02-07-2020 08:02 PM - last edited on 02-07-2020 09:36 PM by RogersZia
We got Ignite bundle installed last month. Rogers technician came home to setup Ignite internet router, Ignite TV box and phone. Our phone dmark point is in the basement near the electrical panel and that is where previous Rogers home phone box was mounted. Now when ignite bundle was installed, Rogers technician ripped apart everything in the basement and connected phone in our family room in the ignite modem. Even I did not realized that this guy has ripped apart everything in the basement and messed my home alarm system which uses phone line.
Today, I got call from alarm company that my home alarm system failed self test with them. Then I realized that the guy messed up alarm system because there is no phone line connection down stairs anymore.
So now, how can I fix this issue. Can I plug the phone jack from family room and somehow patch it in dmark point to make alarm system line live or call Rogers?
I will appreciate your advice.
***Edited Labels***
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02-10-2020 06:40 PM
Hello all
Here is update on my issue. I called Rogers yesterday and explained the issue and offered them solution as well to move my ignite modem which (I am using as a bridge only because I have Orbi's netwrok) to basement so that they can patch phone lines back again and I patched Ethernet cable to second floor where my Orbi is setup. Today, Rogers technicians came and they moved my ignite modem in the basement and reconnected alarm system back and all good now. I called alarm company to test the line. Everything working fine now. Thanks all for your invaluable feedback.
02-07-2020 09:28 PM - edited 02-07-2020 10:44 PM
@rookie8155 wrote:
We got Ignite bundle installed last month. Rogers technician came home to setup Ignite internet router, Ignite TV box and phone. Our phone dmark point is in the basement near the electrical panel and that is where previous Rogers home phone box was mounted. Now when ignite bundle was installed, Rogers technician ripped apart everything in the basement and connected phone in our family room in the ignite modem. Even I did not realized that this guy has ripped apart everything in the basement and messed my home alarm system which uses phone line.
Today, I got call from alarm company that my home alarm system failed self test with them. Then I realized that the guy messed up alarm system because there is no phone line connection down stairs anymore.
So now, how can I fix this issue. Can I plug the phone jack from family room and somehow patch it in dmark point to make alarm system line live or call Rogers?
I will appreciate your advice.
You need to call Rogers and have them send a technician to repair the damage that was done.
Your alarm system does not connect to your in-home wiring like an ordinary telephone. The alarm company likely installed an RJ31X jack, which allows your alarm system to "seize" the telephone line, hang up the call if anyone had been using the phone, and place a call to the alarm company's central station. The alarm will then release the line when its call is complete.
If you had Bell's home phone service, the install tech should have disconnected the incoming Bell line from your in-home telephone wiring. Since you already had a Rogers Home Phone service, the tech should have installed the Ignite XB6 gateway in the basement in place of the original Rogers telephone equipment.
After the wiring for your telephone and alarm system have been repaired, you will need to test that everything is working properly. Call the alarm company and have them put your account into test mode. Trigger the alarm, ideally while somebody is using the telephone and a call is in progress. When the alarm trips, you should see a "check telephone line" indicator on your phone (and/or hear the line go dead) while the alarm system places its call. When the line becomes available again, try using the telephone to call the alarm company immediately. You need to verify with them that they received the signal from your alarm. You also need to do this to confirm that you are able to successfully make calls after the alarm system has seized and released the telephone line.
02-07-2020 10:23 PM
02-08-2020 12:08 AM
One other item. If your termination "block" for the various phone jacks in your home was not "dismantled", then all of the home jacks and perhaps the alarm system wires are still connected to that "block". If you now connect your Home phone modem using a standard telephone cable to a jack in your home, this should "backfeed" the entire system and you should be able to use any wired phone jack in the house, as well as the alarm system. I'm assuming you have a cordless phone set and can plug the base into another jack in the home instead of directly into the home phone modem.
Of course this assumes a properly wired jack system in your home, a functioning termination block for all those wires and the alarm wires.
02-08-2020 12:48 AM - edited 02-08-2020 12:51 AM
@57 If you have an alarm system, the incoming phone service (line from the Telephone port on the XB6) has to be wired into the tip and ring inputs of the RJ31X jack. That's the only way that the alarm system can seize the line.
02-08-2020 01:45 AM - edited 02-08-2020 02:07 AM
I would agree with that. The alarm system has to be the first connected device before the telephone wiring hits the 66 block. That’s either done with the RJ31X jack that @-G- indicated, or, the alarm system it simply wired into the telephone cabling as shown below:
Telephone source device -> Alarm System -> 66 Block -> All of the house phones
In this configuration, the telephone cabling runs thru the alarm system. The alarm system does nothing unless there is some event that triggers it. When that happens, the alarm system seizes the line, or disconnects the current call and dials the alarm centre. It can only do this if its wired into the system so that it has priority over all of the telephones connected to the 66 block, if in fact that priority is needed some day. We’re only talking about two wires, usually a Blue/White and White/Blue pair. That’s a blue wire with white striping, and a white wire with blue striping. Its possible that the wire pair is a blue wire paired with a white cable with blue striping. The remaining pairs of the Cat 3 or Cat 5 cable wouldn’t be used.
In that event that the alarm system triggers, the system looks like this while the alarm system is dialing out, disconnecting the 66 block and the house phones:
Telephone source device <- Alarm System
As @57 indicates, if the tech did nothing but uninstall the Home Phone modem, then you should be left with this:
Alarm System -> 66 Block -> All of the house phones
The tech would have connected the XB6 modem phone port as follows
Alarm System -> 66 Block -> The rest of the house phones
-> XB6 modem located located upstairs.
In that configuration the alarm system should be able to dial out I believe, but, it can’t seize the telephone line as required.
In reference to the RJ31X jack, as indicated by @-G-, here’s a reference worth looking at:
http://wiki.gohts.com/tiki-index.php?page=How+to+Wire+an+RJ31X+Jack
have a look at the second wiring diagram that shows the Telco Line and House Phones. In this case, with that jack installed, the previous Home Phone modem would be wired in as the Telco Line. The House Phone line would run to the 66 block which is then connected to all of the house phones. Key point here is that the telephone line runs thru the alarm system as shown on the left hand side of that diagram, into the alarm system thru the Phone Line, out of the Alarm System via the House Line. Either way, by cutting and patching into the phone cable from the old Home Phone modem to the 66 block, or by using the RJ31X jack, the alarm system is installed with priority over the house phones.
Along comes the XB6 modem which is installed upstairs, creating a problem. Simple way to resolve this is to move one wire pair. Identify the individual wire pair on the 66 block that runs upstairs to the XB6 modem. Disconnect that wire pair from the 66 block and wire that into the previous Telco Line pins on the RJ31X jack, or into the wire pair that connected to the previous Home Phone modem. Done. Remember, we’re only talking about two wires, normally the Blue/White and White/Blue pair.
With that done, keep this in mind. The XB6 modem comes with two RJ-11 jacks for telephone usage. Tech support is supposed to be able to set both ports to the same number, so, in theory, you should be able to use the two phone ports, one port connected to the house telephone system, and one port connected to a telephone / cordless phone base. While that should work, I think it would be problematic for alarm systems where the alarm system has to seize the telephone line when required.
Another way to do this is to look at the house telephone cable that runs between the modem and the 66 block. It should be a Cat 3 or Cat 5 where only one wire pair of four pairs is actually used. Usually that’s the blue/white, white/blue pair. That leaves three other pairs. So, with a little work, you could use the blue/white, white/blue pair as indicated above to wire the XB6 modem into the alarm system, and then use one of the other wire pairs to run back upstairs to the same location. If you happen to have a wallplate that holds keystones for telephone/Ethernet/cable, you can simply wire that selected pair into the white/blue, blue/white pins of a new (additional) keystone and install the keystone into a wallplate with an additional slot for the new keystone. That’s a little work, but, it’s not terribly difficult. The cable run is already there, and if there’s enough slack in the cable, or the other wires are wrapped back along the cable, then you would be able to make use of one of the other wire pairs as a return line back upstairs where its used to connect to a telephone at the modem's location. At the 66 block, you would probably need a short jumper cable to connect to the alarm system or connect one of the other wire pairs to the 66 block. Its not normal to split a cable in this manner, so there probably isn't enough cable length available to both the alarm system and 66 block, hence the need for a short jumper cable. I suspect that is something that a Rogers tech will not be willing to do. You can buy the keystone(s) and wallplate if required and call in an alarm installer or cable installer to do the work, so there would be a cost involved. There are variations of a theme, so to speak depending on how the house telephone cabling is punched down onto the 66 block. If the other wire pairs are already punched down, then its a matter of removing the blue/white, white/blue pair and connecting them to the alarm system, and then cross connecting the chosen wire pair to run back upstairs. At the upstairs electrical box, connect the selected pair to the blue/white, white/blue pins on the keystone. So, it helps to know you're way around the 66 block and what can be done to use more than one wire pair in the Cat 3 or Cat 5 cable to run downstairs and back up again to the modem's location.
02-08-2020 02:11 AM
@Datalink wrote:
The tech would have connected the XB6 modem phone port as follows
Alarm System -> 66 Block -> The rest of the house phones
-> XB6 modem located located upstairs.
In that configuration the alarm system should be able to dial out I believe, but, it can’t seize the telephone line as required.
Actually, this won't work if the wiring was left as-is and with the XB6 telephone port connected to the 66 block. First of all, the alarm system would not be getting dial tone from the 66 block so it would not be able to call out. Furthermore, when it does try to call out, it would be "cutting off" the 66 block when it seizes the line, in which case it definitely would not be getting dial tone.
02-08-2020 02:20 AM - edited 02-08-2020 02:21 AM
Yes, buuut, in theory I would agree, but, who knows if the alarm system is built to actually run in that configuration and will simply use whats available on either side of the alarm telephone connectors. You would have to know the alarm system model number and know how it was built, so, I leave it open to speculation and trial. If it works, yay, if not, no surprise, resort to plan B, or C, etc, etc.
02-08-2020 02:42 AM
All that we really know right now (and all that really matters) is that the alarm system is not able to call out anymore. @rookie8155 needs a knowledgeable tech that can get the installation back into a good working state again.
02-08-2020 11:30 AM
02-10-2020 06:40 PM
Hello all
Here is update on my issue. I called Rogers yesterday and explained the issue and offered them solution as well to move my ignite modem which (I am using as a bridge only because I have Orbi's netwrok) to basement so that they can patch phone lines back again and I patched Ethernet cable to second floor where my Orbi is setup. Today, Rogers technicians came and they moved my ignite modem in the basement and reconnected alarm system back and all good now. I called alarm company to test the line. Everything working fine now. Thanks all for your invaluable feedback.
02-13-2020 08:13 PM
02-14-2020 11:57 AM
Yes, it was great that Rogers fixed the issue. I have a bit complicated setup so I had to guide them as well. My all rooms are patched with CAT 5e which supports gigabit data transfer. All rooms are connected to 8 port switch in the basement with NAS storage connected to it in the basement. Due to alarm system setup in the basement, I was forced to setup Rogers Ignite modem in the basement. I connected family room Orbi router to Ignite mode (running in bridge mode). Then I connected my 8 port switch in family room to Orbi router to connect all devices. Everything seemed up and running and I was very happy until I went to bed to play music from my basement multimedia drives on Sonos speaker that I found out that basement switch did not have any connectivity. Next day, I moved Orbi satellite to other bedroom and connected it wirelessly and then ran ethernet cable out from Orbi to my wall jack to give life to switch in the basement. Now everything working fine. It is bit complicated but it works...
02-14-2020 03:58 PM
@rookie8155 I also have a similar setup to yours in that I have my XB6 in the basement, next to my alarm panel and where all cable/telecom facilities enter my home. My XB6 is is Bridge Mode, I use my own router, the Cat 5e cabling throughout by home also runs to the same location in the basement and connects either to a backbone LAN switch or gets patched in for telephone, and I currently have Wi-Fi mesh hardware (in bridge mode) with nodes on the main and upper floors.
Not sure if this is something that you would be willing to consider but it might be a cleaner setup (for now) to put your XB6 into Gateway mode, keep your main network switch in your basement and uplink it to the XB6 and put your Orbi mesh into bridge mode. Your NAS unit can then go back in the basement and you can protect all of your critical gear with a UPS.
02-14-2020 07:29 PM
@-G- Thanks for your update and advice. Yes, we both have very identical setup. My NAS drives are still in basement. I did not try putting Orbi router and satellite in AP mode yet with fear that it might screw up wifi password etc. on my 40+ wifi devices. It is not fun configuring so many devices again. But I will try to bake SSID identical to Orbi and same subnet to see how it goes. if it works then fine otherwise rollback to original settings.
02-15-2020 12:39 AM
@rookie8155 wrote:
@-G- Thanks for your update and advice. Yes, we both have very identical setup. My NAS drives are still in basement. I did not try putting Orbi router and satellite in AP mode yet with fear that it might screw up wifi password etc. on my 40+ wifi devices. It is not fun configuring so many devices again. But I will try to bake SSID identical to Orbi and same subnet to see how it goes. if it works then fine otherwise rollback to original settings.
Wow, that is A LOT of devices on Wi-Fi. If you decide to make the switch, plan carefully. If your current setup works well, that's also a perfectly good reason to leave things as they are, or at least to not rush into making any changes. I like the Orbi hardware but don't have any experience using them, so I am not familiar with their quirks or know if they will perform any better or worse in bridge/AP mode.
I am nervous about whether the XB6's Wi-Fi connectivity (from your basement) will be solid and stable enough to temporarily replace your Orbi mesh... but it will reveal whether there will be any issues with changing the IPv4 addressing scheme for your internal LAN or if you will run into any other issues with the XB6 in gateway mode.
Another interim step that you can consider taking is to place the XB6 into Gateway mode and leave your Orbi (and everything that is connected to it) as is. You can then connect some devices directly to the XB6 (via Ethernet or to a separate test Wi-Fi SSID) for testing to confirm that the XB6's firewall will not break any of your critical applications. (e.g. some have experienced problems with VPN clients disconnecting, etc.) You'll be in a double-NAT situation for a while but it could be a less disruptive way to do validation testing.
FYI: For those Ignite TV customers that use a Rogers-provided eero mesh, their setup has the XB6 in Gateway mode (with its Wi-Fi disabled) and the eero Hub in bridge mode... so this is a well-tested configuration. I ran in a similar configuration for a while (with a Velop mesh rather than the eero) without any issues.
12-24-2020 12:43 PM - last edited on 12-24-2020 01:50 PM by RogersMoin
Hi, installed my ignite internet/tv/phone but can’t get my phone line to work with the existing home jacks and alarm system. Here is a pic of my alarm connection with the old bell fibe connection.
Note:
Did you forget to upload the pic?
Feel free to create a new message and upload the pic.
-RogersMoin
12-24-2020 02:00 PM - edited 12-24-2020 02:01 PM
@Mark7777 wrote:
Hi, installed my ignite internet/tv/phone but can’t get my phone line to work with the existing home jacks and alarm system. Here is a pic of my alarm connection with the old bell fibe connection.
FYI, you may want to check out this thread: https://communityforums.rogers.com/t5/Home-Phone/Activating-Home-Phone-Jacks/m-p/470069
While that installation did not have a home alarm system, it does have a picture of what had been a Bell Fibe (VDSL) Internet setup with a Comtest VDSL filter/splitter. If that is similar to what you have, you should be able to get your wall jacks activated by following the instructions in this post: https://communityforums.rogers.com/t5/Home-Phone/Activating-Home-Phone-Jacks/m-p/470113/highlight/tr...
11-03-2021 09:58 PM - last edited on 11-03-2021 10:08 PM by RogersRahul
Just received my hardware for the Ignite Package. Rep in store told me I could plug my alarm into Tel2 port, but obviously this isn’t true.
Currently on legacy system and my house is professionally wired with Cat5, coax and phone lines all terminating in the basement. I have a Ubiquiti UAP-AC-PRO access point on the main floor hardwired to the legacy router in the basement and this works well.
The top part of the patch panel is the phone block and a line comes out of #1 for the entire house and plugs into the legacy home phone modem. Another line comes out of #2 (phone block) and goes to the the second jack on the legacy phone modem.
It’s my understanding that I simply plug the line out of #1 (patch panel) into the ignite modem and this will activate all the jacks in my house. I’m confused about the alarm. I have seen similar posts but I am missing something. It would be great if I could post a picture.
I’m nervous about having Rogers come out seeing the stories about them ripping stuff apart.
11-03-2021 11:41 PM
@Rettop21 wrote: It would be great if I could post a picture.
When logged into the forum and composing a post there should be a camera icon just above where you type. Click on that and upload any pics. The pics will take a little while to be approved by a moderator, depending on time of day.
11-04-2021 01:13 AM - edited 11-04-2021 01:21 AM
@Rettop21 Actually, what we really need more info on is the wiring for your alarm system. When you have a single telephone line in a house, you typically have an RJ31X jack that enables the alarm system to seize the line when it needs to call the central station. If you have one of these RJ31X jacks, then the Tel 1 jack on the Ignite gateway should feed "dial tone" to the tip/ring input on the RJ31X. The RJ31X should then also be wired to provide "dial tone" to your telephone patch panel, which will allow the telephones in your home to use the phone line when it is not required by your alarm system.
Some patch panel voice modules (I did a search and picked this one at random) have an RJ31X jack built in. If your telephone patch panel is functionally similar and has an RJ31X jack, then the Ignite gateway's "Tel 1" jack should connect to the "Line In" and your alarm system should connect to the RJ31X.