For several years my home has been in the countryside in England and our phone line has therefore been an old one that hasn't been upgraded in a long while. Our broadband speed started out at about 5Mbps and sometimes dropped down to about 2.. Today it is at 20Mbps with no money spent or new lines installed.. Here's the epic saga of how!
If you have a fibre broadband connection then this post might not help you much, but if you are like me and stuck with a standard telephone line for your web connection then maybe this will change your internet experience for the better.
This all started about 18 months ago when our broadband connection started to fail. We had been told that we would only get about 5-6Mbps on our line - even though it was rated for 20Mbps - due to the dated nature of the system. Others in the area were getting less than 1Mbps in some cases so we thought that 5-6 was OK. In the process of debugging the disconnections we eventually learned, after calling out system engineers about 12 times, that there were numerous faults on our line that don't show up when making phone calls but which hugely effect the possible internet speed the line can handle.
If it weren't for the fact that I am a system engineer and use the web a lot, I probably wouldn't have bothered to push to have this properly investigated and I am sure that most home users of the web don't know enough about the technology to even know they should be pushing to have such issues resolved.
The British Telecom engineers visited many times - often totally contradicting each other and in one case storming out in a rage fit!! However, we eventually learned that:
- A junction in one of the telephone poles was broken and needed replacing.
- The local telephone exchange is really old and not cared for much - so the technology was not optimal and cables were even loose in there!
Eventually - 18 months later, we now have the fastest broadband connection ever (for us) and so far it is working very well.
This cost us nothing more than our time to persist and work with the engineers to resolve the problem. I did learn in the process that the British phone network is terribly run and that the various corporate entities involved are designed to give the impression of offering competition, but in fact they are mostly owned by BT. Some of them, on the phone, would even make disparaging comments about BT as if they were a competitor to them and yet I later learned that BT owns those companies too! lol.
Anyway, the lesson here is - if your broadband connection is crappy and you have a standard phoneline then make sure you explore the option of having an engineer check the line for voltage anomalies and see if you can get a 'lift and shift' done - which is where your line will be routed differently inside the local exchange, possibly eliminating problems that cannot be solved any other way!
Cheers!
Wishing you well,
Ura Soul
Buy My T-Shirts, Gifts & Other Clothing Here.
I worked for a telephone company for 2 years as a tech support representative. And my area of expertise was DSL connections as I had to troubleshoot and fix them over the phone... fun, fun... NOT! But a majority of the time is was due to old lines, bad signal to noise ratio, attenuation, and loop distance. When a technician would be dispatched to the field, they'd change the port the customer was receiving service through and sometimes it worked for a few days. Most of the time though the consensus was to replace the lines in the ground which wasn't financially viable for the telephone company.
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I can imagine that would not be much fun, yes! In my case the distance is under half a mile from the exchange and other things had tested OK too. One engineer did say that some work was needed that would involve digging up the road and the report went 'missing' from British Telecom's system.. They tried to claim that it had never existed except that I had already been forwarded a copy of it from the ISP at my request ;)
I am still quite surprised at how untrustworthy the management appear to be there.
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i feel your pain. i lived in the Orkney islands for a while of the tip of Scotland and the ISP was shockingly slow compared to the 350mb line i have now in Manchester.
Good article buddy. upvoted n followed.
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350Mbps? What sorcery is this? :)
I don't even know what I'd do with all that!
thanks for your support. followed back.
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Virgin Media business line. it keeps a family of 6 happy but i got it more so for the static ip so i can stay connected to my off site server, saves a lot of time when the ip randomly changes.
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Ah ok, yes - good idea. I used DynIP in the past to get around the issue, but if you have 6 users on the network then that makes sense, for sure.
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I recently had internet connectivity/speed issues. It can be so frustrating. Thankfully, now it is fixed. I'm glad your speed is up to par now. It makes life on Steemit so much more pleasant :)
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Thanks - yes, everything is more fun! :)
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Beautiful/post shearing thanks my vote
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This post has received a 53.33 % upvote from @upgoater thanks to: @ura-soul.
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Been there done that; I am in metro Australia, location of course is private, or why be on the block chain? Anyway, copper telephone lines are everywhere most are 50+ years old and work OK with analogue telephone but with ADSL it is a different story. Distance from the exchange is critical; if you are a long way from the exchange bad luck, forget Netflix!
Now along comes a Labor Government (which love to borrow money) and plans a nationwide fibre optic network (The NBN). Super expensive, all on borrowed money and National debt is already too high. The plan was fibre to the home.
Change of Government now we get fibre to the node - end of your street. I am awaiting new service, but it comes at a cost . The promise is speed up to 100 Mb/sec. Cost $100AUD/month +modem etc. Too high IMHO compared with our Asian neighbours. Experience with what we pay for mobile (cell phone) network is not something that should be repeated with NBN. But huge debt is built in so consumers must pay - plus tax of course!
But when all is said and done however this an essential service.
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