cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 
386 Views
Message 11 of 17

Re: FTTC DLM query

I just realised something I should have checked all the way back at the start of this, but didn’t think to check because the landline had just been repaired.
The phone is humming on a quiet line test. It’s not noisy enough to interfere with calls, but it’s not silent either.

It’s an old phone temporarily plugged into the master socket, not a dect by the way.

Fault reported….again.

I’m guessing it could well be why DLM hasn’t done anything to increase speeds.

0 Ratings
Reply
375 Views
Message 12 of 17

Re: FTTC DLM query

Indeed it could well be.

Possibly an earth contact fault causing the hum.

290 Views
Message 13 of 17

Re: FTTC DLM query

No nearer a solution after the latest Openreach visit sadly. 
The fault has apparently been detected as being 100+ metres beyond our street cabinet and is not easily repairable because of a collapsed/damaged duct.

A request for complete replacement of the offending cable has been made today, but I dread to think of the timescale involved with that. Potentially a road closure would be needed. The OR engineer certainly wasn’t prepared to make a guess.

A question please and me thinking out loud really. 

Given the cable from the cabinet to us is said to be perfect, is there anyway I can force a switch to digital voice despite it being copper from the cabinet? That would bypass the problem by cutting power to the offending cable wouldn’t it?

Failing that, should it drag on, I guess I could try to renegotiate a broadband only connection to achieve the same thing and switch the household to 100% mobile.

0 Ratings
Reply
276 Views
Message 14 of 17

Re: FTTC DLM query

The fault can't be on the 'E' side (beyond ) of the cabinet as that isn't carrying the broadband and thus DLM.

Scrap that. Yes, it could affect the 'D' side as well as there is a DC path through the cabinet.

If you moved to DV, there would no longer be a DC path through to the faulty E side, so yes, it should clear your fault.

 

0 Ratings
Reply
258 Views
Message 15 of 17

Re: FTTC DLM query

Thanks @licquorice

I’m pleased my thinking wasn’t totally wrong.

I think what I’ll do is live with it over Christmas to see if any repair eta appears, but as BT have just sent me the standard your service should be fixed now message I suspect I might not have any idea what’s happening going forward. I suppose I’ll have to mark it as not fixed and see.

If nothing acceptable is proposed, I can then discuss the options with BT retail from a stronger position.

As an aside, the engineer implied quite strongly that they are fed up with dealing with the neglected copper network. I can sympathise. I’ll be glad to see the back of it too. Sadly FTTP is only estimated for by Dec 2026 for us.

 

0 Ratings
Reply
197 Views
Message 16 of 17

Re: FTTC DLM query

It looks like BT are now aware that it’s an ongoing fault, so that’s a small positive.

I just received this.

We're sorry, but we need to do some more work to fix your fault. This means it'll be a bit longer before we can get your service up and running again.
We'll let you know as soon as we have more news for you.”

I’ll park this one for now and reassess in January.

0 Ratings
Reply
112 Views
Message 17 of 17

Re: FTTC DLM query

A small unexpected update.

24 hours after the email posted above, BT unilaterally marked the fault as fixed despite me saying it wasn’t.
Whether Openreach have any plans to fix it properly I have no idea. I’ve lost all means of tracking progress.

I still plan to wait until January before doing anything else.

0 Ratings
Reply