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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!lll-winken!telecom-request
- From: sung@concert.net (Wayne Sung)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: Panasonic and Tropez 900 MHz Phones
- Message-ID: <telecom12.868.1@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 02:56:52 GMT
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
- Lines: 68
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 12, Issue 868, Message 1 of 8
-
- I recently had the chance to use both the Panasonic and Tropez 900 MHz
- phones. Here is a quick comparison. Note that these are subjective --
- I didn't try to make any measurements.
-
- Range: Tropez gives almost three times the range outdoors, a small
- amount extra indoors. I can get two houses down the street with the
- Panasonic, more than six with the Tropez. Indoors, I cannot get from
- my desk to my machine room with the Panasonic (less than 100 ft but
- through several walls). The Tropez makes it, although there are some
- dead spots. As long as it rings, I can always take it into another
- room to answer.
-
- Fidelity: Panasonic sounds better than Tropez, although both are very
- good. In particular, under some circumstances the Tropez audio will
- have a low level clicking to it. There is also some gating noticeable
- on the Tropez in a noisy room. Neither had any static (49 MHz phones
- do not work at all in my machine room - all they do is buzz). Dropouts
- are quite abrupt on both, i.e. near the range limit the audio will
- come and go rather than have increasing noise.
-
- Convenience: Panasonic is smaller, and has a belt clip. It is smaller
- because the mouthpiece folds, and also the antenna is shorter. The
- clip that holds the mouthpiece looked flimsy, though. Also, Panasonic
- supplies two batteries with the phone. There is a charging slot in the
- base for the spare pack. No wires are used in the Panasonic packs, the
- Tropez pack has a pair of wires and a connector. The Panasonic can be
- switched totally off, the Tropez is always in standby (even though
- there is an off button).
-
- Operation: The Tropez has a dial in the base, the Panasonic does not.
- Both have page/intercom. The Tropez further allows the handset to
- prevent the base from conferencing into a call. Normally a tone
- indicates that the base has been added. When out of range, the Tropez
- will start beeping as you exceed range whether a call in in progress
- or not. The Panasonic only indicates during a call. Both allow you
- time to get back in range before disconnecting.
-
- The Tropez has a problem (perhaps only with documentation) with the
- out-of- range signal. The manual says press any key to stop this
- signal. Pressing 'off' does _not_ stop it, nor does pressing any of
- the function keys. Only the main pad keys do it. Also, if you stop the
- out-of-range signal and then attempt to get a line while still out of
- range, the phone seems to buffer up the line button: press line, no
- dial tone, press again (maybe a few times). This can result in the
- phone beeping several minutes (a fast beep, different from the
- out-of-range signal).
-
- Also if you disconnect the base to move it, you will cause the
- security code to change in the base but not necessarily the handset.
- You will have to put the handset in the base for maybe half a minute
- for them to resync. Otherwise you get either no response or a lot of
- noise. There are three pins that connect the base to the phone -- two
- carry DC and the third is a data link. The line is answered upon
- removing the phone from the base, no separate switch is required. The
- Panasonic necessarily requires opening the mouthpiece to answer.
-
- Misc: Both phones state that they run at maximum power allowed for
- their respective types of operation, but that maximum range may not be
- attainable in actual oeration. However, neither one specifically says
- what range to expect. There is also no mention of battery operation
- time. Tropez doesn't even say how long the warranty is.
-
- I would judge the Tropez to be the more capable phone, especially
- since the voice is digitized. However, it is quite a bit less costly
- than the Panasonic even considering I saw the Panasonic at two
- discount stores and the Tropez at a phone store which normally has
- everything priced higher.
-