11-10-2020 10:00 PM - last edited on 11-10-2020 10:06 PM by RogersTony
This is a long shot, but can someone take a look at my Bell phone wiring and tell me how I can activate my jacks for Rogers Ignite Home Phone? The white box was installed when I had Bell Fibe internet and I believe it is a "dry loop".
Any help is greatly appreciated!
*** Edited Labels ***
11-10-2020 11:54 PM - edited 11-11-2020 12:32 AM
@mike881881881 Welcome to the Community!
That white box takes the incoming Bell line (which connects to "Line Tip/Ring") and splits it three ways. One of those connections, "Modem T R", will go to a dedicated jack for your VDSL modem. The other lines, labelled "Phone T R" are filtered and are used for connecting to telephones. In a normal installation, one of those Phone connections will typically be wired to a junction point that feeds the wall jacks to your home. Sometimes, the second Phone connection will be wired to a nearby jack.
I can't really see where either of those Phone connections are wired to. It is also not clear where the pair for the incoming Bell service originates. I'm also not sure what that grey cable (with the green/red, black/yellow pairs) is for or why it is wired that way.
Wiring the Ignite Home Phone jacks could either be really easy or could be a bit complicated depending on where the Rogers Ignite modem/gateway is located and also whether you want to use all of the jacks that the VDSL filter/splitter connects to.
You will want to completely disconnect the incoming Bell line from your internal wiring, even if the service is no longer active.
You will also want to (somehow) connect the "TEL 1" port on your Ignite XB6 gateway to the junction point that feeds your wall jacks. Just how you do that will depend on where your Ignite gateway is located, whether it is in the basement (in this location) or located upstairs.
11-11-2020 10:56 AM
11-11-2020 12:44 PM
@mike881881881 Now that you no longer have a service with Bell, you absolutely MUST disconnect the incoming Bell line from the "Line T R" connector before connecting Rogers Home Phone to your in-home telephone wiring.
(Those blue thingies on the Comtest box are used to "punch" the wires down onto an internal connector. You can flip them up (gently!) then disconnect the wire pair.)
If you install the Ignite gateway in the location pictured, hookup of your phone service will be EASY. The Comtest box also has RJ11 jacks for the Phone, Line and Modem connections. After you disconnect the Bell service from "Line T R", use a standard telephone cable to connect "TEL 1" on the Ignite gateway to the "Line" jack on the Comtest box, and voilà. You should now have dial tone on all of your phone jacks.
09-27-2021 12:12 PM
How does it complicate things if I have an alarm system hooked into my house wire phone lines? If I plug a line from the Rogers Ignite box phone jack into my current Rogers Cable Home phone demarcation point jack will all of my wired phones work as well as the alarm system?
09-27-2021 12:24 PM
@Raywray wrote:
How does it complicate things if I have an alarm system hooked into my house wire phone lines? If I plug a line from the Rogers Ignite box phone jack into my current Rogers Cable Home phone demarcation point jack will all of my wired phones work as well as the alarm system?
The "complication" with a home alarm system is that the telephone service needs to connected to the alarm in such a way that the alarm system can seize the phone line when an alarm triggers.
The Ignite Home Phone service operates in the same manner as the legacy Rogers Home Phone service, so the easiest way to make the switch is to unplug the connection from your old Home Phone modem and plug it into the "TEL 1" jack on the Ignite gateway. However, the downside with having an all-in-one modem/gateway is that while the basement is the easiest place to connect the phone service, the basement is also often the worst place to install a device that also provides your Wi-Fi connectivity.
09-27-2021 01:43 PM
09-27-2021 06:17 PM
Thanks for this. I would likely place the Ignite modem on the middle floor and it would not be a problem to run a phone line from this modem to the electrical panel where my current Rogers Cable Home phone equipment is located. My basement has a dropped ceiling so I can run lines easily.
09-27-2021 08:37 PM
@Raywray wrote:
Thanks for this. I would likely place the Ignite modem on the middle floor and it would not be a problem to run a phone line from this modem to the electrical panel where my current Rogers Cable Home phone equipment is located. My basement has a dropped ceiling so I can run lines easily.
FYI, here's one way that you could do this if your home does not have structured wiring: https://communityforums.rogers.com/t5/Home-Phone/Connecting-home-phone-to-Ignite-Router/m-p/482747/h...
07-10-2024 05:00 PM