Line quality, broadband
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From: London, New York, Paris, Moscow.
Not sure I understand what a 'splitter' is. The I Plate is an additional piece of kit which I think you have to buy from BT. I have a NES 5 faceplate but no 'I Plate' as I simply didn't connect the orange wire : achieves the same thing. The better result from the test socket points to room for improvement in your internal arrangements
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From: UK
gr - I have the 'splitter' or 'SSFP' which does the same but provides two sockets, one unfiltered direct to master for ADSL and one filtered for phone (wouldn't buy ANYTHING from BT given a choice.
). About £6. Means in theory no filters required on other plugged ins but I have retained.
). About £6. Means in theory no filters required on other plugged ins but I have retained.
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From: Earth
got online with 3 different speedcheckers
Therefore they are not particularly accurate at the best of times.
Question, even at my lowish speeds would this help throughput as it's 10/100/1000 compared to the present 7 yr old 10/100 type??
Save your money for something else. Or if you want to spend money on a switch, go buy a decent managed 10/100 model. That will give you some extra knobs to tweak should you feel the need.
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From: UK
gr -I forgot to mention that I think ALL the I-PLate does is 'remove' wire 3 at the master - you can save yourself that "£3.79" and do the job properly at all extensions with a pair of snips
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From: London, New York, Paris, Moscow.
"If you have an ADSL service with each phone connected to a micro-filter then the bell-wire is completely redundant since a bell signal is generated in each micro-filter for the few which still need it. Now, unfortunately, this bell-wire tends to cause some degradation to the ADSL signal as it travels about your house. The Solwise solution to this problem would be to detach the front section of your master socket and disconnect the bell-wire(s) (from pin 3) and re-fit the faceplate. The BT solution is called the iPlate! This device places a filter on the bell-wire (which remember is not required!)."
50p or 10/- ?
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With the aforementioned excellent ISP man we have identified the router as the probable cause (swapped out to a borrowed one) so a new one is in the post. I still think the line is also not good, but I will wait and see.

Joined: Oct 2000
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From: Exeter UK
An I-plate and an SSFP (Service Specific Front Plate) are different things.
The I-plate fits on the NTE5 and then the normal single socket front plate fits on the front of an I-Plate. You then plug your filter into the socket as normal.
The newest NTE5s (marked "Openreach" instead of "BT") already contain the I-Plate gubbins so adding an I-Plate to one of those is a waste of time.
An SSFP simply replaces the standard front plate to the NTE5 and contains a filter. There are two sockets, one for the telephone and one for the router. Hence it is sometimes referred to as a "splitter" (but not by BT!)
The I-plate fits on the NTE5 and then the normal single socket front plate fits on the front of an I-Plate. You then plug your filter into the socket as normal.
The newest NTE5s (marked "Openreach" instead of "BT") already contain the I-Plate gubbins so adding an I-Plate to one of those is a waste of time.
An SSFP simply replaces the standard front plate to the NTE5 and contains a filter. There are two sockets, one for the telephone and one for the router. Hence it is sometimes referred to as a "splitter" (but not by BT!)

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From: Bracknell, Berks, UK
Sorry for the late arrival on this thread. Bit of a pet subject for me.
Yes, the i-plate purely disconnects the bell wire (the 3rd internal wire in the housing wiring) as it's no longer needed and *can* provide interference which increases the noise, thus reduces the margin, and there go your sync speeds.
One thing we've not yet discussed BOAC is what sync speeds you actually DO get? e.g. with my loop attenuation (which I assume is an aggregate of the up and down loss) of 66dB and a noise margin of 5dB i'm currently syncing at 2870952 bps, and up at 446666 bps. That's about as good as i'm ever likely to get until Infinity.
Also, have you checked the sync speed at the master socket by removing the faceplate and connecting the router directly to the test socket? as this cuts out the rest of the house wiring from the equation so you can see what proportion of loss is from your house wiring and what's from the line to the house. e.g. I replaced my internal wiring with CAT5e and got an extra 1mbit/s
Cheers,
Mike.
Yes, the i-plate purely disconnects the bell wire (the 3rd internal wire in the housing wiring) as it's no longer needed and *can* provide interference which increases the noise, thus reduces the margin, and there go your sync speeds.
One thing we've not yet discussed BOAC is what sync speeds you actually DO get? e.g. with my loop attenuation (which I assume is an aggregate of the up and down loss) of 66dB and a noise margin of 5dB i'm currently syncing at 2870952 bps, and up at 446666 bps. That's about as good as i'm ever likely to get until Infinity.
Also, have you checked the sync speed at the master socket by removing the faceplate and connecting the router directly to the test socket? as this cuts out the rest of the house wiring from the equation so you can see what proportion of loss is from your house wiring and what's from the line to the house. e.g. I replaced my internal wiring with CAT5e and got an extra 1mbit/s
Cheers,
Mike.
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Thanks EGTE - 'splitter' it is then. Anyway, having 'restored' my setup (for MB from master(test) socket) to splitter, I have retained my 5'ish+ at the router/3'ish at the 'puter but I have started to get a few line errors again which I think points to a cheap E-Bay splitter
New router winging its way here for the weekend I hope so more testing to do.
MB: Down Attenuation 48Db, Noise margin 6Db, line length 4600m, and LLU has definitely improved both up and down. Gone from 3.6/700 at Router to 5.5/1.1
Don't get too excited about Infinity - looking at your attenuation I guess you are 'long line'? 1500m is the max for the fabled 'superfast' (24Mb) and at 5km + you may see a dead donkey. Old technology, anachronistic - and a waste of the BDUK money, as BT emerge (surprise surprise) as the probable only 'bidders' for the dosh

New router winging its way here for the weekend I hope so more testing to do.
MB: Down Attenuation 48Db, Noise margin 6Db, line length 4600m, and LLU has definitely improved both up and down. Gone from 3.6/700 at Router to 5.5/1.1
Don't get too excited about Infinity - looking at your attenuation I guess you are 'long line'? 1500m is the max for the fabled 'superfast' (24Mb) and at 5km + you may see a dead donkey. Old technology, anachronistic - and a waste of the BDUK money, as BT emerge (surprise surprise) as the probable only 'bidders' for the dosh

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From: Bracknell, Berks, UK
LLU will just mean you're connected to a different DSLAM at the exchange, possibly with a different firmware level and chipset, which is interacting more favourably with your modem than the BT fujitsu kit.
Trust me re Infinity, since it was supposed to be made live here in Dec 2010, then March 2011, then Dec 2011, then March 2012, then Dec 2012, i'm holding out not much hope of it ever being here by the time I move house anyway! However, whilst i'm apparently 2.6km from the exchange as the crow flies, but 9.1km from it as the whoosh test proved the cable runs, and i'm only a few hundred metres away from a roadside cab, i'm seeing it as the only way to get semi-decent broadband in the technological wilderness that is Bracknell (ahem).
Trust me re Infinity, since it was supposed to be made live here in Dec 2010, then March 2011, then Dec 2011, then March 2012, then Dec 2012, i'm holding out not much hope of it ever being here by the time I move house anyway! However, whilst i'm apparently 2.6km from the exchange as the crow flies, but 9.1km from it as the whoosh test proved the cable runs, and i'm only a few hundred metres away from a roadside cab, i'm seeing it as the only way to get semi-decent broadband in the technological wilderness that is Bracknell (ahem).
Tabs please!




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From: Biffins Bridge
the i-plate purely disconnects the bell wire
Remember that you will still need a microfilter at all sockets where there is a connection to a phone or device such as a Sky box.
BOAC, I don't think BT have many customers 5km from their nearest cabinet. FTTC is delivering a vastly improved service over the long line copper and BT recently announced that the up to 20Mb service will become up to 40Mb. Good luck with your new router but please allow 48hrs for the exchange equipment to notice and respond with a revised speed (hopefully better).
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i'm apparently 2.6km from the exchange as the crow flies, but 9.1km from it as the whoosh test proved the cable runs, and i'm only a few hundred metres away from a roadside cab, i'm seeing it as the only way to get semi-decent broadband in the technological wilderness that is Bracknell (ahem).
If you follow the sad tale of Ewhurst (Surrey, who were 'gazumped' by BT) Ewhurst Community Broadband there, their first 'Infinity' cabinet has FTTC connections for 100 pairs to match a cabinet which serves 450 pairs, so not even the "40% of cabinet subscribers" will all get it (looks like 22% of 40%). To add to the joy, their lobbying power has been so successful that they will probably be the only 'bidder' for most of the BDUK £530 mill (and the next £300mill).
Tabs please!




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From: Biffins Bridge
BOAC, that news item is 15 months old, things have moved on since November 2010.
Regarding the 450 pair cabinet, you also need to consider how many subscribers there are (hint, less than 450) and of that lower number, what percentage want broadband and of that percentage, what will the take-up be of FTTC.
I'm sure that BT could provide enough fibre to the cabinet for every subscriber just in case they wanted it but would you be willing to pay your share of the cost either through your bill or taxation ? I think not.
Regarding the 450 pair cabinet, you also need to consider how many subscribers there are (hint, less than 450) and of that lower number, what percentage want broadband and of that percentage, what will the take-up be of FTTC.
I'm sure that BT could provide enough fibre to the cabinet for every subscriber just in case they wanted it but would you be willing to pay your share of the cost either through your bill or taxation ? I think not.
Last edited by B Fraser; 10th February 2012 at 19:56. Reason: clarity for the benefit of BOAC

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From: Lemonia. Best Greek in the world
I thought I knew what I had, but reading this lot leaves me very confused!
A while ago I had a long running battle with BT about the fact that my Speed had dropped to zero. (from about 4 - 6 mbps)
Lots of conversations with lots of Indian call centre workers, remote operation of my pc and various drop-in engineers got me nowhere.
Letter to BT CEO, and letter to mate who works in BT got someone's attention, and the delights of an English-speaking "case manager" who promised to stay with my case until it was resolved. (Which he did).
The drop-in engineers changed to another breed of drop-in engineer, (one of whom told interesting BT stories about the BT hierarchy and its broadband connections). This new breed said they knew more about broadband than the other ones.
One of them put in an "Openreach ADSL v1.0" socket about 24 inches from where the main BT line pops out of the ground, and said that thereafter I would not need ADSL filters anywhere in the house anymore.
That, plus lots of other mucking about by BT engineers, both here, and at the 1km away cabinet, and at the 1.8km main BT "shed" got me back to my old 4-6.
..........but this thread has made me terribly confused.
A while ago I had a long running battle with BT about the fact that my Speed had dropped to zero. (from about 4 - 6 mbps)
Lots of conversations with lots of Indian call centre workers, remote operation of my pc and various drop-in engineers got me nowhere.
Letter to BT CEO, and letter to mate who works in BT got someone's attention, and the delights of an English-speaking "case manager" who promised to stay with my case until it was resolved. (Which he did).
The drop-in engineers changed to another breed of drop-in engineer, (one of whom told interesting BT stories about the BT hierarchy and its broadband connections). This new breed said they knew more about broadband than the other ones.
One of them put in an "Openreach ADSL v1.0" socket about 24 inches from where the main BT line pops out of the ground, and said that thereafter I would not need ADSL filters anywhere in the house anymore.
That, plus lots of other mucking about by BT engineers, both here, and at the 1km away cabinet, and at the 1.8km main BT "shed" got me back to my old 4-6.
..........but this thread has made me terribly confused.
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that news item is 15 months old,
Regarding the 450 pair cabinet, you also need to consider how many subscribers there are (hint, less than 450) 450 actually
- and of that lower number, what percentage want broadband and of that percentage, what will the take-up be of FTTC.
- and of that lower number, what percentage want broadband and of that percentage, what will the take-up be of FTTC.
a) learned opinion there says they will need another cabinet with associated 2-way ducting to go above the current 100 - should the demand arise - as there is not enough room in the new small cabinet for the extra racks etc, hence significant costs/planning issues, not forgetting, of course, that 100% coverage of HSB is 'promised' by Surrey CC.
b) one should not forget that the vast majority of the British unwashed (MB, of course, excused) believe BT will be dropping meteorites into THEIR gardens soon, so expectation > realisation?
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From: London, New York, Paris, Moscow.
Just done another BT speed check some days after fitting i plate. Whilst overall [first BT speed check/test] was short on the values derived from internet sourced speed checkers, the second BT speed/test showed a green bar value of 99.5% of obtainable value, which is a gain from the previous BT test values obtained before.fitting the i plate.
So my conclusion is that on my shortish connection [<500m including a bloody overhead!] whilst the speed is a nominal 6.5M with the i plate fitted I'm getting more correct data to the router thus useable values have increased. Slightly.
No forecast of Infinity, probably due to the same overhead.
cheers all and happy surfing,
gr.
So my conclusion is that on my shortish connection [<500m including a bloody overhead!] whilst the speed is a nominal 6.5M with the i plate fitted I'm getting more correct data to the router thus useable values have increased. Slightly.
No forecast of Infinity, probably due to the same overhead.
cheers all and happy surfing,
gr.
Tabs please!




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From: Biffins Bridge
Always do a speed check when your wireless is disabled and you have an ethernet connection to your router which in turn is on your primary socket. I'm on a wireless connection at the moment and have an effective download speed of 5.5Mb whereas the figure is 7.5Mb for a wired connection. There is about 3 feet of sandstone between me and the router so I can't complain. Not bad for a BT Hub version 1.0
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gr - 'Speed tests' in themselves are a bit of a waste of time, although useful indicators - there are so many things that can bring the 'perceived' speed down, including your PC performance/modem-router/memory size etc. The only real 'fact' is the speed delivered to your router and then it is up to you to try and dribble that into your network.
What exactly is an 'overhead'? There is significant pressure to get restrictions on using 'overhead' delivery relaxed which MIGHT happen this year if OFCOM and HMG get their fingers out of their ****.and stop protecting 'last generation access'.
Extract from 'Planning' Dec 11
"Government consults on lifting overhead broadband line restrictions
By Mark Wilding Friday, 02 December 2011
Proposals to lift restrictions on installing overhead broadband lines are being consulted on by ministers.
The government said the proposals are intended to reduce the cost of rolling out broadband across the country and create the "best superfast broadband network in Europe" by 2015. Currently, broadband lines must be buried underground unless there is no viable alternative.
Ministers have stressed that lines will only be installed where existing infrastructure cannot be shared. Planning permission will also still be required in national parks, areas of outstanding natural beauty and sites of special scientific interest.
But the plans have caused concern in some quarters. Tony Burton, director at charity Civic Voice, warned that the government risks alienating the public in a mistaken attempt to cut red tape.
He said: "We’re disappointed by the decision to look at lifting what we call safeguards and the government calls restrictions. We see no evidence that there are unnecessary restrictions that exist.
"No-one is questioning the benefits that broadband can bring, but we want Broadband Britain to be beautiful as well. That will only happen if we are careful about introducing the infrastructure to support it."
The consultation closes on 21 February 2012."
What exactly is an 'overhead'? There is significant pressure to get restrictions on using 'overhead' delivery relaxed which MIGHT happen this year if OFCOM and HMG get their fingers out of their ****.and stop protecting 'last generation access'.
Extract from 'Planning' Dec 11
"Government consults on lifting overhead broadband line restrictions
By Mark Wilding Friday, 02 December 2011
Proposals to lift restrictions on installing overhead broadband lines are being consulted on by ministers.
The government said the proposals are intended to reduce the cost of rolling out broadband across the country and create the "best superfast broadband network in Europe" by 2015. Currently, broadband lines must be buried underground unless there is no viable alternative.
Ministers have stressed that lines will only be installed where existing infrastructure cannot be shared. Planning permission will also still be required in national parks, areas of outstanding natural beauty and sites of special scientific interest.
But the plans have caused concern in some quarters. Tony Burton, director at charity Civic Voice, warned that the government risks alienating the public in a mistaken attempt to cut red tape.
He said: "We’re disappointed by the decision to look at lifting what we call safeguards and the government calls restrictions. We see no evidence that there are unnecessary restrictions that exist.
"No-one is questioning the benefits that broadband can bring, but we want Broadband Britain to be beautiful as well. That will only happen if we are careful about introducing the infrastructure to support it."
The consultation closes on 21 February 2012."
Tabs please!




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From: Biffins Bridge
The overhead is a technical term within the industry to describe telegraph poles. It's not immediately obvious to an outsider.
When the next "here today gone tomorrow" bunch of cowboys set up Wondercom who install a mast outside your front door and run some wires above your property to get from the roadside to a customer backing onto your property then you can thank
.
Reluctance on behalf of HMG is largely driven by what has gone before. No doubt you will recall that the cable TV companies did such a wonderful job in hiring the cheapest available contractors for installing their network. Besides the damage to water pipes, gas mains, pavements etc. they chopped through a number of tree roots, killing many in the process. They quickly became known as squirrels. as what do they have in common ?
They both f@ck up trees.
When the next "here today gone tomorrow" bunch of cowboys set up Wondercom who install a mast outside your front door and run some wires above your property to get from the roadside to a customer backing onto your property then you can thank
OFCOM and HMG (for) get(ting) their fingers out of their ****
Reluctance on behalf of HMG is largely driven by what has gone before. No doubt you will recall that the cable TV companies did such a wonderful job in hiring the cheapest available contractors for installing their network. Besides the damage to water pipes, gas mains, pavements etc. they chopped through a number of tree roots, killing many in the process. They quickly became known as squirrels. as what do they have in common ?
They both f@ck up trees.
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From: Earth
No doubt you will recall that the cable TV companies did such a wonderful job in hiring the cheapest available contractors for installing their network.



