Troubleshooting 101
Our warranty on telephone repair does not
cover bad cords, problems with wiring, system programming, bad handsets
or anything other than the main part of the telephone.
To avoid testing and handling fees:
Please make sure proper troubleshooting is done. Also, make sure complete and
accurate problem descriptions are sent in with any warranty item.
Warning!
Over 80% of items returned to us for warranty work do not have a problem
and were not tested properly by the user. Sadly, even after extensive
conversations with our technicians over phone and email about
troubleshooting, we still get back telephones for warranty work with bad
handsets and bad cords!!

Step 1
After first noticing any problem, spend some time
testing the phone before giving up and assuming anything. Try unplugging, then plugging
it back in a few times. If the problem is intermittent, try to get a
good understanding about what the cause is. If the problem is constant,
try to find out if it is intermittent and just acting up at that moment.
Try knocking the phone around a little.
Tap all sides as if you are knocking lightly on a door. Pull and push on
the curly handset cord on both ends as well as the line cord where it
plugs into the bottom. Try leaving the phone unplugged for a few minutes
and then try it again.
Step 2
With any problem you must try it in at least 2-3 locations
with 2-3 completely different handsets, handset cords and line cords.
Unplug everything and take only the main part of the telephone to
another location where you have the same type of telephone (try to swap
the phone with another of the same model number!). Unplug the
good phone and use all the cords and handsets on the problem phone.
Again, test the phone there for a few minutes. Repeat step 1 at
this new location. Try the good phone in the previous location using the
handset, handset cord and line cord from the problem unit. If you can,
leave the two phones in their new locations for an extended period.
Next:
If the problem phone still does not work in the new locations with
different cords and the good phone is working with the cords and handset
from the problem unit, then you should have just eliminated 90% of the
possible outside sources for the problem.
You must provide a clear and accurate
problem description no matter
how obvious the problem may be. We do not miss obvious problems on the
test bench, your phone was most likely working when we had it.
Here is the bad news: There are
phone systems that have identical looking phones that require different
types of handsets. It's very rare but we have seen phones that work
perfectly on one control unit, and have major problems on another
identical control unit using the same wiring! We have seen phones
that only showed problems on even or odd ports of a control unit or on
one station card in a multi-carded system. We have seen phones that did
not like a certain type of line cord and would work fine with other
brands. (Most of these problems are rare and caused by the
phone and the control unit both being on opposite sides of their
tolerance range)
If you plug in a phone and after 5 second
you notice some problem then after another 5 seconds, unplug it and send
it back for warranty work then you will be wasting a lot of your time, a
lot of our time, and spending too much money on shipping, handling and
testing fees.