Finally Lift Handset & dial ***12#4567890*3 (this is the 'Force Home' procedure)
Replace handset
The red LED on the V4 should now flash for at least 60 seconds. If it stops after 20 seconds or so, the Force Home has failed.
Time has moved on (much quicker than it used to - or so it seems at my age) and my previous advice on residential telephony has been or is now gradually being overtaken by changes in the retail market. Hence, I have now deleted links to my previous 'pearls of wisdom'. I sincerely hope they helped save some of you money.
I shall give it a go! Are all of those to be followed or might 1 work on its own? Cheers
One might work - but, if so, I have no idea which.
In any case, doing the first 4 will take a minute at most and the last one is the Force Home - so will take 1½ minutes or so (with the wait).
Time has moved on (much quicker than it used to - or so it seems at my age) and my previous advice on residential telephony has been or is now gradually being overtaken by changes in the retail market. Hence, I have now deleted links to my previous 'pearls of wisdom'. I sincerely hope they helped save some of you money.
I have my Orchid Dialler Box set using the Heinz programme via emails from Orchid so why am I still being charged by Virgin (who are my CPS and offer free evening and weekend calls) for some pphone calls?
I have my Orchid Dialler Box set using the Heinz programme via emails from Orchid so why am I still being charged by Virgin (who are my CPS and offer free evening and weekend calls) for some pphone calls?
Normally, this sort of problem is caused by the dialler having lost its day/time settings allowing peak calls to go out via the CPS instead of 18185.
What type of calls?
What day(s)?
What time of day?
Time has moved on (much quicker than it used to - or so it seems at my age) and my previous advice on residential telephony has been or is now gradually being overtaken by changes in the retail market. Hence, I have now deleted links to my previous 'pearls of wisdom'. I sincerely hope they helped save some of you money.
That appears to show the problem IS your Orchid's clock.
You could manually correct the clock or force the dialler home to pick up your program again (and the clock at the same time) but I'd suggest doing a complete reset (see post #862 above).
Time has moved on (much quicker than it used to - or so it seems at my age) and my previous advice on residential telephony has been or is now gradually being overtaken by changes in the retail market. Hence, I have now deleted links to my previous 'pearls of wisdom'. I sincerely hope they helped save some of you money.
That appears to show the problem IS your Orchid's clock.
You could manually correct the clock or force the dialler home to pick up your program again (and the clock at the same time) but I'd suggest doing a complete reset (see post #862 above).
It is a pity there is no way to get the dialler to dial home say once a month automatically to pick up the latest settings (and time of course) as you never know until it is too late if the time is wrong in the unit.
It is a pity there is no way to get the dialler to dial home say once a month automatically to pick up the latest settings (and time of course) as you never know until it is too late if the time is wrong in the unit.
I assume there is no way to do this?
No, there isn't unfortunately - and neither is there (my preferred solution) a version with a built-in 60kHz receiver to pick up the time from the atomic clock transmitter in Cumbria.
Mine is programmed to use 18185 for daytime UK 01/02 calls so the absence of the tariff announcement would alert me when making an outgoing call.
However, I use the Ranger DECT version (which relies on the mains, not the line power, to maintain its clock) and live in a village where power cuts are not uncommon. By accident, I stumbled upon a sort of 'automatic' warning system to alert me its clock needed resetting:
When I first installed the Ranger, I didn't like the base station's ringer - so I turned it OFF (i.e. I use only the handsets' ringers). I then found that, when there is a power cut, the base station's ringer gets switched ON again - warning me to reset the clock (and the VCR, cooker clock, answering machine clock etc.)
Time has moved on (much quicker than it used to - or so it seems at my age) and my previous advice on residential telephony has been or is now gradually being overtaken by changes in the retail market. Hence, I have now deleted links to my previous 'pearls of wisdom'. I sincerely hope they helped save some of you money.
Replies
There are five procedures:
Lift Handset & dial
**# 0000 * 01536272200 * 1
Replace handset
Lift Handset & dial
**# 0000 * 1 * 8
Replace handset
Lift Handset & dial
**# 0000 * 0 * *
Replace handset
Lift Handset & dial
**# 0000 * 0 * 7
Replace handset
Finally Lift Handset & dial ***12#4567890*3 (this is the 'Force Home' procedure)
Replace handset
The red LED on the V4 should now flash for at least 60 seconds. If it stops after 20 seconds or so, the Force Home has failed.
In any case, doing the first 4 will take a minute at most and the last one is the Force Home - so will take 1½ minutes or so (with the wait).
What type of calls?
What day(s)?
What time of day?
I will check my Virgin ebill and let you know.
Thanks. :A
These were during the billing period 22nd June to 21st July
28/06/2007
15:43
016********
0:00:20
£0.07
02/07/2007 9:40
016********
0:00:38
£0.08
Total itemised calls for line: 016******** - 15p
You could manually correct the clock or force the dialler home to pick up your program again (and the clock at the same time) but I'd suggest doing a complete reset (see post #862 above).
It is a pity there is no way to get the dialler to dial home say once a month automatically to pick up the latest settings (and time of course) as you never know until it is too late if the time is wrong in the unit.
I assume there is no way to do this?
Mine is programmed to use 18185 for daytime UK 01/02 calls so the absence of the tariff announcement would alert me when making an outgoing call.
However, I use the Ranger DECT version (which relies on the mains, not the line power, to maintain its clock) and live in a village where power cuts are not uncommon. By accident, I stumbled upon a sort of 'automatic' warning system to alert me its clock needed resetting:
When I first installed the Ranger, I didn't like the base station's ringer - so I turned it OFF (i.e. I use only the handsets' ringers). I then found that, when there is a power cut, the base station's ringer gets switched ON again - warning me to reset the clock (and the VCR, cooker clock, answering machine clock etc.)