Hello there, I'm going to try and be as detailed as possible, so sorry about the length of this question.
Moved into new build, using Full fibre 900mb.. Next to the ONT is 5 ethernet ports, (even though there's only 3 upstairs) these were annoyingly not labeled.. after trial and error I found the port that matched my bedroom. I connected it up, and wired my xbox, getting all excited to download games fast, and play with very low latency.. however, the wire connection keeps dropping out then popping up every 5 seconds, as if I was removing the wire then plugging it in... I tried several wires so I know its not them. Has anyone got any ideas? I also tried moving the Hub upstairs into my room and wiring from the actual hub.. but that degraded everyone's speed and put my xbox into strict nat type.. although it wasn't dropping out every 5 seconds, it definitely wasnt usable...
Thanks in advance
Sounds as though there is a dodgy punch down somewhere in the structured wiring. If it was done properly, it should have been tested and certified afterwards. I bet that doesn't happen in domestic builds very often.
I agree with @WSH sounds like a problem with the wiring. DO you have a long ethernet cable you could run from the router to your xbox to test it by eliminating the installed Ethernet? Alternatively can you move the xbox down close to the SH2 to carry out a test with a short Ethernet cable?
It's worth buying an RJ45 tester - they are only about £10 to buy - it will check there is signal continuity on each of the eight wires. You could also try unscrewing the faceplate and seeing if any of the eight wires are not fully punched down.
Yeah, you could be right with that.. is it something BT could help with? Whether I have to pay or not..
Your internal wiring is entirely your responsibility and nothing to do with BT.
I'll look into this.. cheers for that mate
Yeah I figured.. do you know who would be best to contact to fix? I'm not very versed in this, would a electrician be able to sort it do you think? I know it's data and not spark.. but same principle?
Not really, sparkies are generally not good at data wiring although they are probably getting better at it as it becomes more common.
You might find a suitable tradesman in your local paper.