O.K. here is our set-up:
Northern site:
IPO 500 in off-site co-location facility.
Connected to Internet via 5MB burstable to 50
One T1 (D4-AMI) 24 channels of voice.
Three SIP trunks from providers
One SIP trunk from IPO 500 at Southern site
One SIP trunk from second IPO 500 at Southern site
Executive Offices (7 phones) connected to Northern ISP via 2 bonded T1 circuits.
Bandwidth use also shared by video conference system and SQL server hosting replicated call center database,
VPN connections to co-location site and Southern site.
Southern site:
Connected to ISP by E3 via microwave connection.
VPN connections to Northern co-location and Executive Offices
50 IP phones serviced by Northern IPO 500 via VPN.
IPO 500 in Southern site used for local analog devices and connected to Northern site via SIP trunk.
Second Southern IPO 500 provided by E1 provider used as gateway splits E1 traffic into a SIP trunk for the Northern 500, another SIP trunk into a local Quintum gateway, and out another E1 to a local PBX switch.
DavidCT,
Thanks for the recommendations. The co-location facility provides BSD from miltiple ISP providers. We are in negotiations for fiber to compliment the microwave in the Southern location so we can do the same there.
hairless,
It sounds like you are recommending using the legacy TDM E1/T1 capabilities rather than the SIP capabilities of the IPO. Do you see some capacity issues with SIP (or other SIP issues)?
Bas1234,
Thanks for the roll-over ARS concept. I think it will come in handy on some other projects too.
amriddle01, tipeter, albus,
We have some really old and rotten aerial copper servicing the site. That is the main reason that everything is being delivered by microwave except one E1 and that has been a real pain. The secondary fiber route that is under negotiaion will be aerial, so that will have also its challenges at times.