Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router
Set Lowest Price Alert
×
Notify me, when price drops
Set Alert for Product: Grandstream HT814 Analog Telephone Adapter 4 FXS Port Gigabit Router ATA - $95.99
Last Amazon price update was: October 30, 2024 22:52
×
Product prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on Amazon.com (Amazon.in, Amazon.co.uk, Amazon.de, etc) at the time of purchase will apply to the purchase of this product.
Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router
$95.99
Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router Price comparison
Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router Price History
Price History for Grandstream HT814 Analog Telephone Adapter 4 FXS Port Gigabit Router ATA
Statistics
Current Price | $95.99 | October 30, 2024 |
Highest Price | $95.99 | August 11, 2024 |
Lowest Price | $95.99 | August 11, 2024 |
Since August 11, 2024
Last price changes
$95.99 | August 11, 2024 |
Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router Description
- Supports 4 SIP profiles through 4 FXS ports and dual Gigabit ports Includes a built-in Nat router which can handle routing speeds up to 100Mbps. Include TR-069 and XML Confit files Failover SIP server automatically switches to secondary server if Main server loses connection
- Tells and SRTP security encryption technology to protect calls and accounts Automated provisioning options
- Black
- 4 Port
Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router Specification
Specification: Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router
|
Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router Reviews (13)
13 reviews for Grandstream GS-HT814 4-Port VoIP Router
Show all
Most Helpful
Highest Rating
Lowest Rating
Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
john –
I use these to convert SIP trunks to analog lines for digital phone systems that don’t have SIP capabilities. Easy to program and have yet to have any technical issues with theses adapters at all.
PasKy –
… un ATA VOIP veramente ostico da configurare, ma se lo sai configurare e veramente un apparecchio dalle infinite configurazioni e possibilità voce chiara e limpida. supporta 4 VOIP (solo 2 in parallelo e 2 di riserva, e 8 uscite FSX!)
bawbag2016 –
Plays nicley with a rotatome equipped antique phone but couldn’t get the pulse dial to work
Peter Wu –
Takes a little configuration but it’s a good replacement for OBI soon to be non-supported hardware. Need additional third party service to get it to work with Google Voice. It’s not too expensive for that option.
Kindle Customer –
I am very pleased with it. It works great the quality was excellent, the connectivity is great. It is worth the amount of money I paid for it. It was easy to use. The appearance is very nice. Would recommend this seller. It is very quiet
J Prevo –
I use 1-VoIP and they only wanted to provide me with really old hardware. So I bought this Grandstream and am very happy with it. The config is pretty crazy because VoIP itself is complicated but tech support at 1-VoIP quickly walked me through it and had it up and running in no time. My internet is pretty bad (about 20 Mb/s) but this adapter seems to handle it pretty well. The voice quality is much better than with the old adapters that I had.
KARIM. –
Works great
DTHB –
Not easy to configure, but once configured works well if not upgraded to beta firmware which cripples functionality. Also, as with most devices, to ensure security., reverting to older firmware is not possible. A less highlighted feature of the ht814 is support of encrypted calls. and does not require downloading of cirtificates. works with VOIP.ms.
Dibyendu Das –
Value for money
Rich C –
Always a goto product for home or small home office installs.
Mark Twain –
My traditional copper home phone line went down last month. So I put in a repair request with Verizon to have it fixed. A few days later, Verizon’s response was: “we are no longer repairing our copper lines in your area, you’ll need to move to FIOS”.
Well, I have been planning for this eventuality on and off for about two years now. My plan was that at the point Verizon would no longer repair the copper, I was then going to migrate my phone number to a VOIP service and save the premium Verizon was charging for the traditional copper line. My reasoning being that if I had to move to a service that only remained active for the length of time that the backup battery can power it, I might as well do that myself and save a lot of monthly expense in the process.
And so began the search for an ATA to which to bring my in house copper wiring back online, but without the $50/month expense Verizon was charging. I looked at several ATA’s (the Cisco and Linksys models as well as this one) and there were two reasons that I went with this model. Reason one, it had four FXS ports (I had four traditional phones connected to the Verizon line) while all of the Cisco/Linksys units were two port units. Reason number two, and the reason that became the final reason why I chose this Grandstream model, was discovering within the documentation for the device a setting to enable pulse dialing support in the ATA. One of the four phones I had connected to Verizon is an old western electric rotary dial pulse phone (the old tanks that simply never die) and so this Grandstream ATA’s support for pulse dialing meant I did not also have to spend an additional $50 on a pulse to tone adapter for the old tank. As well, I can confirm that the device does indeed support pulse dial phones, because the old Western Electric pulse dial phone is working with the unit just fine. Everything I found related to the Cisco/Linksys ATA’s indicated that they do not, and never have, supported pulse dial, so this fact tipped the scale in favor of the Grandstream unit.
The ATA has now been connected to my in house wiring for about a week and a half, and it has performed perfectly up to my expectations. It has always worked when I have made a call, and it has always remained registered with the voip service (Voip.ms in case anyone wants to know) that I had already picked out to use as part of my pre-planning for Verizon’s eventual refusal to repair their old copper wiring.
Voice sound quality (I’m using the PCMU codec) sounds identical to how voice quality sounded when the phones were connected to Verizon’s switch, and I have had zero issues with stutter and/or echo while using the unit to make calls.
There is also one extra feature I now have that I did not anticipate. Because the FXS ports on the Grandstream are independent of each other, instead of my internal wiring being “party-line” style (all phones connect to the same phone “signal”) I now have four independent “extensions” that can each be making calls at the same time. I can also make calls from one “extension” to another within my home to communicate between rooms via the phones, something I could not do before (this is a feature of Voip.ms’s system where one can setup internal “extension” numbers for each phone adapter port to use to make/take calls between them).
As for another review of this unit pointing out that the configuration is confusing, I can understand their viewpoint. If one purchases this device with zero background knowledge of VOIP terminology, the configuration of the device may appear a little daunting and confusing. However, this is not so much the fault of the device as it is simply lack of necessary knowledge by the purchaser who is attempting to setup the device. As I had been planning for this move for some time, I had already become familiar with much of the VOIP and SIP terminology and so I found the configuration and setup of the device to be quite straightforward overall. I suspect, however, that any ATA will fall into this issue, there will be some level of assumed knowledge required to understand how to configure and set it up, and the ease with which one finds the setup to be will be determined by how much of that necessary background knowledge one has.
All in all, I am very pleased, and this unit is going to well pay for itself in only a few short months, as I have transitioned from paying Verizon $50/month to paying (estimated, as I’ve not used a full month yet) about $3-$5/month to Voip.ms for VOIP service.
John Crehore –
Liked that it’s smaller/more compact and uses less power. Output ports are reversed from old model so can cause connection issues unless you pay attention
Amazon Kunde –
Wir verwenden das Gerät als “Vermittler” zwischen unserer Tür Sprechanlage und unserer Telefonanlage.
Das Gerät kann webbasiert konfiguriert werden und hat sehr viele Features – manche von diesen Features sind mir unbekannt, aber das Gerät scheint zuverlässig zu funktionieren, eine Langzeit Erfahrung gibt es natürlich noch nicht.