I spent some time today re-setting Digital Voice phones. No problem with broadband, but phones were not able to make or receive calls. I had to reset hub. Is this a common occurrence?
So much more enjoyable than boring old copper lines.
It used to be a very common occurrence on the old Broadband Talk service which was IP based.
Whenever BT network changes were made, on any part of the routing, the virtual path was lost, and the only way to get it back was to restart the home hub which created a new routing.
I cannot imagine Digital Voice being any different, but it will be interesting to see.
Hi @Geoff765
I had a short downtime on my phones yesterday, I put it down to a blip on the BT servers. I simply did nothing and it returned after a few minutes.
It used to be a very common occurrence on the old Broadband Talk service which was IP based.
Whenever BT network changes were made, on any part of the routing, the virtual path was lost, and the only way to get it back was to restart the home hub which created a new routing.
I cannot imagine Digital Voice being any different, but it will be interesting to see.
@Keith_Beddoe - That's terrible if true. What a palaver! Things should become less complicated over time, not more so. It's like Freeview needing to be constantly re-tuned as channel frequencies and signal variables change, it's distressing, confusing and an absolute chore for many elderly or vulnerable people, but at least for the former they put a message on the screen in advance telling you to do it. Surely BT could send alerts to people's phones for the same purpose? For subscribers to lose their phone service without warning until they re-tune the hub is unacceptable.
Lets hope its more resilient and there is some form of monitoring of end user connections.
Broadband Talk worked via centralised servers in a BT London building. When the connection path went down there was no user indication, and calls reverted to the normal PSTN path, resulting in people being charged for the full cost of calls, instead of the cheap/free broadband calls.
I suspect this is one of the main reasons the service was discontinued.