Yes you can use a BT business hub on a residential line to make use of the bridge mode, however, I'm not sure that it will have the Digital Voice capability of the residential hub.
Looking at the specifications on the BT Business direct site for the BT Business Smart Hub 2 found here it does say
"BT Smart Hub 2 comes with 2 DECT antennas and integrated support for Ultrafast broadband (G.Fast and FTTH) as well as Complete Wi-Fi compatibility."
On the BT Business Broadband packages website it does say it includes a Smart Hub and Digital phone line. I think the only difference is the firmware and the Smart Hub 2's are hardware wise identical. It's a real shame the 'modem only' mode isn't available for the residential Smart Hub 2's...
Hmm, even if it is DV compatible, I'm not sure it would be when in bridge mode as the IP layer won't be accessible.
@licquorice wrote:
Hmm, even if it is DV compatible, I'm not sure it would be when in bridge mode as the IP layer won't be accessible.
Bridging only means that the public IP address appears on the interface, and there is no NAT taking place, just like a modem. There is still an IP path to the gateway, so it may still work.
Can't see how the IP layer will be accessible, surely in bridge mode the IP layer is just passed through, the public IP address only appears on the router WAN port. A modem can't see the IP layer.
@licquorice wrote:
Can't see how the IP layer will be accessible, surely in bridge mode the IP layer is just passed through, the public IP address only appears on the router WAN port. A modem can't see the IP layer.
To be honest, I am not sure, as TCP/IP is something I never got involved with, X25 was my specialism, a much more robust communications protocol, always activity, even on disconnected interfaces.
The Smart Hub would still be able to "see" the network and the ATM layer, which I suspect that DV uses, as that is the only way the priority tagging can be done. It was certainly the case with Broadband Talk, as it was possible to view the config on the early Home Hub 1s.
Thinks of course, may have moved on from there.
It won't, there is no ATM and DV is VOIP in any case. In bridge mode the hub is acting purely as a modem, converting DSL to Ethernet, all the higher layers are dealt with the router.
@licquorice wrote:
It won't, there is no ATM and DV is VOIP in any case. In bridge mode the hub is acting purely as a modem, converting DSL to Ethernet, all the higher layers are dealt with the router.
So the ATM layer is no longer used, ATM carried over the SDH network was the "in" thing at the time I was working, but that was on the old DSLAMs. I suppose its now optical all of the way into the SDH network. Anyway, the only way to see if DV works, is to try a business hub.
My DV line activates tomorrow which is exciting. I've ordered a business hub off eBay so I will post back here once it's arrived and connected.