates all Cisco IP Communications solutions by providing flexible and reliable connectivity to public or private switched telephone networks around the world.

Provides high-density gateway for Cisco IP phones to PSTN or legacy PBX/PABXs. (Private Automatic

Branch Exchange).

Provides high-density gateway to PSTN for traditional PBX systems, phones, fax machines, and key communication systems connected to a voice, data, and video infrastructure.

Interoperable within a Cisco AVVID architecture and Cisco IP Communications solution.

Reduce or eliminate toll charges assessed by long distance and local carriers by transporting voice and fax traffic across the enterprise intranet, LAN, metropolitan-area network (MAN), or WAN.

Works with existing phones, fax machines, PBX systems, and key systems.

Connection trunk: Creates a permanent tie-line replacement structure (digital-to-digital, digital-to-analog, or analog-to-analog capabilities).

Interoperates end-to-end with Cisco IP phones, analog phones, fax machine connections, and PBX/PABX connections to and from other Cisco voice-enabled products.

Voice/Fax over IP: VoIP traffic at Layer 3 can travel over any Layer 1 or Layer 2 media, including ISDN, leased lines, serial connections, Frame Relay, Ethernet, Token Ring, and Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM).

Voice/Fax over Frame Relay: VoFR is supported using FRF.11 and FRF.12 standards. This solution also uses features found only in Cisco IOS Software for maintaining voice quality.

Voice over ATM: VoATM is supported using AAL2 or AAL5 encapsulation. Leverages existing ATM networks as a direct transport method for voice. VoATM requires ATM interfaces such as T1/E1 ATM, IMA, DS3/E3 or

OC-3, or DSL WICs.

Compressed Real-Time Protocol (cRTP) offers RTP header compression and packet fragmentation techniques that allow toll-quality voice and fax transmissions over any WAN connection.

Call admission control and PSTN fallback: Uses Service Assurance Agent (SAA) to determine latency, delay and jitter and provide real-time ICPIF calculations before establishing a call across an IP infrastructure. SAA packets emulate voice packets receiving the same priority as voice throughout the entire network.

Advanced quality of service (QoS) mechanisms: These configurable Cisco IOS Software features reserve appropriate bandwidth and prioritize voice and fax traffic to ensure transparent delivery of toll-quality voice and fax. They include Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP), Queuing Techniques (such as Low Latency Queuing),

IP Precedence, and DiffServ Code Points.

Supports H.323 V1/V2/V3/V4, MGCP 0.1/1.0, and SIP call control protocols. Also supports Cisco CallManager

3.3 using MGCP or H.323, and Cisco CallManager Express 3.1.

G.711, G.729, G.729a/b, G.723.1, G.726, G.728, GSM, GSM-EFR, GSM-ER: These are standards-based compression technologies allowing transmission of voice across IP, Frame Relay and ATM. The G.711 standard employs 64 kbps PCM modulation using either u-law or A-law. Other codecs employ lower bit rates.

Supports the following signaling protocols:

FXO/FXS loop-start and ground-start signaling

E&M (wink, immediate, delay)

Inbound signaling (such as DTMF, MF support)

T1 and E1 CAS

T1 and E1 PRI Q.931 user side and network side

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 7 of 15

Feature

Voice Features

Voice Port Interfaces

Voice Port-Specific

Features

Description and Benefits

T1 and E1 PRI QSIG

E1 MelCAS

E1 R2 CAS

T1 and E1 Transparent CCS (with Multi-D channel)

Country-specific signaling

Conferencing/Transcoding

1

: Supports up to 50 eight-party G.711 ad-hoc conferencing sessions, or up to 32 eight-party multi-codec (G.711/G.729) ad-hoc conferencing sessions. A maximum of 128 transcoding sessions between G.729a and G.711 codecs, and 96 transcoding sessions between G.729 and G.711 codecs.

Echo cancellation: Industry-leading G.168-compliant software echo cancellation provides echo cancellation on tail circuits up to 64 Mbps.

Silence suppression, voice activity detection (VAD): Bandwidth is used only when someone is speaking.

During silent periods of a phone call, bandwidth is available for data traffic.

Comfort noise generation: This feature reassures the phone user that the connection is being maintained, even when no voice packets are being transmitted.

Private line automatic ring-down (PLAR): Provides a direct connection to another digital or analog voice port by lifting a telephone handset on one end. Includes "Trader Turret" PLAR.

Local/Advanced Voice Busy-Out (LVBO/AVBO): Automatically busies out any desired voice trunk line to a

PBX or PSTN when a direct WAN or LAN connection to the router or any part of the network to the destination port is down.

Caller ID support: Per-port configurable caller ID (with per call un-blocking) over analog FXS, FXO and DID interfaces.

Hunt groups across cards: Calls can be forwarded automatically to the first available line.

Integrated add/drop multiplexer (drop and insert): Performs add/drop multiplexing for voice within a multiport voice Network Module. Eliminates the requirement, maintenance, support, and expense of using an external add/drop multiplexer.

Channel bank: Supports the conversion of analog voice ports into digital voice traffic using DS-0 channels on a

T1 or E1 interface.

Dial plan mapping: Simplifies configuration and management through automatic mapping of dialed phone numbers to IP addresses.

Interactive Voice Response Support (IVR): Provides automated-attendant, voice-mail support, and call routing based on desired service.

Hoot and Holler over IP: Delivers superior quality Hoot and Holler multicast voice services and multicast conferencing over the WAN using existing end-points.

Supports FXS, FXO (includes CAMA), DID, E/M, BRI (S/T), T1, E1, and J1 interfaces.

FXS and FXO: Provide battery polarity reversal detection and initiation for disconnect supervision and far-end answer supervision.

ISDN BRI network side and phantom power: The VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE provides the ability to connect a

PBX/PABX configured as user side directly to the router. Also provides phantom power to accommodate equipment that requires it.

Analog CAMA trunk connection: The VIC2-2FXO and VIC2-4FXO provide the ability to connect to analog

CAMA trunks which provide dedicated E-911 services. Each VIC port can be individually configured as an FXO or a CAMA port via Cisco IOS Software.

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 8 of 15

Feature

Fax and Modem

Data Features

High-Performance

Flexible DSP

Architecture

Description and Benefits

Per port disable: Allows disabling of any single port without affecting any other port on the same VIC or NM.

LED indicators for voice processing resources and port status.

Fax and modem passthrough: Allows fax and modem traffic to pass through a voice port.

Fax relay: Provides a more robust protocol for fax transmission over packet networks. Also supports the T.37 and T.38 fax protocols.

Supports serial data WAN access using T1/E1 or fractional T1/E1 network interface.

N X 64 Kbps or N X 56 Kbps channel group data rates (T1:N=1 to 24, E1:n=1 to 31).

Supports up to 32 data channel groups with a total bandwidth of up to 2 Mbps.

Supports integrated data WAN access and DS-0 voice channels on the same T1/E1.

Dual clocking domain: Supports a second clocking domain for one T1/E1 data only trunk, independent of the primary clocking domain used by other T1/E1 and BRI ports resident within a single NM-HDV2 module.

Channel capacity: Supports up to 120 medium-complexity voice channels. See NM specifications below for further details.

Flexi-DSP architecture: There is no need to specify codec complexity at configuration. An appropriate codec is dynamically selected when a call is established, while allocating DSP resources optimally.

Feature upgrades: The DSP architecture allows for addition of new features through simple code updates.

DSP sharing: Supports the ability to share DSPs among multiple NM-HDV2 modules within a single Voice

Gateway Router.

1. Conferencing/transcoding feature available on 2600XM, 2691 and 3700 platforms starting with 12.3(8)T, 2800 starting with 12.3(8)T4, 3800 starting with

12.3(11)T.

ADDITIONAL FEATURES

Cisco IOS Software and Platform Support

Fully supported via Cisco IOS Software CLI (call level interface) including device configuration, monitoring, link status, security, Layer 2 and 3 protocol configuration and management, and call history

Supported on all Cisco 2600XM, 2811, 2821, 2851, Cisco 2691, Cisco 3700 Series and Cisco 3800 Series Multiservice Access routers

Network Management Support

Cisco Voice Manager

SNMP protocol compliant

Manageable via a MIB browser

CiscoView interface for configuration

ConfigMaker

NetSys supported

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 9 of 15

Software and Memory Requirements

Table 7. Cisco IOS Software Version

Product

NM-HDV2

NM-HDV2-1T1/E1

NM-HDV2-2T1/E1

PVDM2-8

PVDM2-16

PVDM2-32

PVDM2-48

PVDM2-64

NM-HDV2

NM-HDV2-1T1/E1

NM-HDV2-2T1/E1

PVDM2-8

PVDM2-16

PVDM2-32

PVDM2-48

PVDM2-64

Cisco 2600XM

12.3(7)T

12.3(8)T for conferencing/transcoding

IP Plus images and higher

64 MB DRAM

32 MB Flash

Cisco 2691

12.3(7)T

12.3(8)T for conferencing/transcodin g

IP Plus images and higher

128 MB DRAM

32 MB Flash

Cisco 2811, 2821, 2851 Cisco 3825

12.3(8)T4 12.3(8)T4

IP Plus images and higher

IP Plus images and higher

256 MB DRAM

64 MB Flash

256 MB DRAM

64 MB Flash

Cisco 3700

12.3(7)T

12.3(8)T for conferencing/transcodin g

IP Plus images and higher

128 MB DRAM

32 MB Flash

Cisco 3845

12.3(8)T4

IP Plus images and higher

256 MB DRAM

64 MB Flash

Please refer to the Cisco IOS Software release notes for determining the minimum flash and DRAM memory requirements.

Environmental Specifications

Operating temperature: 0 to 40°C (32 to 104°F)

Storage temperature: -25 to +70°C (-13 to 158°F)

Relative humidity: 5 to 85% noncondensing operating; 5 to 95% noncondensing, nonoperating

NM SPECIFICATIONS

Table 8.

Description

Cisco IOS Software

Requirement

NM-HDV2

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/Fax Network

Module

12.3(7)T, IP Voice Images or higher

12(3)8T for conferencing, conferencing.–2600XM, 2691, 3700 platforms

12(3)8T4, IP Voice image or higher-

2811, 2821, 2851 platforms, and

12(3)11T, IP Voice image or higher

-3800 platforms

NM-HDV2-1T1/E1

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/Fax Network Module with One Built-in T1/E1 Port

12.3(7)T, IP Voice Images or higher.

12(3)8T for conferencing, conferencing.

–2600XM, 2691, 3700 platforms

12(3)8T4, IP Voice image or higher-

2811, 2821, 2851 platforms, and

12(3)11T, IP Voice image or higher -

3800 platforms

NM-HDV2-2T1/E1

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/Fax Network Module with Two Built-in T1/E1 Ports

12.3(7)T, IP Voice Images or higher.

12(3)8T for conferencing, conferencing.–2600XM, 2691, 3700 platforms

12(3)8T4, IP Voice image or higher-

2811, 2821, 2851 platforms, and

12(3)11T, IP Voice image or higher -

3800 platforms

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 10 of 15

Description

Cisco Part Number

FCC Specifications

Spare

Voice Channel

Capacity

NM-HDV2

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/Fax Network

Module

800-22166-01

NM-HDV2-1T1/E1

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/Fax Network Module with One Built-in T1/E1 Port

800-22167-01

FCC Class B device

NM-HDV2=

60 digital voice channels of medium complexity or

4 analog voice channels

FCC Class B device

NM-HDV2-1T1/E1=

90 digital voice channels of medium complexity or

30 digital voice channels of mediumcomplexity and 4 analog voice channels

1,012,136

Mean Time Between

Failures (MTBF)

1,251,736

VICs/VWICs

Supported

PVDM2 Supported

Maximum of ONE:

VIC2-2FXS

VIC-4FXS/DID

VIC2-2FXO

VIC2-4FXO

VIC2-2E/M

VIC-2DID

VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

VIC-1J1

Any VWIC-xMFT-xx

Requires at least one and maximum of four Packet Fax/Voice

DSP Module for voice calls:

PVDM2-8

PVDM2-16

PVDM2-32

PVDM2-48

PVDM2-64

Maximum of ONE:

VIC2-2FXS

VIC-4FXS/DID

VIC2-2FXO

VIC2-4FXO

VIC2-2E/M

VIC-2DID

VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

VIC-1J1

Any VWIC-xMFT-xx

Requires at least one and maximum of four Packet Fax/Voice DSP Module for voice calls:

PVDM2-8

PVDM2-16

PVDM2-32

PVDM2-48

PVDM2-64

NM-HDV2-2T1/E1

IP Communications High-Density

Digital Voice/Fax Network Module with Two Built-in T1/E1 Ports

800-22168-01

FCC Class B device

NM-HDV2-2T1/E1

120 digital voice channels of medium complexity or

60 digital voice channels of medium complexity and 4 analog voice channels

939,368

Maximum of ONE:

VIC2-2FXS

VIC-4FXS/DID

VIC2-2FXO

VIC2-4FXO

VIC2-2E/M

VIC-2DID

VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

VIC-1J1

Any VWIC-xMFT-xx

Requires at least one and maximum of four Packet Fax/Voice DSP

Module for voice calls:

PVDM2-8

PVDM2-16

PVDM2-32

PVDM2-48

PVDM2-64

VOICE INTERFACE CARD SPECIFICATIONS

Please refer to the following datasheet for VIC specifications: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/modules/ps5365/products_data_sheet09186a0080191d41.html

VOICE WAN INTERFACE CARD SPECIFICATIONS

Please refer to the following “Cisco One and Two Port T1/E1 Multiflex Voice/WAN Interface Cards” datasheet for VWIC specifications: http://www.cisco.com/en/US/products/hw/routers/ps259/products_data_sheet09186a0080091b9c.html

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 11 of 15

Table 9.

Product Number

VIC-1J1

VWIC-1MFT-T1

VWIC-2MFT-T1

VWIC-2MFT-T1-DI

VWIC-1MFT-E1

VWIC-2MFT-E1

VWIC-2MFT-E1-DI

VWIC-1MFT-G703

VWIC-2MFT-G703

CAB-E1-RJ45BNC

CAB-E1-RJ45TWIN

T1 Network Interface

Transmit Bit Rate

Receive Bit Rate

Line Code

AMI Ones Density

Framing Format

Output level (LBO)

Input Level

DTE Interface (WIC mode)

DTE Interface (VIC mode)

DCE Interface

E1 Network Interface

Transmit Bit Rate

Receive Bit Rate

Data Rate

Clocking

E1 National Bits

Encoding

DTE Interface (WIC mode)

DTE Interface (VIC mode)

DCE Interface

Description

Single-Port J1 Voice Interface Card

1-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-T1

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-T1

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-T1 with Drop and Insert

1-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-E1

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-E1

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-E1 with Drop and Insert

1-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-E1 G.703

2-Port RJ-48 Multiflex Trunk-E1 G.703

E1 Cable RJ-45 to Dual BNC (Unbalanced)

E1 Cable RJ-45 to Twinax (Balanced)

1.544 Mbps ± 50 bps/32 PPM

1.544 Mbps ± 50 bps/32 PPM

AMI, B8ZS

Enforced for N x 56 Kbps Channels

D4 (SF) and ESF

0, -7.5, or -15 dB

+1dB0 down to -24 dB0

Fractional Service

G.704/Structured

G.704/Structured

2.048 Mbps ±100 bps/50 PPM

2.048 Mbps ±100 bps/50 PPM

1.984 Mbps (framed mode) Per E1 Port

Internal and Loop (recovered from network)

Fixed (non-configurable)

HDB3

Fractional Service

G.704/Structured

G.704/Structured

J1 Network Interface

Signaling Standards

Interface Type

J1 CAS

E & M Immediate Start, Wink Start

DB15 Connector (Female)

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 12 of 15

Product Number

Line Bit Rate

Line Code

Framing Format

Output level (LBO)

Input Level

Diagnostic Loopback Support

Alarm Detection

LED Indicators

Physical Interface Standards

Description

J1 2.048Mbps

CMI (Coded Mark Inversion)

Eight Frame Multiframe J1 TTC JJ-20.11

2.55 (min), 3.3 (typ) and 3.9 Max Vp-p

Greater than 0.2 Vp-p and Less than 4 Vp-p

Line Loopback, Local Loopback and Isolation Loopback.

Monitors for Loss of Signal, Out of Frame/Loss of Lock and Yellow Alarm. If any of these conditions are present, the alarm LED (labeled AL) on the NM-HDV faceplate will be lit.

Data Carrier Detect (CD)

Loopback (LP)

Alarm (AL)

TTC JJ.20.10-11

HOMOLOGATION

The IP Communications High-Density Digital Voice Network Modules are approved for the countries listed below. The approvals are for offpremise and on-premise connections, unless stated otherwise. Approval for other countries is in progress. Please refer to the homologation

Website shown below for approval progress for other countries and the VIC/VWIC cards used in the NM-HDV2: http://tools.cisco.com/cse/prdapp/jsp/externalsearch.do?action=externalsearchresult&page=EXTERNAL_SEARCH

Table 10.

Country

United States

Canada

European Community (CE) Countries

1

Specification

EMC 47CFR15 Subpart B 2002, T1

Safety IEC60950

Telecom 47 CFR part 68, TIA/EIA 968-A

EMC CISPR22 or FCC Part 15

Safety IEC60950

Telecom CS-03

EMC EN55022/EN50082/EN61000

Safety EN60950

Telecom TBR4, TBR12 and TBR13

Approval

Supported

Supported

Supported

1. CE (European Community) countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg,

Malta, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom.

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 13 of 15

Corporate Headquarters

Cisco Systems, Inc.

170 West Tasman Drive

San Jose, CA 95134-1706

USA www.cisco.com

Tel: 408 526-4000

800 553-NETS (6387)

Fax: 408 526-4100

European Headquarters

Cisco Systems International

BV

Haarlerbergpark

Haarlerbergweg 13-19

1101 CH Amsterdam

The Netherlands www-europe.cisco.com

Tel: 31 0 20 357 1000

Fax: 31 0 20 357 1100

Americas Headquarters

Cisco Systems, Inc.

170 West Tasman Drive

San Jose, CA 95134-1706

USA www.cisco.com

Tel: 408 526-7660

Fax: 408 527-0883

Asia Pacific Headquarters

Cisco Systems, Inc.

168 Robinson Road

#28-01 Capital Tower

Singapore 068912 www.cisco.com

Tel: +65 6317 7777

Fax: +65 6317 7799

Cisco Systems has more than 200 offices in the following countries and regions. Addresses, phone numbers, and fax numbers are listed on the Cisco Web site at www.cisco.com/go/offices .

Argentina • Australia • Austria • Belgium • Brazil • Bulgaria • Canada • Chile • China PRC • Colombia • Costa Rica • Croatia • Cyprus

Czech Republic • Denmark • Dubai, UAE • Finland • France • Germany • Greece • Hong Kong SAR • Hungary • India • Indonesia • Ireland

Israel • Italy • Japan • Korea • Luxembourg • Malaysia • Mexico • The Netherlands • New Zealand • Norway • Peru • Philippines • Poland

Portugal • Puerto Rico • Romania • Russia • Saudi Arabia • Scotland • Singapore • Slovakia • Slovenia • South Africa • Spain • Sweden

Switzerland • Taiwan • Thailand • Turkey • Ukraine • United Kingdom • United States • Venezuela • Vietnam • Zimbabwe

Copyright 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CCIP, CCSP, the Cisco Powered Network mark, Cisco Unity, Follow Me Browsing, FormShare, and StackWise are trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc.; Changing the Way We Work, Live, Play, and Learn, and iQuick Study are service marks of Cisco Systems, Inc.; and Aironet, ASIST, BPX,

Catalyst, CCDA, CCDP, CCIE, CCNA, CCNP, Cisco, the Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert logo, Cisco IOS, the Cisco IOS logo, Cisco Press, Cisco Systems, Cisco Systems

Capital, the Cisco Systems logo, Empowering the Internet Generation, Enterprise/Solver, EtherChannel, EtherSwitch, Fast Step, GigaStack, Internet Quotient, IOS, IP/TV, iQ

Expertise, the iQ logo, iQ Net Readiness Scorecard, LightStream, Linksys, MGX, MICA, the Networkers logo, Networking Academy, Network Registrar, Packet, PIX, Post-

Routing, Pre-Routing, RateMUX, Registrar, ScriptShare, SlideCast, SMARTnet, StrataView Plus, Stratm, SwitchProbe, TeleRouter, The Fastest Way to Increase Your Internet

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

All other trademarks mentioned in this document or Web site are the property of their respective owners. The use of the word partner does not imply a partnership relationship

Page 14 of 15 between Cisco and any other company. (0402R) 204064_ETMG_KW_08.04

Printed in the USA

© 2004 Cisco Systems, Inc. All right reserved.

Important notices, privacy statements, and trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. can be found on cisco.com

Page 15 of 15

advertisement

Related manuals