Turn on suggestions
Auto-suggest helps you quickly narrow down your search results by suggesting possible matches as you type.
Showing results for
fibre pipe in street already
Topic Options
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark Topic as New
- Mark Topic as Read
- Float this Topic for Current User
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Printer Friendly Page
- Plusnet Community
- :
- Forum
- :
- Help with my Plusnet services
- :
- Fibre Broadband
- :
- Re: fibre pipe in street already
fibre pipe in street already
10-02-2016 12:40 PM
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Report to Moderator
My neighbour once paid for a fibre link to his house which was installed be an openreach engineer. He has now moved and the fibre pipe is obviously still there. An openreach engineer was at another neighbours house today and has had the cover up in the street. I went over to chat to him about our slow broadband and he showed me the fibre pipe and said it would be relativltly easy for someone to utilise it. How could this be done and anyone know how i could get the ball rolling?
Message 1 of 7
(1,286 Views)
6 REPLIES 6
Re: fibre pipe in street already
10-02-2016 2:14 PM
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Report to Moderator
Checking your line it does show that fibre is available, however the estimates aren't that much more than what you get at the moment
The current estimates on your ADSL connection are 5.5Mbps to 7.5Mbps
FTTC estimates for your line show are Download: 9.5Mbps to 5.1Mbps Upload 1.2Mbps to 0.8Mbps
If you did want to discuss upgrading to fibre, I'd recommend giving our Customer Options Team a call on 0800 013 2632.
The current estimates on your ADSL connection are 5.5Mbps to 7.5Mbps
FTTC estimates for your line show are Download: 9.5Mbps to 5.1Mbps Upload 1.2Mbps to 0.8Mbps
If you did want to discuss upgrading to fibre, I'd recommend giving our Customer Options Team a call on 0800 013 2632.
Message 2 of 7
(682 Views)
Re: fibre pipe in street already
10-02-2016 3:02 PM
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Report to Moderator
Is FTTP or FTTPoD available?
That sounds like what the neighbour had.
That sounds like what the neighbour had.
jelv (a.k.a Spoon Whittler) Why I have left Plusnet (warning: long post!) Broadband: Andrews & Arnold Home::1 (FTTC 80/20) Line rental: Pulse 8 Home Line Rental (£14.40/month) Mobile: iD mobile (£4/month) |
Message 3 of 7
(682 Views)
Re: fibre pipe in street already
10-02-2016 3:18 PM
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Report to Moderator
That's what I thought too, but http://dslchecker.bt.com isn't showing any availability for FTTP/FTTPoD.
Message 4 of 7
(682 Views)
Re: fibre pipe in street already
10-02-2016 3:50 PM
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Report to Moderator
Not all fibre is the same, sadly. It may be that the fibre the poster has is not compatible with the equipment BT has. At one of my previous jobs I was responsible for getting fibre to our site and an office doing it with us had existing fibre. Unfortunately it had been put in to supply an ISDN service and BT said it was now useless.
Even if the fibre is compatible there is an issue of contention that could - ahem - cause contention. I'm assuming that the original owner paid for a leased line. That means a dedicated link back to the exchange and probably straight onto the backhaul. Openreach might be reluctant to activate that because it gives the poster an unfair advantage over his neighbours. Possibly even over the entire area served by that exchange. Imagine the scenario:Everyone else has to muck in and share the cabinets and exchange but there's the OP with his own pipe right onto the exchange backhaul. That's fine if the OP is paying for a leased line but if they just want a typical home connection that's a big no-no.
This could be mitigated somewhat by moving the cable end point to the aggregation point for cabinets on that exchange but that still leaves the OP connecting through what is effectively their own personal cabinet.
Then there's the uncertainty over whether openreach actually could make the changes needed. As a company they have the technical expertise for sure but not all their engineers have all the expertise. This means that for residential connections BT prefer a 'cookie cutter' approach. Dealing with some weird cabling arrangement is just hassle for openreach that they either don't want to deal with or else will want to charge a lot more money for.
Even if the fibre is compatible there is an issue of contention that could - ahem - cause contention. I'm assuming that the original owner paid for a leased line. That means a dedicated link back to the exchange and probably straight onto the backhaul. Openreach might be reluctant to activate that because it gives the poster an unfair advantage over his neighbours. Possibly even over the entire area served by that exchange. Imagine the scenario:Everyone else has to muck in and share the cabinets and exchange but there's the OP with his own pipe right onto the exchange backhaul. That's fine if the OP is paying for a leased line but if they just want a typical home connection that's a big no-no.
This could be mitigated somewhat by moving the cable end point to the aggregation point for cabinets on that exchange but that still leaves the OP connecting through what is effectively their own personal cabinet.
Then there's the uncertainty over whether openreach actually could make the changes needed. As a company they have the technical expertise for sure but not all their engineers have all the expertise. This means that for residential connections BT prefer a 'cookie cutter' approach. Dealing with some weird cabling arrangement is just hassle for openreach that they either don't want to deal with or else will want to charge a lot more money for.
Message 5 of 7
(682 Views)
Re: fibre pipe in street already
11-02-2016 1:34 PM
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Report to Moderator
Yes, i think my neighbour told me that it was a leased line, just seems a shame that it is all there and we cant use it and are stuck on 7mb adsl
Message 6 of 7
(682 Views)
Re: fibre pipe in street already
11-02-2016 1:44 PM
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Highlight
- Report to Moderator
Definitely a shame. And I'm not saying it's impossible but finding someone willing to get it done and for a reasonable price will be the difficult bit I doubt Openreach will talk to you so you'll need to go through a CP and it'll have to be one that specialises in leased lines and they will want paying
Even if FTTP/oD becomes available to you they might not be able to use the fibre. BT's FTTP/oD offering is PON (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_optical_network)- which means that we don't all get our own cable. We still share a node much as FTTC shares a cabinet at the moment. So your existing cable would have to be cut and spliced into the splitter, assuming it's physically compatible.
mav:quote
Even if FTTP/oD becomes available to you they might not be able to use the fibre. BT's FTTP/oD offering is PON (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Passive_optical_network)- which means that we don't all get our own cable. We still share a node much as FTTC shares a cabinet at the moment. So your existing cable would have to be cut and spliced into the splitter, assuming it's physically compatible.
mav:quote
Message 7 of 7
(682 Views)
Topic Options
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark Topic as New
- Mark Topic as Read
- Float this Topic for Current User
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Printer Friendly Page
- Plusnet Community
- :
- Forum
- :
- Help with my Plusnet services
- :
- Fibre Broadband
- :
- Re: fibre pipe in street already