Hi ,
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You can make as many requests as you like , they do not form a part of any contract, they are requests than can and will be refused if unsafe or unreasonable as far as time spent completing that request.
So your requests are , ONT in a boarded loft , CSP fitted at height , but that’s all they are requests , BT ( and every other ISP that consumes Openreach products ) have no ‘right’ , in the same way you don’t , to dictate what Openreach will or won’t do , in effect you wasted your breath ‘telling’ BT this , and if the BT ‘guide’ explicitly said the installation will be exactly to your specifications, they shouldn’t have .
You make your request to the installer , TBH , if your requirements were passed onto an installer, that knew , even without visiting that your requests were not going to be acceptable, they may not have even turned up , why bother to travel if you know you won’t fit a CSP from the top of a ladder and that’s what the customer wants .
Boarded loft , so is this a proper room ( so has building regulations ? ) does it have a proper staircase with handrail to access it , is it fully boarded and properly lit ? , if all these conditions are not met the installer is quite within their rights to no enter that area , let alone fit any equipment in it .
CSP at height , the safety reason for CSP to be at a low lever trumps any aesthetic reason you may have for wanting it height ….in a nutshell your can’t insist that someone does something they consider to be unsafe , even if you don’t think it’s unsafe and even if the ‘order taker’ suggested that your requirements will be met.
However , contractors more so than direct labour, often will look to ‘drop’ unconventional or ‘demanding’ installations in favour of ‘vanilla’ installations that are quick and easy , ( and not have to contend with those that expect a ‘Savile Row’ suit for an ‘off the peg’ price ) ….if you haven’t cancelled, then the revisit should be an Openreach tech ( not another contractor ) , however even they may take the same stance and refuse your requests if they are genuinely unacceptable , or they may suggest the contractor was being difficult, and do as you require.
Customers do have choice in relation to the location of the ONT , provided it’s reasonable …..if a mutually agreed location cannot be found , then cancellation may be the only thing to do …..if ( as an example ) a customer wanted the ONT at the rear of the property when the the optical feed is at the front , and insists no external cable on wall ( or perhaps the property is terraced so no way to cable externally front to back ) then if that internal cable run would take hours ( and the householder hasn’t even cleared furniture from the walls ) then that is an unreasonable request, this example doesn’t even have any safety concerns it’s simply an unrealistic expectation of the amount of time that would be required …OR offer a more expensive installation ( that the ISP doubtless would pass on to the customer ) if they know their requirements are greater than most , would you be prepared to pay a premium for that ?
FYI , you can always run your own Ethernet cable from the acceptable ( from the installers point of view ) ONT location to your preferred router location.
Very strange my next door neighbour had his fibre installed yesterday znd the engineer was extremely helpful and he did a good job most of all he did not even try and strap the fibre cable on next door neighbour's gutter pipes ( which I obviously object .
What is so disappointing was the engineer wasn't keen in having a workable solution , other than find an excuse not to do the job , to add to this I even told him to follow the copper cable feed now and possibly comprises with CP box location near ground level ( just like my neighbour's location of CP
I do feel BT Openreach is employed 3rd party to do the job and BT 's name get dragged
No such company as BT Openreach.
Openreach won’t install CSP’s (what you call CP, which in Telecoms Jargon actually means Communications Provider) at height, i.e. at the eves.
It either goes at ground level or they take the Drop Wire directly into the attic and use an Internal CSP.
So can they either goes at ground level {where the power is available /Not sure how another enginner was able to do on my next door neifghbour`s was no probelm there } or beter still Can they take the Drop Wire directly into the attic and use an Internal CSP- I have seen other BT customers had this done -hence I asked the same .
I’m not sure this is the silver bullet you think it is , an internal CSP ‘may’ get around the CSP at low level , and avoid the drop cable attaching at height and running down the wall to a low level CSP , but you still face the potential problem of loft access ( if that’s where you would want the internal CSP ) , plus AFAIK, internal CSP’s won’t necessarily be carried by every installation technician….and finally an external CSP is preferred ( from Openreach’s point of view ) as it’s a convenient place to test , obviously if the CSP is internal access is required inside the premises to perform the same test ,
as already stated , much depends on the individual that arrives to do the job , some ( not all ) contractors , who are paid on how many jobs they complete are less likely to spend ‘extra’ time doing a job , Openreach techs don’t get paid the same way , so ( to a large extent ) a job takes as long as it takes , they don’t ‘suffer’ financially.