Path: utzoo!attcan!telly!robohack!woods From: woods@robohack.UUCP (Greg A. Woods) Newsgroups: comp.unix.i386 Subject: Re: sharing modem and fax on 1 line Message-ID: <1990Feb24.054554.29519@robohack.UUCP> Date: 24 Feb 90 05:45:54 GMT References: <25e307cd-3b6comp.unix.i386@ddsw1.MCS.COM> <1990Feb22.174344.19266@druid.uucp> Organization: R. H. Lathwell Associates: Elegant Communications, Inc. Lines: 36 In article <1990Feb22.174344.19266@druid.uucp> darcy@druid.UUCP (D'Arcy J.M. Cain) writes: > In article <25e307cd-3b6comp.unix.i386@ddsw1.MCS.COM> akcs.richie@ddsw1.MCS.COM (Richard Schwarzbach) writes: > >sharing of a single phone line between a FAX and a MODEM. > > There is actually a device which will handle this transparently to the > user. When the phone rings, it puts the line off hook but continues > to send the ring tone so that it seems like the phone is still ringing. > It then tries to do FAX handshaking. If successful it connects to the > FAX line otherwise it connects to the modem line (or voice I suppose) > and the fake ringing stops. I considered building one, but it's not as simple as it sounds. Your intermediate device must replace a good part of either your FAX or modem, since it is very difficult to pass off a call once you have already done the handshaking necessary for either connection. Once you have negotiated the call, you are stuck. It may be possible to try detecting the originate tone of either device while generating ring to both devices. Upon recognizing the tone, check that the desired device has gone off hook, and then connect the call to it. This was the approach I was working on anyway. Our FAX (Toshiba, I think) tries to connect, then rings its handset if the connect fails. Unfortunately it does not ring the downstream phone line too, though I suspect it would be too late anyway. My simplest solution was to put a timer switch on the FAX, and have it simply shut off after business hours. The FAX electronics are smart enough to make it transparent to the downstream phone when the power is off. -- Greg A. Woods woods@{robohack,gate,eci386,tmsoft,ontmoh}.UUCP +1 416 443-1734 [h] +1 416 595-5425 [w] VE3-TCP Toronto, Ontario; CANADA