Description
- From 2 to 24 ports supported, mixing FXO and FXS interfaces, as required. *Support for the Asterisk?, Yate?, FreeSwitch?, CallWeaver?, OPAL? PBX/IVR projects, as well as other Open Source and proprietary PBX/Switch/IVR/VoIP gateway applications. *Single synchronous PCI interface for all 24 FXO/FXS ports. *Four RJ11 ports per Remora? card. Dimensions: 2U Form factor: 120 mm x 55 mm for use in restricted chassis. *Short 2U compatible mounting clips available for installation in 2U rack-mount servers. *32 bit bus master DMA data exchanges across PCI interface at 132Mbytes/sec for minimum host processor intervention. *Autosense compatibility with 5 V and 3.3 V PCI busses. Fully PCI 2.2 compliant, compatible with all commercially available motherboards, proper sharing of PCI interrupts. *Intelligent hardware: Downloadable Field Programmable Gate Array programming with multiple operating modes. Field upgradeable so that new features can be added when they become available. *Power: 800mA peak, operational 300 mA max at +3.3 V or 5 V. *Temperature range: 0 – 50C. The A200 and Remora? cards incorporate four, 4-pin RJ11 narrow jacks, such as used in telephone handsets. Each Sangoma A200 Card is shipped with four 2m cables terminating in a narrow RJ11/4 plug at one end and a telephone-standard RJ11/6 plug at the other.
Sangoma’s A200 4 port FXO/FXS card delivers superior audio quality and is expandable to 24 ports in a 2U form factor. *As you need them, additional REMORA? cards can be added to the base four-port A200 card. A single PCI or PCI Express slot hosts connection for up to 24 ports and ensures common synchronous clocking for all channels. *The A200 AFT architecture is shared with Sangoma’s A101, A102, A104 and A108 cards ensuring common 3.3 V or 5 V, high performance and universal PCI or PCI Express compatibility. Like all the Sangoma AFT Series, the A200 and RemoraTM system has field upgradeable firmware to take advantage of enhancements as they become available. Sangoma cards guarantee error-free faxing and click-free audio on analog–digital links.