you need to report a phone fault from what you describe
I assume that the lights on the home hub change colour?
As its doing it on a regular basis now, then check your phone line for noise. If its quiet, then whatever is causing the disconnections is elsewhere in the higher frequency range.
Unfortunately, FTTC will be more susceptible to interference, because of its wide frequency utilisation, compared to ADSL.
I will do that later on in the week then. I had also powered down my whole house through the main switch on the fuse box in case any of my appliances were causing 'Rein' and noise was still there. There is also quite alot of dirt on the back of my master socket, which is obviously because there has never been a front cover over it (which has allowed said dirt into it) apart from where i hard wired an extension to my bedroom but that has since been removed.
I have attached a photo of what i mean. Sorry for the bad picture quality.
@Achildishperson12 wrote:
as mentioned before, there is a buzz. So this is what is causing the drop outs right??
Almost certain, as the buzz would only be the part of the fault that is affecting the audio band, so there is likely to be an issue at higher frequencies. The Openreach broadband engineer do have test equipment that can detect this.
It usually caused by line unbalance, that the BT line test cannot detect. This can result in noise being induced from other adjacent cable pairs.
@Achildishperson12 wrote:
Hi, may you please fill me on what audio bands mean in telephone networks? (unless that was just a typo for broadband). And what do higher frequencies mean?
Audio is the part you can hear on your phone, and are below 25KHz and are not used for broadband. Other noise and interference would not be audible as its above that range.
As you can see from the picture below, your broadband extends to high frequencies, so there is a lot of potential for interference pickup. Yours would be the VDSL spectrum.