Hi all.
A couple in our village have just been moved over to BT Digital Voice. They live in a big old house with really thick walls. Their router is in the centre of the house and the WiFi and DECT signals only travel about one room in any direction. They need a phone in the study and also two phones upstairs, both areas which have no WiFi or DECT signal from the router.
I have a few questions. Firstly, do the Digital Voice Adapters connect to the hub using WiFi or DECT? If it's Wifi, will they work with a powerline wifi extender? If it's DECT, can I use a DECT extender to increase the range? (Any suggestions on good ones would be helpful).
There is a perfectly good set of wired phone extensions in the house, which no longer work as they are connected to the now-dead master socket. If I sever the connection to the master socket, can I connect the phone socket on the back of the router to the extension network and get all the extensions working again?
Any help or suggestions would be much appreciated!
If you simply connect the green socket on the hub to any phone socket after first removing the 2 incoming external wires on the master socket, you will be back to how you were.
Thanks for that. The property is not on fibre though, so the data connection is still coming through the copper wires, which does complicate things. I think I should still be able to get it to work though.
if still getting broadband from current master socket setup - FTTC- then you cannot disconnect the incoming openreach wiring to enable other sockets as that only works with FTTP
What I'm thinking of doing is disconnecting the extension wire inside the master socket, bring it out and terminate it with a new socket which I can connect with the green socket on the back of the router. That way the in-house extensions will be isolated from the incoming line. Does that sound feasible?
Yep, that sounds like a plan.
Thanks both, I will let you know how I get on.
As promised, an update. Unfortunately, what I though was the master socket in the kitchen, turned out to be just an extension disguised as a master socket! Which meant I could not relocate the hub there. Turns out the real master socket is in their loft (as is mine) and it's just not practical to locate the hub up there.
The customer has ordered (and received) a digital handset and an adapter. The digital handset does seem to have a reasonable range and works in the study. I haven't been around to check the range on the adapter yet, but I'm hoping I may be able to locate it in the corridor above the hub and then plug in a base unit and a couple of extension phones.
Are all the extensions star wired from the master socket in the loft or are they properly daisy chained and there is only one cable between the loft and kitchen sockets and then further cables to the other extension sockets?
If the latter, I would simply crimp the connections in the loft and replace the socket in the kitchen with a master socket and proceed with your original plan.
If the loft socket is cabled to more than one extension socket (star wired), you can still possibly make use of the spare wires in the cable to 'backwire' connections.
tbh I haven't ventured into the loft yet so I have no idea how the extensions are wired. Would this be feasible anyway with the line being FTTC and they don't want the hub in the attic? I think we'll see how the adapter works and then maybe explore other options