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Use your home telephones and voicemail system with the Grandstream HandyTone 502

The Grandstream HandyTone-502 is a full feature voice and FAX-over IP device that offers a high-level of integration including dual 10M/100Mbps network ports with integrated router, NAT, DHCP server, dual port FXS telephone gateway, market-leading sound quality, rich functionalities, and a compact and lightweight design. We ship the device to you fully configured and ready to plug in your home phones. Shipped configured for only $75.00

 

 

 

Grandstream HandyTone 502 Specifications

Technical Specification

  • Telephone Interfaces - 2 FXS ports, 2 SIP accounts
  • Network Interface - Two RJ-45 10M/10Mbps ports
  • LED Indicators - Power, WAN, LAN, PHONE1 and PHONE2
  • Reset Button - Factory Reset button
  • Voice over Packet Capabilities - Voice Activity Detection (VAD) with CNG(Comfort Noise Generation) and PLC(Packet Loss Concealment), Dynamic Jitter Buffer, Modem detection & auto-switch to G.711, Packetized Voice Protocol Unit(supports RTP/RTCP and AAL2 protocol), G.168 compliant Echo Cancellation, LEC(Line Echo Cancellation) with NLP, Asymmetric RTP stream.
  • Voice Compression - G.711 + Annex | (PLC), Annex || (VAD/CNG format) encoder and decoder, G.723.1A, G.726(ADPCM), G.729A/B/E, iLBC, G.726 provides proprietary VAD, CNG, and signal power estimation, Voice Play Out unit(recording, fixed and adaptive jitter buffer, clock synchronization), AGC(Automatic Gain Control), Status output, Decoder controlling via voice packet header.
  • DHCP Client/Server - Yes, NAT Router or Switched Mode
  • Telnet Server - Yes
  • Fax over IP - T.38 compliant Group 3 Fax Relay up to 14.4Kbps and auto-switch to G.711 for Fax Pass-through (pending). Fax Datapump V.17, V.19, V.27ter, V.29 for T.38 fax relay.
  • QoS - Diffserv, TOS, 802.1 P/Q VLAN tagging
  • IP Transport - RTP/RTCP
  • DTMF Method - Flexible DTMF transmission method, user interface of In-audio, RFC2833, and/or SIP Info.
  • IP Signalling - SIP (RFC3261)
  • Provisioning - TFTP, HTTP, HTTPS (pending)
  • Control - TLS/SIPS, SIP over TCP/TLS.
  • Management - Syslog support, HTTPS and telnet (pending), remote management using Web browser, Support Layer 2 (802.1G, VLAN, 802.1p) and Layer 3 QoS (ToS, DiffSery, MPLS), Auto/manual provisioning system.
  • Dial Plan - Yes
    * UPnP - Yes
  • Power - Output: 12V DC; Input: 100-240V AC 50-60Hz
  • Environment - Operational: 32F-104F or 0C-40C; Humidity: 10-90% (non-condensing)
  • Dimensions (H x W x D) - 115mm (L) x 75mm (W) x 27mm (H)
  • Short and long haul - REN3: Up to 150 ft on 24 AWG line
  • Call Handling Features - Caller ID display or block, Call waiting Caller ID, Call waiting/flash, Call transfer, Hold, Forward, Mute, 3-way conferencing, Message waiting, Do-Not-Disturb (DND), Call-return service.
  • Caller ID - Bellcore Type 1 & 2, ETSI, BT, NTT, and DTMF-based CID.
  • Polarity Reversal / Wink - Yes
  • EMC - EN55022/EN55024 and FCC part15 Class B
  • Safety - UL 

Hardware Specifications

  • LAN Interface - 2xRJ45 10M/100Mbps (integrated router)
  • LED - 5 LEDs (GREEN)
  • Universal Switching Power Adaptor - Input: 100-240V AC, 50/60Hz, 0.5A Max; Output: 12V DC, 1.25A; UL: certified
  • Dimension - 115mm (L) x 75mm (W) x 27mm (H)
  • Weight - 94 g. (0.21lbs)
  • Temperature - 32~104F / 0~40C
  • Humidity - 10%-90% (non-condensing)
  • Compliance - FCC, CE

Glossary

ADSL - Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line. Modems attached to twisted pair copper wiring that transmit from 1.5Mbps to 9Mbps downstream (to the subscriber) and from 16kbps to 800kbps upstream, depending on line distance.

ARP - Address Resolution Protocol is a protocol used by the IP (Internet Protocol), IPv4, to map IP network addresses to the hardware addresses used by a data link protocol. The protocol operates below the network layer as a part of the interface between the OSI network and OSI link layer. It is used when IPv4 is used over Ethernet.

ATA - Analogue Telephone Adapter. Enables analogue telephone to be used in data network for VoIP.

CODEC - Abbreviation for Coder-Decoder. It is an analog-to-digital (A/D) and digital-to-analog (D/A) converter for translating the signals from the outside world to digital, and back again.

DATAGRAM - A data packet carrying its own address informaton so it can be independently routed from its source to the destination computer.

DNS - Short for Domain Name Service, an Internet service that translates domain names into IP addresses.

DSP - Digital Signal Processor. A specialized CPU used for digital signal processing. All Grandstream products have DSP chips inside.

DTMF - Dual Tone Multi Frequency. The standard tone-pairs used on telephone terminals for dialing using in-band signalling. The standards define 16 tone-pairs (0-9, #, * and A-F) although most terminals support only 12 of them (0-9, * and #).

FXO - Foreign eXchange Office. An FXO device can be an analog phone, answering machine, fax, or anything that handles a call from the telephone company

An FXS interface will accept calls from FXS or PSTN interfaces. All countries and regions have their own standards.

FXS is complimentary to FXS (and the PSTN).

FXS - Foreign eXchange Station. An FXS uses additional hardware to generate the ring signal to the FXS extension (usually an analog phone).

An FXS device will allow any FXS device to operate as if it were connected to the phone company. This makes your OBX the POTS+PSTN for the phone.

The FXS interface connects to FXS devices (by an FXS interface, of course).

DHCP - The Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol is an Internet protocol for automating the configuration of computers that use TCP/IP. DHCP can be used to automatically assign IP addresses, deliver TCP/IP stack configuration parameters such as the subnet mask and default router, and to provide other configuration information such as the addresses for printer, time and news servers.

ECHO CANCELLATION - Echo Cancellation is used in telephony to describe the process of removing echo from a voice communication in order to improve voice quality of a telephone call. In addition to improving quality, this process improves bandwidth savings achieved through silence suppression by preventing echo from travelling across a network. There are two types of echo of relevance in telephony - acoustic echo and hybrid echo. Speech compression techniques and digital processing delay often contribute to echo generation in telephone networks.

H.323 - A suite of standards for multimedia conferences on traditional packet-switched networks.

HTTP - Hyper Text Transfer Protocol. The World Wide Web protocol that performs the request and retrieve functions of a server.

IP - Internet Protocol. A packet-based protocol for delivering data across networks.

IP-PBX - IP-based Private Branch Exchange.

IP Telephony (Internet Protocol Telephony, also known as Voice over IP telephony). A general term for the technologies that use the Internet Protocol's packet-switched connections to exchange voice, fax, and other forms of information that have traditionally been carried over the dedicated circuit-switched connections of the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN). The basic steps involved in originating an IP Telephony call are conversion of the analog voice signal to digital format and compression/translation of the signal into Internet Protocol (IP) packets for transmission over the Internet or other packet-switched networks; the process is reversed at the receiving end. The terms IP Telephony and Internet Telephony are often used to mean the same; however, they are not 100 per cent interchangeable, since Internet is only a subcase of packet-switched networks. For users who have free or fixed-price Internet access, IP Telephony software essentially provides free telephone calls anywhere in the world. However, the challenge of IP Telephony is maintaining the quality of service expected by subscribers. Session border controllers resolve this issue by providing quality assurance comparable to legacy telephone systems.

IVR - IVR is a software application that accepts a combination of voice telephone input and touch-tone keypad selection and provides appropriate responses in the form of voice, fax, callback, e-mail and perhaps other media.

NAT - Network Address Translation.

PPPoE - Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet is a network protocol for encapsulating PPP frames in Ethernet frames. It is used mainly with cable modem and DSL services.

PSTN - Public Switched Telephone Network. The phone service we use for every ordinary phone call, or called POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service), or circuit switched network.

RTCP - Real-time Transport Control Protocol. With the RTP it is delivery and packaging of multimedia data, but does not transport any data itself. It is used periodically to transmit control packets to participants in a streaming multimedia session. The primary function of RTCP is to provide feedback on the quality of service being provided by RTP.

RTP - Real-time Transport Protocol defines a standardized packet format for delivering audio and video over the Internet.

SDP - Session Description Protocol is a format for describing streaming media initialization parameters.

SIP - Session Initiation Protocol. SIP is a text-based protocol suitable for integrated voice-data applications. SIP is designed for voice transmission and uses fewer resources while it is considerably less complex than H.323. The Grandstream products are SIP-based.

STUN - Simple Traversal of UDP over NAT is a network protocol allowing clients behind NAT to find out its public address, the type of NAT it is behind and the internet side port associated by the NAT with a particular local port. This information is used to set up UDP communication between two hosts that are both behind NAT routers. It works with non-symmetric NAT routers.

TCP - Transmission Control Protocol is one of the core protocols of the Internet protocol suite. Using TCP, applications on networked hosts can create connections to one another, over which they can exchange data or packets. The protocol guarantees reliable and in-order delivery of sender to receiver data.

TFTP - Trivial File Transfer Protocol, is a very simple file transfer protocol, with the functionality of a very basic form of FTP. It uses UDP (port 69) as its transport protocol.

UDP - User Datagram Protocol is one of the core protocols of the Internet protocol suite. Using UDP, programs on networked computers can send short messages known as datagrams to one another. UDP does not provide the reliability and ordering guarantees that TCP does; datagrams may arrive out of order or go missing without notice. UDP is faster and more efficient for many lightweight purposes.

VLAN - A Virtual LAN, is a logically-independent network. Several VLANs can co-exist on a single physical switch.

VoIP - Voice over the Internet Protocol. VoIP encomprasses many protocols. All the protocols do some form of signalling of call capabilities and transport of voice data from one point to another.

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