Hello
We live in a McCarthy Stone apartment in a block of 31. Several similar blocks round the country are being charged tens of thousands of pounds by the freeholder to replace all the equipment for the front door and care system because the of the forthcoming digital voice upgrade. What we would like to know is whether a full replacement of all the equipment is necessary or if there are simple adjustments and bits of equipment we could use to make the present items work on the new digital system. Is anyone able to give us any advice please?
Welcome to this user forum for BT Retail phone and broadband customers.
This may help, as there is a section on alarms https://landlinesgo.digital/
Its likely that your existing system may need upgrading for it to work. But only if it needs to connect to the phone network to make or receive phone calls.
If its just a stand-alone system, then it should not be affected.
The change to digital voice for BT customers requires nothing more than changing the point at which the telephone instrument plugs in , no longer at the wall socket , but into the broadband router , so the obvious question, are you a BT broadband customer ? , if you are , when invited to do so , you take your telephones cord , remove it from the Openreach wall socket , and plug it into the SH2 ( broadband router ) phone socket , that’s it , job done , if you have an earlier version of the BT Hub , you are sent a new router that does have a phone socket built in.
It seems your freeholder is doing work that they can charge you for , and obfuscating by linking this with the change to an IP telephone system ( in BT case , this is called Digital Voice ) , if you are with BT , and there is no reason all residents will be BT customers , no doubt some of your fellow ‘residents’ will use other companies like Sky , Talk Talk , etc. and will still be liable for the same charge, that in itself shows the charge is nothing to do with ‘BT’ .
…obviously if they are upgrading security, door locks , care systems ( whatever they entail ) it has nothing to do with BT , presumably you could, if you choose , not have a ‘landline’ at all and only use a mobile phone , ask them , if you would still be charged for these upgrades if that were the case, the answer ( no doubt ) will be yes , you still have to pay .
If you don't already have one you should form a residents association to liaise with your freeholder on this. You may need to employ suitably qualified engineers to assess the current systems & what needs to be done (if anything) to make them compatible. No one here can answer in other than the most general terms.