Cisco Two-slot IP Communications Voice/Fax Network Module Data Sheet


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DATA SHEET

CISCO IP COMMUNICATIONS VOICE/FAX NETWORK MODULE

Cisco IP Communications Voice/Fax Network Modules for the Cisco 2600XM Series, Cisco 2691, Cisco 2800, 3600, 3700, and 3800 Series Voice Gateway Routers

Figure 1. NM-HD-2VE with one VWIC-2MFT and one VIC-4FXS/DID

The Cisco

®

IP Communications voice/fax network modules provide enterprises, managed service providers, and service providers the ability to directly connect the public switched telephone network (PSTN) and traditional telephony equipment (private branch exchange [PBX], key system, analog telephones, fax machines, etc.) to Cisco 2600XM and 2800 Series, Cisco 2691, 3640, and 3660, and Cisco 3700 and 3800 Series voice gateway routers. This set of Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules delivers the most versatile combination of analog and digital voice and data capabilities in a single network module. As a completely integrated component of the Cisco IP Communications solution including

Cisco CallManager, Cisco IP phones, Cisco Unity

®

unified messaging software, Cisco IP Contact Center (IPCC), and the entire line of Cisco IP

Communications products, the Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules are a cornerstone of Cisco AVVID (Architecture for Voice,

Video and Integrated Data). When used in a Cisco voice gateway router with Cisco CallManager, Survivable Remote Site Telephony (SRST), or

Cisco CallManager Express, the Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network module is a complete IP Communications solution for the business branch.

Figure 1 shows the IP Communications voice/fax network module with one VWIC-2MFT-T1-DI and one VIC-4FXS/DID.

The Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules for the Cisco 2600XM Series, Cisco 2691, and Cisco 2800, 3600, 3700, and 3800 series voice gateway routers enable packet voice technologies including VoIP (H.323, Media Gateway Control Protocol [MGCP], and Session Initiation

Protocol [SIP]), voice over Frame Relay, and voice over ATM (ATM Adaptation Layer 2 [AAL2] and AAL5). Cisco IP Communications solutions provide the means for integrating voice and data within a single network, allowing users to take advantage of services such as IP telephony, integrated services, and toll-bypass while providing an opportunity to improve productivity. By operating on Cisco IOS Software, these solutions incorporate 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. Cisco IOS Software solutions enable time-sensitive voice traffic to be moved across even low-bandwidth WAN connections with the priority and quality that voice and fax demand. Transporting voice over IP networks

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continues to provide transport flexibility because IP can be routed across a multitude of WAN technologies (leased lines, Frame Relay, and ATM) along with providing direct connectivity to the desktop.

Figure 2 shows an IP telephony application using Cisco CallManager Express and SRST in a business branch.

Figure 2. IP Telephony Application using Cisco CallManager Express and SRST in the Business Branch

The Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules support either one or two Cisco voice interface cards (VICs) or Cisco voice/WAN interface cards (VWICs) and install into network module slots for the Cisco 2600XM Series, Cisco 2691, and Cisco 2800, 3600, 3700, and 3800 series voice gateway routers. The Cisco VICs are daughter cards that install into the network modules and provide the interface to the PSTN and to telephony equipment (PBX, key systems, fax machines, phones). The Cisco VWICs are daughter cards that provide the interface to the PBX, PSTN, and/or WAN.

VICs include 2-port foreign exchange station (FXS), direct inward dial (DID), foreign exchange office (FXO), and E&M analog interface cards.

Also available are 4-port 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 (Table 1).

Cisco VWICs include 1- and 2-port T1 and E1 interface cards with optional drop-and-insert capability. These cards cover a full range of digital voice and WAN connectivity options and provide connectivity to the world’s PBXs, PSTNs, and Post, Telephone, and Telegraph (PTT) organizations.

Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules provide the gateway to Cisco AVVID for calls to and from the PSTN and the traditional telephony equipment. Users can deploy networks that take advantage of investments in existing telephony equipment while also deploying and integrating IP telephony immediately or in the future. These network modules enable users to operate at any point on the integrated voice, video, and data infrastructure spectrum while incrementally adding connections to both traditional telephony and IP telephony.

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Table 1. Cisco Voice/WAN Interface Cards

Part Number

NM-HD-1V

Description

1-slot IP communications voice/fax network module.

Application

Supports up to four channels of analog/BRI voice using any supported coderdecoder (codec). (No support for T1/E1 or data WAN.)

NM-HD-2V 2-slot IP communications voice/fax network module.

Supports up to eight channels of analog/BRI voice using medium complexity codec or six channels using any supported codec. (No support for T1/E1 or data WAN)

NM-HD-2VE 2-slot IP communications enhanced voice/fax network module.

Supports analog/BRI/T1/E1 voice and data WAN. Supports up to 48 channels of G.711 codec, 24 channels of medium-complexity codec, or 18 channels of any supported codec. Offers maximum investment protection with support for analog/digital voice and data WAN.

VIC2-2FXS 2-port FXS voice/fax interface card. FXS port is used to connect directly to phones, fax machines, and key systems. Generates battery polarity reversal and caller ID.

VIC-4FXS/DID 4-port FXS voice/fax interface card. (Note:

The DID feature was added to the 2600XM,

2691, 2800, 3700, 3800 starting with

12.3(14)T. This feature currently is supported on 1700 and 2801 platforms.)

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

VIC2-2FXO 2-port FXO voice/fax interface card

[universal card for all countries]. Also supports analog Centralized Automated

Message Accounting (CAMA) on any port.

FXO port is used to connect to PBX or key system, or to provide off-premises connections to PSTN or PTT. Supports battery reversal detection and caller

ID. These Cisco 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)

VIC2-4FXO 4-port FXO voice/fax interface card

[universal card for all countries]. Also supports analog CAMA on any port.

FXO port is used to connect to PBX or key system, or to provide off-premises connections to PSTN or PTT. Supports battery reversal detection and caller

ID. These Cisco 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)

VIC2-2E/M 2-port E&M voice/fax interface card. Used to connect to PBX or key system as tie lines.

VIC-2DID 2-port DID voice/fax interface card. (Note:

FXS support on the VIC-2DID was added to the 2600XM, 2691, 3700, 3800 in 12.4.3 and 12.4(2nd)T. This feature currently is supported on 1700 and 2801 platforms.)

Used to provide off-premises DID connection from central office. Serves only incoming calls from the PSTN. Supports caller ID.

VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE 2-port BRI voice/fax interface card

(configurable for either network or terminal side).

Used to connect as network side or user side to PBX or key system as off-premises connections (ISDN voice BRI). Supports patent-pending flexible

Layer 2 and Layer 3 configurations.

VWIC-1MFT-T1

VWIC-2MFT-E1

1-port RJ-48 multiflex trunk—T1 (Voice and

WAN).

VWIC-2MFT-T1 2-port RJ-48 multiflex trunk—T1 (Voice and

WAN).

VWIC-2MFT-T1-DI 2-port RJ-48 multiflex trunk—T1 with dropand-insert capability (Voice and WAN).

VWIC-1MFT-E1 1-port RJ-48 multiflex trunk—E1 (Voice

WAN). and

2-port RJ-48 multiflex trunk—E1 (Voice and

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

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

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

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

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

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Part Number Description

WAN).

VWIC-2MFT-E1-DI 2-port RJ-48 multiflex trunk—E1 with dropand-insert (Voice and WAN).

VWIC2-1MFT-T1/E1 1-port RJ-48 multiflex trunk-T1/E1 (Voice and WAN)

VWIC2-2MFT-T1/E1 2-port RJ-48 multiflex trunk-T1/E1 (Voice and WAN)

Application

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

Used to connect to PBX, PSTN, or WAN using T1/E1 standard interface and provide channel drop-and-insert capability.

Used to connect to PBX, PSTN, or WAN using T1/E1 standard interface and provide channel drop-and-insert capability.

Table 2 shows the maximum number of Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules allowed per Cisco platform.

Table 2. Number of Cisco IP Communications Voice/Fax Network Modules Allowed Per Cisco Platform

Cisco Platform

Cisco 2600XM Series multiservice platforms

Cisco 2691 Multiservice Platform

Cisco 2811/2821/2851 Integrated Services Routers

Cisco 3640/A Multiservice Platform

Cisco 3660 Series multiservice platforms

Cisco 3725 Multiservice Access Router

Cisco 3745 Multiservice Access Router

Cisco 3825 Integrated Services Router

Cisco 3845 Integrated Services Router

Maximum Number of Network Modules

Allowed

1

1

1

3

6

2

4

2

4

Table 3 summarizes the features and benefits of Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules.

Table 3. Features and Benefits

Feature

IP Telephony Voice Gateway

Toll Bypass

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 gateway for Cisco IP phones to PSTN or traditional PBXs and private automatic branch exchanges (PABXs).

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

Interoperable within Cisco AVVID and Cisco IP Communications solutions.

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, faxes, PBXs, and key systems.

Connection trunks creates a permanent tie-line replacement structure (digital-to-digital, digital-toanalog, or analog-to-analog capabilities).

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

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Feature

Voice over Packet Transport

Call Control Signaling

International Telecommunications

Union (ITU) Standard Voice Codecs

Telephony Interface

Signaling Support

Voice Features

Description and Benefits

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 ATM.

Voice/Fax over Frame Relay—Voice over Frame Relay 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 is supported using AAL2 or AAL5 encapsulation. Uses existing ATM networks as a direct transport method for voice. Requires ATM interfaces such as T1/E1 ATM, Inverse Multiplexing over 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 Calculated Planning Impairment Factor (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 QoS Mechanisms—These configurable Cisco IOS Software features reserve appropriate bandwidth and prioritize voice and fax traffic to help 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 differentiated services code points (DSCPs).

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

CallManager using MGCP or H.323.

G.711, G.729, G.729a/b, G.723.1, G.726, G.728, and GSM—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 dual-tone multifrequency [DTMF], multifrequency support)

• T1 and E1 channel associated signaling (CAS)

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

• T1 and E1 PRI QSIG

• E1 MelCAS

• E1 R2 CAS

• T1 and E1 Transparent common channel signaling (CCS) (with multiple-D channel)

• Country-specific signaling

Echo Cancellation—Cancels echo on tail circuits up to 32 msec (configurable tail length)

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—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

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Feature

Voice Port Interfaces

Voice Port-Specific Features

Fax and Modem

Data Features (Only Supported on NM-HD-2VE)

High-Performance Flexible Digital

Signal Processor (DSP) Architecture

Description and Benefits

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 and Drop Multiplexer (Drop and Insert)—Performs add and drop multiplexing for voice within a dual-port voice network module. Eliminates the requirement, maintenance, support, and expense of using an external add and 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 (only supported on NM-HD-2VE)

Dial Plan Mapping—Simplifies configuration and management through automatic mapping of dialed phone numbers to IP addresses

Interactive Voice Response (IVR) Support—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.

Support FXS, FXO (includes CAMA), DID, E/M, BRI (S/T, NT/T), T1, and E1. (T1 and E1 only supported on NM-HD-2VE)

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 or 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 Cisco VIC port can be individually configured as an FXO or a CAMA port via Cisco IOS Software.

Per Port Disable—Allows disabling of any single port without affecting any other port on the same VIC or network module.

LED indicators for voice-processing resources and port status.

Fax and Modem Pass-Through—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.

• Support 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

Channel Capacity—Supports up to 48 voice channels. See network module specifications below for further details.

Flexible 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.

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ADDITIONAL FEATURES

Cisco IOS Software and Platform Support

Fully supported via Cisco IOS Software command-line interface (CLI) including device configuration, monitoring, link status, network security,

Layer 2 and 3 protocol configuration and management, and call history

Supported on all Cisco 2600XM and 2800 Series, Cisco 2691, 3640/A, and 3660, and Cisco 3700 and 3800 Series voice gateway routers

Traditional Circuit-Switched PBX Support

Verified PBX interoperability with Lucent Definity series (G3r), Nortel Meridian series (Option 11), Siemens HICOM 330E, NEC NEAX 2400,

Alcatel 4400, and Ericsson MD110. Other PBXs continue to be tested.

Network Management Support

Cisco CallManager

Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) compliant

Manageable via a Management Information Base (MIB) browser

CiscoView interface for configuration

ConfigMaker

NetSys supported

SOFTWARE AND MEMORY REQUIREMENTS

Table 4 shows the software and memory requirements for the Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules and Cisco voice interface cards.

Table 4. Software and Memory Requirements for Voice/Fax Network Modules and Voice Interface Cards

Cisco IOS Software Version

Product

NM-HD-1V

NM-HD-2V

NM-HD-2VE

VIC2-2FXS

VIC-4FXS/DID

VIC2-2FXO

VIC2-4FXO

VIC2-2E/M

VIC-2DID

VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

VWIC-xMFT-xx

Cisco 2600XM and 2691

Series

• Cisco IOS Software

Release 12.2.(15)ZJ or

12.3(4)T

• “Plus” images

• Cisco IOS Software

Release 12.2.(15)ZJ or

12.3(4)T

• “Plus” images

Cisco 2800 Series

• Cisco IOS Software

Release 12.3(8)T4

“IP Voice” images

Cisco IOS Software

Release 12.3(8)T4

“IP Voice” images

Cisco 3600 and 3700 Series

• Cisco IOS Software Release

12.2.(15)ZJ or 12.3(4)T

“Plus” images

Cisco IOS Software Release

12.2.(15)ZJ or 12.3(4)T

“Plus” images

Cisco 3800 Series

• Cisco IOS Software

Release 12.3(11)T

• “IP Voice” images

• Cisco IOS Software

Release 12.3(11)T

• “IP Voice” images

Note:

Use Cisco CallManager version 3.3(3) for MGCP support.

Note:

Please refer to the Cisco IOS Software release notes for determining the minimum flash and dynamic RAM (DRAM) requirements.

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TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

Environmental Specifications (Same for all Modules)

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

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

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

Network Module Specifications

Table 5 lists specifications for Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network modules.

Table 5. Specifications for IP Communications Voice/Fax Network Modules

Description

NM-HD-1V

1-slot Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network module

Cisco IOS

Software Release

Cisco Part Number

12.2.(15)ZJ “Plus” Image

800-21590-01

FCC Specifications FCC Class B device

Spare NM-HD-1V=

Voice Channel Capacity 4 any complexity codec

1,605,514 hours

800-21591-01

FCC Class B device

NM-HD-2V=

6 any complexity or 8 medium complexity

1,312,760 hours Mean Time Between

Failure (MTBF)

Cisco VICs and VWICs

Required

NM-HD-2V

2-slot Cisco IP Communications voice/fax network module

12.2.(15)ZJ “Plus” Image

Requires one Cisco VIC:

• VIC2-2FXS

• VIC-4FXS/DID

• VIC2-2FXO

• VIC2-4FXO

• VIC2-2E/M

• VIC-2DID

• VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

Requires at least one Cisco VIC

(maximum of two):

• VIC2-2FXS

• VIC-4FXS/DID

• VIC2-2FXO

• VIC2-4FXO

• VIC2-2E/M

• VIC-2DID

• VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

NM-HD-2VE

2-slot Cisco IP Communications enhanced

Voice/fax network module

12.2.(15)ZJ “Plus” Image

800-20164-01

FCC Class B device

NM-HD-2VE=

18 any complexity, 24 medium complexity, or 48 G.711

1,092,352 hours

Requires at least one Cisco VIC or VWIC

(maximum of two):

• VIC2-2FXS

• VIC-4FXS/DID

• VIC2-2FXO

• VIC2-4FXO

• VIC2-2E/M

• VIC-2DID

• VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

• Any VWIC-xMFT-xx and VWIC2-xMFTxx (except VWIC-xMFT-G703)

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VIC Specifications

Tables 6–11 show the specifications for the Cisco Voice Interface Cards (VIC).

Table 6. VIC2-2FXS Specifications. 2-Port FXS Voice/Fax Interface Card (for on-premise use only)

Feature

Interface Type

Description

FXS (on-premise connection only)

Cisco IOS Software Release

Cisco Part Number

Compliance

12.2.(15)ZJ

800-21341-01

Safety Conformance

Spare

FCC Class B device, CE

UL1950

VIC2-2FXS=

Address Signaling Formats • In-band DTMF

• Out-of-band pulse (10/20 pps)

Signaling Modes Loop start, ground start

Ringing Tone Configurable for different country requirements

Ringing Voltage >40 Vrms at 5 REN at 25 Hz (configurable frequency); 5 REN max per port, 8 REN total per VIC2-2FXS

Ringing Frequencies 20 Hz, 50 Hz

Loop Length

MTBF

<1500 ft (450 m.) 24 AWG Category 5 twisted pair cable

Physical Connector RJ-11

Number of Connectors/Ports Two

2,534,574 hours

Table 7. VIC-2DID Specifications. 2-Port DID Voice/Fax Interface Card. (Note: FXS support on VIC-2DID is in 12.4.3 and

12.4(2nd)T)

Feature

Interface Type

Cisco IOS Software Release

Cisco Part Number

Compliance

Safety Conformance

Spare

Address Signaling Formats

Signaling Modes

Disconnect Supervision

Caller ID

Physical Connector

Description

DID trunk

12.2.(15)ZJ

800-06487-01

FCC Class B device, CE

UL1950

VIC-2DID=

• In-band DTMF

• Out-of-band pulse (10/20 pps)

Immediate, delay dial, wink start

Power denial (Calling Party Control, far-end disconnect)

On-hook transmission of frequency-shift-keying (FSK) data

RJ-11

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Feature

Number of Connectors/Ports

MTBF

Description

Two

3,270,000 hours

Table 8. VIC2-2FXO and VIC2-4FXO Specifications. 2- or 4-Port FXO Voice/Fax Interface Card with Battery Reversal Detection and

Caller ID (for all countries). Includes support for North American analog CAMA trunk interface (user side).

Feature

Interface Type

Cisco IOS Software Release

Cisco Part Number

Compliance

Safety Conformance

Spare

Signaling Modes

Address Signaling Formats

Tone Disconnect Supervision

Battery Polarity Reversal Detection

Power Interrupt Disconnect

Physical Connector

Number of Connectors/Ports

MTBF

Description

FXO

12.2.(15)ZJ

VIC2-2FXO: 800-21597-01, VIC2-4FXO: 800-21589-01

FCC Class B device, CE

UL1950

VIC2-2FXO=, VIC2-4FXO=

Loop start, ground start

• In-band DTMF

• Out-of-band pulse (10/20 pps)

Call disconnect on progress tone of less than 600 Hz

Detection of disconnect supervision and far-end answer supervision via battery polarity reversal

Call disconnect on power interrupt of > 600 ms

RJ-11

Two for VIC2-2FXO, four for VIC2-4FXO

2,043,450 hours for VIC2-2FXO; 1,245,152 hours for VIC2-4FXO

Table 9. VIC2-2E/M Specifications. 2-Port E&M Voice/Fax Interface Card

Feature

Interface Type

Cisco IOS Software Release

Cisco Part Number

Compliance

Safety Conformance

Spare

Address Signaling Formats

Signaling Modes

Signaling Types

E-Lead Current Limit

M-Lead Sensitivity

Pulse Distortion

Description

E&M (For PBX trunking, Hoot Phones, or radio systems)

12.2.(15)ZJ

800-21342-01

FCC Class B device, CE

UL 1950

VIC2-2E/M=

• In-band DTMF

• Out-of-band pulse (10/20 pps)

Immediate, delay dial, wink start

I, II, III, and V

100 mA

> 3 mA

< 2 percent

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Feature

Physical Connector

Number of Connectors/Ports

MTBF

Description

4 wire/2 wire

Two

1,825,192 hours

Table 10. VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE Specifications. 2-Port BRI Voice/Fax Interface Card (user or network side)

Feature

VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE

Interface Type

Cisco IOS Software Release

Cisco Part Number

Compliance

Safety Conformance

Spare

ITU Compliance

Interface

ISDN Digital Access

Physical Connector

Number of Connectors/Ports

Phantom Power

MTBF

Description

2-port BRI voice/fax interface card (user or network side)

ISDN BRI

12.2.(15)ZJ

800-21861-01

• FCC Part 68

• CS03

• CTR3

• TS-031

• JATE Green Book

UL1950, CAN/CSA-C22.2, IEC 950, EN60950

VIC2-2BRI-NT/TE=

ITU-T Q.920, Q.921, Q.930, Q.931

4-wire user side S/T or network-side NT (software-configurable)

BRI 2B+D

RJ-45

Two

30 mA at 40V maximum per port

2,682,752 hours

Table 11. VIC-4FXS/DID Specifications. 4-Port FXS or DID Voice/Fax Interface Card (The DID feature is supported starting with

12.3(14)T.)

Feature

Interface Type

Cisco IOS Software Release

Description

FXS

Cisco Part Number

Compliance

12.2.(15)ZJ

800-17016-02

Safety Conformance

Spare

FCC Class B device, CE

UL1950

VIC-4FXS/DID=

Address Signaling Formats

• In-band DTMF

• Out-of-band pulse (10/20 pps)

Signaling Modes Loop start, ground start

© 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.

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

Page 11 of 15

Feature

Ringing Tone

Ringing Voltage

Description

Configurable for different country requirements

Ringing Frequencies

Loop Length

Physical Connector

>40 Vrms at 5 REN at 25 Hz (configurable frequency); 5 REN maximum per port, 8 REN total per VIC-4FXS/DID

20 Hz, 50 Hz

<1500 ft (450 m.) 24 AWG Category 5 twisted pair cable

RJ-11

Number of Connectors/Ports Four

MTBF 2,131,306 hours

VWIC Specifications

Table 12 shows the Cisco VWIC specifications.

Table 12. VWIC Specifications

Cisco Product Number

VWIC-1MFT-T1

VWIC-2MFT-T1

VWIC-2MFT-T1-DI

VWIC-1MFT-E1

VWIC-2MFT-E1

VWIC-2MFT-E1-DI

VWIC2-1MFT-T1/E1

VWIC2-2MFT-T1/E1

CAB-E1-RJ45BNC

CAB-E1-RJ45TWIN

Description

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-T1/E

2-port RJ-48 Multiflex trunk-T1/E1

E1 cable RJ-45 to dual BNC (unbalanced)

E1 cable RJ-45 to Twinax (balanced)

Table 13. T1 Network Interface

Feature

Transmit Bit Rate

Receive Bit Rate

Description

1.544 Mbps ± 50 bps/32 PPM

1.544 Mbps ± 50 bps/32 PPM

AMI, B8ZS Line Code

AMI Ones Density

Framing Format

Output Level (LBO)

Input Level

Enforced for N x 56 Kbps channels

D4 (SF) and ESF

0, -7.5, or -15 dB

+1dB0 down to -24 dB0

Data Terminal Equipment (DTE) Interface (WIC mode) Fractional service

DTE Interface (VIC mode) G.704/structured

Data Circuit-Terminating Equipment (DCE) Interface G.704/structured

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Page 12 of 15

Table 14. E1 Network Interface

Feature

Transmit Bit Rate

Receive Bit Rate

Data Rate

Clocking

E1 National Bits

Encoding

DTE Interface (WIC mode)

DTE Interface (VIC mode)

DCE Interface

Description

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

Homologation

The following Cisco VICs are approved for the countries listed below (Table 15). The approvals are for off-premise and on-premise connections, unless stated otherwise.

For the latest country approval status of these cards, please refer to this web page:

http://tools.cisco.com/cse/prdapp/jsp/externalsearch.do?action=externalsearch&page=EXTERNAL_SEARCH

For the approval status of Cisco VWIC cards, please see the data sheet for “Cisco One and Two Port T1/E1 Multiflex Voice/WAN Interface Cards.”

Table 15. Cisco Voice Interface Card Approval by Country

VIC2-2FXO VIC2-4FXO

VIC2-2FXS

(on Premise Only)

United States

• Canada

United States

• Canada

United States

• Canada

• CE countries* • CE countries* • CE countries*

• Australia

• Japan

Australia

Japan

Australia

Japan

Hungary

Poland

• Croatia

Singapore

Hungary

Poland

Croatia

Singapore

• Hungary

• New Zealand

VIC-4FXS/DID

(on Premise Only)

United States

• Canada

• CE countries*

• Australia

• Japan

VIC2-2E/M

(on Premise Only)

United States

• Canada

• CE countries*

• Australia

• Japan

• Hungary

• Singapore

VIC-2DID VIC2-2BRI -NT/TE

United States United States

• Canada

• CE countries*

• Australia

• Taiwan

• Hong Kong

• Brazil

Slovakia

• Canada

• CE countries*

• Japan

• Hungary

• Poland

* European Community countries: Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal,

Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom.

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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.

European Headquarters

Cisco Systems International BV

Americas Headquarters

Cisco Systems, Inc.

Asia Pacific 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

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

170 West Tasman Drive

San Jose, CA 95134-1706

USA www.cisco.com

Tel: 408 526-7660

Fax: 408 527-0883

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 Website 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  2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CCSP, CCVP, the Cisco Square Bridge logo, Follow Me Browsing, 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 Access Registrar, Aironet, ASIST, BPX, Catalyst, CCDA, CCDP,

CCIE, CCIP, CCNA, CCNP, Cisco, the Cisco Certified Internetwork Expert logo, Cisco IOS, Cisco Press, Cisco Systems, Cisco Systems Capital, the Cisco Systems logo, Cisco Unity,

Empowering the Internet Generation, Enterprise/Solver, EtherChannel, EtherFast, EtherSwitch, Fast Step, FormShare, GigaDrive, GigaStack, HomeLink, Internet Quotient, IOS, IP/TV, iQ

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

Routing, Pre-Routing, ProConnect, RateMUX, ScriptShare, SlideCast, SMARTnet, StrataView Plus, TeleRouter, The Fastest Way to Increase Your Internet Quotient, and TransPath are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and certain other countries.

Printed in the USA

Page 14 of 15

© 2005 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.

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

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