Default button assignments
437
Programming Operations Guide
7316 button defaults
Button mapping for the 7316 digital phone is unique. Although the button is patterned after the
7310, the 7316 does not have a second level on its upper button group. Because of this, the
numbering for the 7316 is not consecutive. Refer to the diagrams below.
Internal autodial numbers are assigned to buttons 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, and 21 on the main button
group. Programmed external line buttons descend down the lower left buttons, starting with button
01. When more than five external lines are programmed, assignment continues on the lower right
buttons, starting at button 06.
Important note:
The 7316E digital phone buttons are mapped differently than the 7316.
Therefore, if you replace a 7316 telephone with a 7316E, the button programming will revert to the
default settings for the 7316E, losing any keys programmed by the user at the telephone. Also,
settings that are copied from one telephone to the other may be in a different location on the new
telephone. This is consistent with how the system behaves if you switch any telephone model for a
different model on the same connector.
The following figure shows the default button number assignments on the 7316 digital phone.
Figure 140
7316 telephone button assignment
7316 upper buttons (PBX and DID) default button settings
Btn #
Btn #
Autodial to 227
23
31
Autodial to 231
Autodial to 228
25
33
Autodial to 232
Autodial to 229
27
24
Autodial to 239
Autodial to 230
29
26
Autodial to 240
7316 lower button defaults
Btn #
PBX
DID
Btn #
PBX
DID
11
Autodial 221
17
Autodial to 224
13
Autodial 222
19
Autodial to 225
15
Autodial 223
21
Autodial to 226
01
DND
Target Line
06
Conference
02
Transfer
07
Last No. Redial
03
Call Forward
08
Intercom
04
Pick-Up
09
Intercom
05
Page-General
10
Handsfree
11
13
15
01
02
03
04
05
17
19
21
06
07
08
09
10
Summary of Contents for BCM 3.7
Page 4: ...4 Software licensing N0008589 3 3...
Page 32: ...32 Contents N0008589 3 3 W 937 Index 939...
Page 46: ...46 Tables N0008589 3 3...
Page 64: ...64 How to get help N0008589 3 3...
Page 90: ...90 Manually activating Telnet N0008589 3 3...
Page 116: ...116 Delayed system restart N0008589 3 3...
Page 194: ...194 Configuring a data module N0008589 3 3...
Page 276: ...276 Setting line telco features N0008589 3 3...
Page 310: ...310 Using COS passwords N0008589 3 3...
Page 364: ...364 Enhanced 911 E911 configuration N0008589 3 3...
Page 380: ...380 Renumbering DNs N0008589 3 3...
Page 398: ...398 Saving wizard pages on your computer N0008589 3 3...
Page 458: ...458 Voice Mail settings N0008589 3 3...
Page 488: ...488 Setting system telco features N0008589 3 3...
Page 508: ...508 Other programming that affects public networking N0008589 3 3...
Page 522: ...522 PRI networking using Call by Call services N0008589 3 3...
Page 592: ...592 Monitoring Hunt groups N0008589 3 3...
Page 636: ...636 Configuring Double Density N0008589 3 3...
Page 640: ...640 Using the Network Update Wizard N0008589 3 3...
Page 666: ...666 Importing and Exporting DHCP data N0008589 3 3...
Page 722: ...722 Restarting the router N0008589 3 3...
Page 726: ...726 Important Web Cache considerations N0008589 3 3...
Page 748: ...748 Configuring an Interface with NAT N0008589 3 3...
Page 794: ...794 IPSec N0008589 3 3...
Page 818: ...818 Configuring the Policy Agent characteristics N0008589 3 3...
Page 832: ...832 Firewall rules for Business Communications Manager with Dialup interfaces N0008589 3 3...
Page 876: ...876 ISDN Programming N0008589 3 3...
Page 1004: ...1004 Index N0008589 3 3...