E&M Signaling
E&M signaling supports tie-line type facilities or signals
between voice switches. Instead of superimposing both voice and signaling on the
same wire, E&M uses separate paths, or leads, for each.
To call a remote office, your PBX must route a request for use
of the trunk over its signal leads between the two sites. Your PBX makes the
request by activating its M-lead. The other PBX detects the request when it
detects current flowing on its E-lead. It then attaches a dial register to the
trunk and your PBX, which sends the dialed digits. The remote PBX activates its
M-lead to notify the local PBX that the call has been answered.
There are five
types of E&M signaling: Type I, Type II, Type III, Type IV, and Type V. The
E&M leads operate differently with each wiring scheme, as shown in Table 2-1 and Table 2-2. Keep in mind that any of the E&M
supervisory signaling types (that is, wink-start, immediate-start, and
delay-start) can operate over any of the following wiring schemes.