Emerson Powers ACT VoIP System Print E-mail
Written by Adam Gosling   
Thursday, 26 October 2006
The ACT Government IT service provider, InTACT, has taken steps to protect its deployment of 11,000 IP phone services with Liebert-branded uninterruptible power systems worth up to A$1 million.

Emerson will supply 270 Liebert UPSs as part of a major ACT Government IP telephony rollout done in conjunction with a network improvement project.

InTACT is managing the deployment which ranges across multiple departments, institutions and healthcare centres, including the ACT Legislative Assembly, ACT Emergency Services and Canberra Hospital.

"Power protection is one of the major considerations when replacing older analogue PSTN phone systems with IP telephony," said Mick Hutterer, Data Centre Manager for InTACT.

"In the past, analogue telephone handsets connected to the PSTN network drew their power from the phone grid. That's no longer the case with IP handsets, which draw their power from the data network.

"If the power goes down, the handsets go down along with the network. It's therefore critical that both network and handsets have sufficient power protection to maintain communications in the event of an emergency or power loss."

The IP telephony component of the network upgrade project will see multiple switches distributed across the network, with up to 48 IP handsets connected to each switch. A single UPS will be used to protect each switch, providing at least 30 minutes' uptime per phone in the event of a power failure.

The majority of UPS will be Liebert's UPStation GXT2 units, ranging from 1.5KVA to 3KVA (a single 1.5KVA UPS has enough power to protect two switches). A number of larger Liebert UPSs, including GXT2s up to 10KVA, and 'Nfinity' UPSs up to 20KVA will be used in other parts of the network to protect the core communication switches and servers.

All UPSs will be hot swappable, and feature SNMP management consoles that allow for remote management across the network from a central site.

"As more companies and organisations deploy IP telephony, their power protection requirements become more pronounced," said Peter Spiteri, Marketing Manager, Emerson Network Power Australia.

"This is particularly true in environments that are themselves mission-critical, such as hospitals and a good number of essential service organisations that make up the ACT Government project," he said.

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