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> I don't think so. It lokos like there are some problems in software. I can > see almost all mentione errors in almost totaly controled envronement > with guaranted good lines and with control over both side faxes (be it > standalone or fax/modem. > > So if someone will came with an idea or patche, I can test things in such > environement. Retraining is only any use in dealing with a bad line, not with protocol problems. It may be that the remote fax modem (including one in a fax machine) is using the wrong criteria to request a retrain, but if it is doing so, it is at fault. (The receiving modem has to model the characteristics of the line, which will tend to blur one bit into another (one signalling unit, which is really multiple bits). To do this, part of the start up of the modem is a sequence of increasingly complex, but predictable signals, that the receiving modem can use to calibrate its filters (basically what it is doing is working out how much the signalling units interfere with each other and introducing compensating corrections based on previous units). If the line characteristics change significantly, it may be necessary to repeat the calibration process, which is what is called a retrain. Retrains ought to be initiated on the basis of measurements of the analogue signal, but might be triggered, in a simple implementation, by an excess error rate in the demodulated data. It would only be in that latter case that anything in the software or interface to the modem would trigger a retrain, and then would only be the result of using the wrong criteria.)