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To factory reset your Panasonic KX-TGP600 Dect Phone, enter the MAC password or MAC ID and complete the reset process on your device. Learn more here. Lost the directions/manual for our kx-tg785sk 5hs with bluetooth. How can a person get a replacement? Technician's Assistant: What's the make/model of your device? How old is it? Panasonic KX-tg785sk 5hs. Technician's Assistant: How long has this been going on? What troubleshooting have you tried? Need to replace the directions/manual. User manual PANASONIC KX-TG785SK Lastmanuals offers a socially driven service of sharing, storing and searching manuals related to use of hardware and software: user guide, owner's manual, quick start guide, technical datasheets. Panasonic KX-TG585SK Pdf User Manuals. View online or download Panasonic KX-TG585SK Operating Instructions Manual, Quick Manual.
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Panasonic Kx Tg885sk Operating Instructions
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Link2Cell Cordless Telephone with
Model No.KX-TGF572
KX-TGF574
KX-TG785SK
Model shown is KX-TGF572.
on page 12.
Please read these operating instructions before using the unit and save them for
Consulte “Guía Rápida Española”, página 88.
For assistance, visit our Web site: http://shop.panasonic.com/support for
Please register your product: http://shop.panasonic.com/support
TGF57xUSA(en)_1201_ver031.pdf 11/12/2016 6:41:04 PM
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Panasonic Kx Tg785sk Manual
This multi-handset cordless phone/answering machine does basically what you would want such a device to do. It makes and answers calls over a landline connection, and has a high-capacity answering machine; the multiple handsets allow you to put a receiver in many rooms without extra expense, and the remote receivers can access all of the functions of the base unit as well. It has advanced features including storing the caller number for purposes of blocking future calls from that number, and Bluetooth pairing to your cellphone so the local handset can be used to make or receive calls over your cellphone number (the cordless handset basically becomes your all-in-one phone for calls to either your landline or cellphone numbers, as long as your cellphone is within Bluetooth range of the base receiver). It has a large phone number directory capacity, and phone numbers entered into the directory from any handset become accessible on all the others; you can also import your existing phone directory from your cellphone. These are all good features, and add up to a very functional and flexible system.However, many of these features are badly executed or clunky to use, which severely detracts from the usefulness of the unit. Some problems:
- Terrible voice quality when making cellphone connections by Bluetooth through the cordless base station (i.e., making or answering calls through your cellphone, but talking on the cordless handset, with the two linked by Bluetooth). This sounds like a convenient feature: with multiple handsets all over the house, you can easily make or answer a cellphone call by just picking up the nearest cordless phone - no need to go hunting for the cellphone. But when you do use this feature, the call audio is almost always poor quality (you are making two wireless connections just to make that call from your end); often it's easier to hang up and just call the person directly from the cordless phone, which defeats the purpose.
- Internal phone directory is a major pain. The function to import your numbers from your cellphone is very difficult to use, but luckily you don't have to do it often. The directory will hold many names, but has a small memory space for each name: you can only input about a dozen letters. Every phone number is a separate entry, so if a person has multiple phone numbers you have to enter their name multiple times, with some sort of code to indicate whether that number is a cellphone, home phone, etc. (a problem, again, when the space for name entry is already so short); then you have to scroll through all those names to find the one you want to call.
- Making calls from stored directory numbers is a major pain. To recall numbers from the directory, you have to first push the phone book symbol, wait several seconds for a secondary screen to pop up, select a code key (*), enter up to 4 - but no more - letters from the person's name by scrolling through letters on the number keypad, push the search function button, then scroll through *every entry in the directory* that has names beginning with those letters, plus all the separate entries for any of those who have multiple phone numbers, to find the one you want, then execute the call function. (Calling my mother takes about 15 keypresses and several periods of waiting.)
- There is a supposed VIP number feature that allows you to store 9 contacts identified by single-digit numbers, so you can call them with a single keypress, but I have not found any way to make it work.
- The received-call listing function is slow and clunky. The phone indicates you have received a call while you were out by displaying 'CID' - whatever that means; you have to press the 4-way pad several times to get a list of the calls, and then decide whether to erase the call and/or block the caller. There is a dedicated 'Call Block' button on the handsets and on the base station, but it does not block the displayed call. Instead, it initiates a process requiring presses of three different controls and then an acknowledgment that you really want to block the call you have just gone through all that to block (the default is 'No' - if you make that mistake, you have to do the whole thing again). Erasing the call from memory - even if you have just blocked the caller - is a separate process and also takes several steps involving a different set of keys. It takes about a dozen presses of 4 different controls, with waiting periods at various points, to block and delete one unwanted call. Luckily, you can block and erase calls from the remote handsets as well, though it is not any easier.
- Listening to and then deleting voicemails is similarly slow and clunky, and the controls on the base station or handsets are not clearly marked for that; you have to flail your way through multi-function controls to figure out how to access, play, and erase the messages. There is no way to fast-forward or reverse through the calls; if you miss a message or number you have to replay the entire message from the beginning. There is also a slow and tedious robot-voice announcement at the beginning of the old- and new-call messages, which you have to listen to every time you try to access them.
- THERE IS NO CALL LOG. There is no list of recent calls made *from* the system, and no way to easily call back someone you recently spoke to other than to go through the whole clunky search-and-scroll thing again. This is just bizarre. This is a standard feature on modern phones.
- As mentioned in passing above, the control responses on the handsets are very slow; you have to wait a beat after every input for the display screen to refresh before you can go on to the next input, and there are often waiting periods of several seconds between executing one function and being able to execute the next one. Since even basic functions often require long sequences of multiple key inputs, you can very quickly get frustrated waiting for the phone to accept all the keypresses you have to make, and there is no way to speed up the process. This occurs even for the most basic functions like looking up and calling a contact, so it quickly becomes very aggravating.
In short, I bought this unit because it had multiple handsets and good functionality. It seemed like a great deal at the price. After using it for some months, I find myself moderately frustrated with it. The user interface is slow and stupidly clunky, basic functions are missing or hard to access, and the slow and complicated access sequences for many functions are a repeated annoyance. Sound quality is OK at best, and often very bad when using a paired cellphone - one of the system's major selling points. I would not have bought this system if I had know of these issues, and the relatively low price I paid (for a *refurbished* unit) does not seem like a great deal. It *is* functional, and does what it claims, but not easily and sometimes not well. It is usable, however, and the problems can be worked around, though not ignored.