baka nga defective unit. better get another one.
usually kasi sa amin, hissing sound is caused by bad signal lang, tipong di na abot ng mga channels.
meron din kami dsl with filter. wala naman effect sa landline or cordless.
uniden ang gamit namin. ang pangit, yung rubber button eh, hirap na pindutin. kahit ibaon mo ng kuko eh di padin mapipindot ang keys. hirap gamitin.
Boybi got mine abroad but there should be available ones here. There are several DECT phone manufacturers like Ericsson and Panasonic (and others) pero Siemens pa lang nasubukan ko so far and very happy with it.
You can try AVESCO or scout around Raon / Parksquare.
eto product page nya; Siemens A120
do note that this is the cheapest model, marami pang mas maganda sa kanya.
kaya hinde mo na gumagana yung keypad kasi magumi na ang loob nito, try mo buksan then makikita mo na meron parang oil substance in between the keypads and the circuit board punasan mo lang ng cotton buds with alcohol yung board then pwede naman hugasan yung keypads. aayos yan, kasi ilan bese ko ng ginawa dito sa cordless namin.
[quote=Horsepower;945291]IF you really can't solve the hissing, switch to digital wireless phones like Siemens DECT models. Look for the ones Made in Germany. Siemens Gigaset A120, it's the cheapest. 300 meter range. Kahit sobrang layo mo sa base, you won't hear a slight hiss. It's even better than corded sa clarity. Corded kasi is subject to corrosion of wires which also contributes to the noise.
quote]
yup ganito din ang gamit sa HQ namin (abroad) may mga parang routers na nakapalibot para siguro sa signal coverage. Siemens din yung isang cordless namin kaso hinde pa gigaset (mahal kasi eh) dito niyo ba gamit yan sa pinas? if yes i might consider to buy this kung maganda ang performance at walang hissing sound.![]()
Yup, sa Philippines ko gamit. Kakabitan ko rin ng VoIP router para dual line yung phone.
got a vtech DECT as sm applicance. 1.4k only. got lcd, cli, AAA batts, ringtones, keylock, etc...
1. Check your DSL filters. Make sure they work. Make sure the phone is connected to a filter.
2. Do you have wireless? If you have wireless, make sure your telephones are in a different frequency. I believe in the Philippines only 900Mhz and 1.8Ghz are allowed. I could be wrong, the NTC may have approved the 5.8GHz. But last time I bought one it was the lower frequency.
Bro., cellphones in the Philippines are using near- 900MHz(outside MM, I think) and 1800MHz (1.8GHz) bands for communications. So, these cordless phones with such operating frequencies should be discouraged to avoid unnecessary interference.
Problem is, these are the standard frequencies for cordless phones in the US, as they're using near-1900MHz (1.9GHz) operating frequency for their cellphones.... Hence most of our cellphones are triband...
Talk about worldwide or global standards for communications!
4303:gun:
[quote=the_wildthing;947136]1. Check your DSL filters. Make sure they work. Make sure the phone is connected to a filter.
yup, nakakabit ngayon ang filters that comes with the box when the PLDT installed my DSL pero hinde ko makita ang difference nito. with and w/o filters ganun din ang hissing sound.
i tried to revive our old GE cordless phone, binuksan ko then nilinis ko ulet ang loob and guess what, gumana ulit at very minimal ang hissing sound. sana tumagal muna ito at wala pang panbili ng bago.![]()
I checked the Panasonic.com.ph site: the older phones use 46-49MHz, the newer ones use 1.88 to 1.9GHz. Wala pa ring 5.8GHz.
Mukhang na-solve mo na rin naman ang problema sa paglinis.