Sorry, I missed the fact that the install had already happened, and that you had a new-fangled master socket. That changes things a little, and it means that you are now the de-facto owner of all the internal wiring, even if BT did install it originally.
It will be worth making sure that they did things the right way then...
| Quote from: mikko |
I need help answering this question I cannot disconnect/remove the extension cabling as it was permanently wired by BT (then GPO) years ago before the internet era.
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I'll double-check...
From what you've written before, the engineer fitted a master socket (ie one with a horizontal split across the middle), but didn't fit a data extension.
That
should leave you with a master socket that has these components:
At the back, the backplate, with the internal test socket, wired only to the external cable, and no extensions. Without any faceplates attached, it would look like this. The red highlight shows the test socket - and this now demarks the end of BT's ownership of the line.
In the middle, a VDSL faceplate that has the socket for the modem, but no wires attached. It ought to look like the one in this thread, except the wires in the red circle (which are the data extension) won't exist.
At the front, is a half-height front faceplate. One of these can be seen dangling at the front of the image in the same thread. The voice extension wiring should be connected to the back of this faceplate, nowhere else.
If you unscrew the front half-height faceplate, this
should disconnect the extension wiring - so what they mean by "
remove extension cabling" is to unscrew and unplug the front faceplate. Once the faceplate is removed, all the extension sockets should be dead (no dialtone with a phone), so that's a good way to check.
If the extensions aren't wired like this, and any of them stay live when you remove the front, half-height, faceplate, then the engineer has wired things incorrectly - and you need to get this fixed.
| Quote from: mikko |
Is the training period 10 days or 2 days (as I read somewhere for FTTC)? Installation was 13-Dec-2012.
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The line monitoring starts from day 1, but usually only triggers adjustments after 2 days, if needed, and (so far) largely seems to make the right adjustments first time. In some cases (rare, but it seems to be getting a little more common), it can make further adjustments over the next few days. If it does keep making adjustments, it is the first indication that there might be something wrong with the line (or, of course, the internal extension wiring).
So the answer is that 2 days is almost always sufficient, but it *might* take a little longer.
Plusnet Customer
Using FTTC since 2011. Currently on 80/20 Unlimited Fibre Extra.