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Previously on "Any particular reason to go for Fibre v2 over regular Fibre?"

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  • darmstadt
    replied
    Don't bother unless you're going to cough up the extra price which your ISP will obviously do once this comes into effect, which hopefully it never does: Net neutrality: European Parliament votes in favour of 'two speed' internet (Wired UK)

    One of the most stupid things about this, apart from the whole aspect of it, is that telecoms providers are fully in support of it (more profits, natch) however it's those same telecoms companies who are constantly pushing you to use their 'over the wire media services' which all use a lot of bandwidth which will then cost you a lot more. Me, I'm digging out my old US Robotics 128k modem

    Leave a comment:


  • stek
    replied
    Originally posted by BolshieBastard View Post
    There's some important information frequently missed when talking about BT fttc.

    Your max speed will be determined by how far away your BT cabinet is from your home and whether you have copper twin or aluminium twin to the home.

    The further away from your home the cabinet is, the longer the copper \ ali twin will be which will slow down your speed considerably.

    If you are fortunate and your cabinet is no more than 50 metres, you should get the full 80mb download speed if using Infinity 2. Alternatively if you use Infinity 1, you'll get the capped 38mb.

    Further than 50m and you'll see a drop off in maximum download speed for each Infinity option. at about 600 - 700 metres, you be down to 50mb for Infinity 2.

    BT state cabinets usually accommodate about 220 line connections and each connection is rated to deliver 80mb max when all line connections are Infinity enabled. Im skeptical about that as Ive seen my speed deteriorate as the cabinet takes up more Infinity connections.

    BT are also aware of but do not acknowledge that as the cabinets get more Infinity connections, lines are subject to 'cross talk' type interference which can impact line speed. It needs to be understood this 'cross talk' interference is not interference from voice calls. Its from the fibre. BT are supposed to be working on a solution but as with most things, dont hold your breath.

    Have to say, Infinity 2 is quite good if not a little expensive when you add in the line rental although you can access BT's wifi network anywhere for free if you subscribe.

    Id bin the BT home hub and use a good 3rd party device router but before you do, make sure you enable the public sharing on the BT homehub so you can use the free wifi anywhere. Then, when you bin the BT homehub, you're no longer sharing part of your bandwidth because 3rd party routers dont support it (its not the guest network) but you can still use BT's free wifi anywhere.

    If you dont have a houseful of devices that connect to the net at the same time its impressive. If you have a couple of kids or young adults and lots of devices all connecting at the same time, you can have some impact on speed.

    Respect to those in the countryside who got pissed off with BT dragging their heels and installed their own fibre. Some of these are delivering a gigabyte download speed and makes even 300mb seem slow.
    Good post, but with residential you are always subject to contention. Still tempted by the 100Mb/s both ways uncontended I was offered for 260/mo +VAT, - still too dear. I wouldn't feel't benefit......

    Leave a comment:


  • BolshieBastard
    replied
    There's some important information frequently missed when talking about BT fttc.

    Your max speed will be determined by how far away your BT cabinet is from your home and whether you have copper twin or aluminium twin to the home.

    The further away from your home the cabinet is, the longer the copper \ ali twin will be which will slow down your speed considerably.

    If you are fortunate and your cabinet is no more than 50 metres, you should get the full 80mb download speed if using Infinity 2. Alternatively if you use Infinity 1, you'll get the capped 38mb.

    Further than 50m and you'll see a drop off in maximum download speed for each Infinity option. at about 600 - 700 metres, you be down to 50mb for Infinity 2.

    BT state cabinets usually accommodate about 220 line connections and each connection is rated to deliver 80mb max when all line connections are Infinity enabled. Im skeptical about that as Ive seen my speed deteriorate as the cabinet takes up more Infinity connections.

    BT are also aware of but do not acknowledge that as the cabinets get more Infinity connections, lines are subject to 'cross talk' type interference which can impact line speed. It needs to be understood this 'cross talk' interference is not interference from voice calls. Its from the fibre. BT are supposed to be working on a solution but as with most things, dont hold your breath.

    Have to say, Infinity 2 is quite good if not a little expensive when you add in the line rental although you can access BT's wifi network anywhere for free if you subscribe.

    Id bin the BT home hub and use a good 3rd party device router but before you do, make sure you enable the public sharing on the BT homehub so you can use the free wifi anywhere. Then, when you bin the BT homehub, you're no longer sharing part of your bandwidth because 3rd party routers dont support it (its not the guest network) but you can still use BT's free wifi anywhere.

    If you dont have a houseful of devices that connect to the net at the same time its impressive. If you have a couple of kids or young adults and lots of devices all connecting at the same time, you can have some impact on speed.

    Respect to those in the countryside who got pissed off with BT dragging their heels and installed their own fibre. Some of these are delivering a gigabyte download speed and makes even 300mb seem slow.

    Leave a comment:


  • aoxomoxoa
    replied
    Originally posted by Boo View Post
    How much are you paying may I ask ? Is it a business or residential service ?

    Boo
    £38/mth plus £8/mth for a Vonage package. Works out about the same as I previously paid for slow broadband with EE plus BT charges, but a lot faster.

    It's a residential package. Highly recommended if you have the chance to use them.

    Leave a comment:


  • Boo
    replied
    Originally posted by aoxomoxoa View Post
    Not wanting to brag, but I'm out in the sticks and am paying for a 10 Mbps synchronous service with Gigaclear, and typically getting speeds in the region of 300 Mbps. Just saying.
    How much are you paying may I ask ? Is it a business or residential service ?

    Boo

    Leave a comment:


  • VectraMan
    replied
    Originally posted by Scrag Meister View Post
    I'm waiting for FTTP to get 330Mbps, sadly BT stopped taking orders and cranked up the pricing to stupid levels.

    Currently running 76Mb, with my Ultra HD TV for Ultra HD BT Sport channel.
    Apparently they're using 29Mb, which is impressive, and twice as much as Netflix UHD.

    Review of BT ULTRA HD Service | Increase Broadband Speed

    So with FTTP you'll be able to have 11 Ultra HD TVs all watching Ultra HD BT Sport. Or 55 HD TVs all watching Netflix in HD.

    Let me know when you do this as I'd like to come round and see.

    Leave a comment:


  • Scrag Meister
    replied
    I'm waiting for FTTP to get 330Mbps, sadly BT stopped taking orders and cranked up the pricing to stupid levels.

    Currently running 76Mb, with my Ultra HD TV for Ultra HD BT Sport channel.

    Leave a comment:


  • aoxomoxoa
    replied
    Not wanting to brag, but I'm out in the sticks and am paying for a 10 Mbps synchronous service with Gigaclear, and typically getting speeds in the region of 300 Mbps. Just saying.

    Leave a comment:


  • VectraMan
    replied
    Originally posted by d000hg View Post
    It turned on yesterday and I measured 36/9 via my homeplug, which is pretty much the "up to" top end. And an impressive 25/8 on my iPad via Wifi.
    Why is that impressive? My cheapo Android tablet has no trouble working at 140Mb on WiFi.

    Leave a comment:


  • d000hg
    replied
    Anyhow I went for BT Infinity with various vouchers and cashback offers getting me £150 back, and it was on offer at £10/month which seemed OK.

    It turned on yesterday and I measured 36/9 via my homeplug, which is pretty much the "up to" top end. And an impressive 25/8 on my iPad via Wifi.

    Leave a comment:


  • d000hg
    replied
    I don't think so, their checker told me both services are available based on my post code and phone number (as did BT's). We're city centre a few hundred yards from a Fibre cabinet.

    If they all gave projected upload speeds prominently it would be nice though... some don't seem to tell you this at all.

    Leave a comment:


  • VectraMan
    replied
    I wonder if you live in an area with only v1 available that is the best upload speed you get, whereas because what I have is actually v2 (the modem syncs at 67Mb at the moment, though I've seen it say 80Mb) but restricted to 38Mb I get the full upload.

    I thought I was going to be getting 10Mb upload, which I'm sure I read somewhere, so nearly 20 was a surprise. Don't tell them in case it's a mistake and they slow mine down.

    Leave a comment:


  • d000hg
    replied
    Unlimited Fibre features
    Up to 38Mb download speeds
    Up to 1.9Mb upload speeds

    Unlimited Fibre Extra features
    Up to 76Mb download speeds
    Up to 19.5Mb upload speeds

    I might have to phone and check, it would be pretty much a deal-breaker.

    Leave a comment:


  • VectraMan
    replied
    Originally posted by d000hg View Post
    Getting an estimated upload speed is not always that easy, but I've noticed a couple of providers quoting "up to" 1-2Mb upload on the 38Mb "fibre v1" service.

    Is this some deliberate hobbling of the service so that people who want decent upload are forced to go for the top-tier 76Mb option?

    https://www.plus.net/home-broadband is one... you'd not be impressed if you took Fibre as a developer and your upload still sucked.
    That's what I'm on and:





    Unless they've started doing it since I signed up a year ago I can't see why that'd be the case.

    Leave a comment:


  • d000hg
    replied
    Getting an estimated upload speed is not always that easy, but I've noticed a couple of providers quoting "up to" 1-2Mb upload on the 38Mb "fibre v1" service.

    Is this some deliberate hobbling of the service so that people who want decent upload are forced to go for the top-tier 76Mb option?

    https://www.plus.net/home-broadband is one... you'd not be impressed if you took Fibre as a developer and your upload still sucked.

    Leave a comment:

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