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You have to go into the menu and reset the rings so that the phone will ring at least 4 times. Your owners manual should give you directions to do that. You can also call Panasonic.
When it stops ringing, the caller goes to your voice mail, right?
If so, then you need to contact your phone company and have them change your "Ring Cycle" -- that's the number of rings before the voice mail system picks up.
Some phone companies have a way for you to do this yourself from their website, other require that you call up the customer service line. Either way, the thing you want to adjust is your voice mail ring cycle.
When it stops ringing, the caller goes to your voice mail, right?
If
so, then you need to contact your phone company and have them change
your "Ring Cycle" -- that's the number of rings before the voice mail
system picks up.
Some phone companies have a way for you to do
this yourself from their website, other require that you call up the
customer service line. Either way, the thing you want to adjust is your
voice mail ring cycle.
In my VZ wireless I have to change it by calling tech support.
Your carrier may not offer it. Since your phone needs to be found, the number of rings you hear and the intercept time may be different. The stock answer is "if your cell is close to a tower it will work after X rings".
Log into your Vonage account and change the number of rings or seconds to intercept for VM. In my Packet8 service, I can set a number of parameters for dual ring, intercept, and/or turn voice mail on and off. The last time I worked on a customer's Vonage we could do the same.
You have to change the rings from the voice mail server. If you don't know your way around the server, its best to get a local NEC tech although it is fairly simple to navigate. Depends on your skill. Typical default password for the server is NEC
I have contacted Verizon tech support for this issue. They say it depends on where you are (what towers are responding to your incoming call) and can not be changed. I told them that Cingular could entend the ring time, not number of rings. The rude customer-no-service person told me "well, you need to go to Cingular-now AT&T". We will see what type of response I get from the letter I wrote to the President of Verizon.
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