timely thread...
The restaurant where I work has for years had a Panasonic cordless phone, very basic, probably 900MHz. It has had low volume for years, probably been dropped. Trying to use it in the kitchen was hopeless, especially when Japanese tour guides with high pitched voices and little English phone up to arrange their next stop. Finally it stopped charging. I discussed what was needed with my employers, I suggested a multi-handset phone so it could be used as an intercom with the house - they live next door. Previously we dialled their home phone - 25c per call.
With the owners' approval, I picked up a Doro 3-handset + answerphone that was on special at Target for $79. (Was $180). It worked very well but was very fiddly to use - tiny buttons, have to access too many functions via a menu, confusing to use. But it worked, including working perfectly as an intercom.
Nobody liked it much so it went back to Target for a refund. I had since chased up specs for a Uniden WDECT which promised longer range (still 900Mhz I think), simple operation, extra-volume button (perfect for a noisy kitchen) and NO answer machine - it had proved to be an unwanted nuisance on the Doro.
John came home with a Panasonic 5.8 GHz fancy schmantzy costing $280!! More tiny buttons than you could imagine, doesn't work properly as an intercom (drops out or can't contact other handset at all), changes settings by itself especially turns volume down, so cumbersome to use John comes almost crying with frustration to me and says "how do you use this bloody thing again???" for the hundredth time, and the answer phone won't stay turned off - if the incoming call waits more than about eight rings, the answer phone turns itself on. So we get cryptic messages like "hello, Yumiko here, want to change our booking to 6 people plus one guide" when we have no idea who Yumiko is, what day or time she is coming... so we just don't want an answer machine at all!!
To make it harder, the place John bought the phone from is a small 2 person store in a small town, nowhere near as helpful a returns policy as a big company like Target. (no relation to Target in USA) so the best we can get is that the technician will look at the phone and look for a fault... meanwhile we have a battered old cord phone...at least you can hear the callers on it..
Any recommendations for a phone? must be:
-Current model, available new now
-not prone to interference - we have lots of gizmos in the kitchen
-very simple and intuitive to use - owners are in 60s age bracket and not technically minded at all
-NO answer machine or one that stays off when turned off
-just about bullet proof
-able to have raised volume - incoming voice, not just ringer volume
-intercom function that works reliably and clearly across a 50 metre car park.
Thanks
Chris.
The restaurant where I work has for years had a Panasonic cordless phone, very basic, probably 900MHz. It has had low volume for years, probably been dropped. Trying to use it in the kitchen was hopeless, especially when Japanese tour guides with high pitched voices and little English phone up to arrange their next stop. Finally it stopped charging. I discussed what was needed with my employers, I suggested a multi-handset phone so it could be used as an intercom with the house - they live next door. Previously we dialled their home phone - 25c per call.
With the owners' approval, I picked up a Doro 3-handset + answerphone that was on special at Target for $79. (Was $180). It worked very well but was very fiddly to use - tiny buttons, have to access too many functions via a menu, confusing to use. But it worked, including working perfectly as an intercom.
Nobody liked it much so it went back to Target for a refund. I had since chased up specs for a Uniden WDECT which promised longer range (still 900Mhz I think), simple operation, extra-volume button (perfect for a noisy kitchen) and NO answer machine - it had proved to be an unwanted nuisance on the Doro.
John came home with a Panasonic 5.8 GHz fancy schmantzy costing $280!! More tiny buttons than you could imagine, doesn't work properly as an intercom (drops out or can't contact other handset at all), changes settings by itself especially turns volume down, so cumbersome to use John comes almost crying with frustration to me and says "how do you use this bloody thing again???" for the hundredth time, and the answer phone won't stay turned off - if the incoming call waits more than about eight rings, the answer phone turns itself on. So we get cryptic messages like "hello, Yumiko here, want to change our booking to 6 people plus one guide" when we have no idea who Yumiko is, what day or time she is coming... so we just don't want an answer machine at all!!
To make it harder, the place John bought the phone from is a small 2 person store in a small town, nowhere near as helpful a returns policy as a big company like Target. (no relation to Target in USA) so the best we can get is that the technician will look at the phone and look for a fault... meanwhile we have a battered old cord phone...at least you can hear the callers on it..
Any recommendations for a phone? must be:
-Current model, available new now
-not prone to interference - we have lots of gizmos in the kitchen
-very simple and intuitive to use - owners are in 60s age bracket and not technically minded at all
-NO answer machine or one that stays off when turned off
-just about bullet proof
-able to have raised volume - incoming voice, not just ringer volume
-intercom function that works reliably and clearly across a 50 metre car park.
Thanks
Chris.