Telephone VoIP adapter explained

A telephone VoIP adapter (TVA), also called digital telephone adapter, is a device that interfaces digital private branch exchange (PBX) telephone sets to a Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) network, using, for example, the Session Initiation Protocol.

An analog telephone adapter (ATA) converts an analog telephone port (Foreign exchange station, FXS) to a VoIP network.

A Centrex TVA interfaces centrex telephones and analog-based Centrex telephones.

Some telecom manufacturers have produced hybrid exchanges with TVA-like elements that support IP telephones and also have units or cards that allow connection of digital telephones.

Whether a standalone TVA or a hybrid PBX is deployed, the intention is to preserve investment in an installed base of telephones, and eliminate the need to install Ethernet network infrastructure.[1] [2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Types of Phones . 2010-02-19 . 2010-09-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20100901210441/http://astbook.asteriskdocs.org/en/2nd_Edition/asterisk-book-html-chunk/asterisk-CHP-2-SECT-4.html#asterisk-CHP-2-SECT-4.1.2 . dead .
  2. Web site: VoIP Migration Company Citel to Showcase Communication Manager at ITEXPO.