We have a number of sip-connected customers whose broadband connections have suddenly become, uh, less than reliable. Actually, there is nothing wrong with the broadband connection, but rather the network backbone in the country they are connected through has become bogged down. Although latency between the sip clients and the * server is only 125ms (ping times), it seems larger packets either take longer or get lost completely, and the resulting latency as reported by * is 500-2000ms. The result is broken up sound at one end of the connection. (The other end is fine, but that's probably because the routing between the * system and the sip clients is asymetrical, so the problem apparently exists in one direction but not both.) The sip clients all use G.729. My question is this. Are there any RTP settings that I could tinker with that would improve the quality, perhaps at the expense of delay, by making better use of the limited bandwidth available. The problem is not so much that the bandwidth is limited, but that it is intermittent and inconsistent. TIA Bruce Komito High Sierra Networks, Inc. www.servers-r-us.com (775) 236-5815