Specifications
Administrator Procedures
INTER-TEL
®
CS-5200/5400 ADMINISTRATOR GUIDE, ISSUE 1.0 – April 2005
Clearing Alarms
Page 37
To respond to a major alarm from any alarm display endpoint, take the following action:
Clearing Alarms
An Administrator can clear a network-wide alarm on the local node only or on every node in
the network. To clear an alarm, you can use either the Administrator feature codes or the menu
buttons on your endpoint.
SYS ALARM #20
CHECK PRINTER
The printer is not functioning properly.
Check that the cable and the power cord are connected, and that it has paper and toner.
SYS ALARM #21
V-MAIL 80% FULL
The external voice mail disk space is 80% of full. If it reaches 100%, Voice Mail cannot
accept any messages until disk space is made available.
Contact service personnel.
SYS ALARM #22
V-MAIL 100% FULL
100% of the external voice mail disk space is in use. Voice mail cannot accept any mes-
sages until disk space is made available.
Contact service personnel.
SYS ALARM #23
SMDR 80% FULL
The SMDR disk space on the external voice processing system is 80% of full. If it reaches
100% before the SMDR information is cleared, no further SMDR recording will be possible.
Contact service personnel.
SYS ALARM #24
SMDR 100% FULL
100% of the SMDR disk space on the external voice processing system is in use. No fur-
ther SMDR recording is possible.
Contact service personnel.
SYS ALARM #32
INSUF BAND
The IP Network does not have enough bandwidth to support the IP call that is currently
connected to the extension. If this alarm is generated frequently, it could indicate a network
problem that requires the attention of your network administrator.
Notify your network administrator. The affected device is not behind a firewall or NAT.
Table 10: Alarm Texts, Descriptions, and Actions (Continued)
ALARM TEXT DESCRIPTION AND ACTION REQUIRED (CONTINUED)
ALARM TEXT DESCRIPTION AND ACTION REQUIRED
#100–199
#200–224
SYS ALARM #XXX
CALL TECHNICIAN
These alarms indicate that an equipment failure has occurred that
requires the attention of service personnel.
Contact service personnel.
Be prepared to provide all alarm information, as well as what was
taking place when the alarm occurred.