Re: [Hampshire] FTTC/vDSL/NT5e faceplates

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Author: Tim
Date:  
To: Hampshire LUG Discussion List
Subject: Re: [Hampshire] FTTC/vDSL/NT5e faceplates
On 06/11/14 19:42, Paul Tansom wrote:
> ** Jay Bennie <jay@???> [2014-11-06 18:23]:
>>> Looks like a choice of either phone or internet until next week :( It is still
>>> odd taking the box apart when I've been used to leaving well alone because if
>>> they think it has been tampered with BT will charge!
>>>
>> set up a line divert to a skype or voip number :)
>>
>> oh and trace the wire back - if it has been cold and wet with you - checking the wires aren't compromised is worth while... they don't last forever and vDSL is a bit sensitive to bad copper. I had a similar drop off at the old office .... but if just today - it was a bad bt day.
> ** end quote [Jay Bennie]
>
> I'm not majorly worried about incoming calls for a while. Anyone we are
> interested in hearing from knows about the problem and most of the rest are
> junk calls (in spite of BT Privacy). For outgoing I've got BT Smartalk on my
> mobile as well as the mobile itself (if I stand in the right place) or one of
> my VOIP lines (although they were a bit dodgy today - probably the broadband).
>
> Wiring wise, it is a single cable from the telegraph pole into the back of the
> master socket so I don't have a junction box to worry about or anywhere damp
> can get in, and it was replaced a couple of years ago - or two faults back -
> which was replacing a cable that was put in in 2001 when I had an ISDN line
> installed (they ran a new cable for both the ISDN and standard line). It's all
> positively modern for BT in this area! I'm not sure if it an issue up here, but
> I understand that a lot of the cabling in Portsmouth is aluminium instead of
> copper, which is causing problems with even basic broadband. I wish cable was
> an option, but they don't provide the features I use unfortunately.
>

My boss had an issue with his (company supplied) broadband some years
ago, every time the weather turned damp or wet broadband would fall
over. After 6 month where the ISP kept throwing it back to BT as a line
fault and a conscientious BT engineer the fault was found 4 telegraph
poles down the road, the lid of a junction box on the box was damaged
and all the wiring was damp and corroded. Apparently the BT guy spent a
day up the pole replacing the box and renewing the wiring. So the
junction box does not necessarily need to be on you house or on the
telegraph you are directly connected to.

Tim

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