|
General Chat This forum is for general topics and chat type threads. |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
23 Aug 19, 10:00 AM |
#1
|
Relaxing at the Grand Floridian
Join Date: Sep 17
|
bt fiber
This may seem a stupid question but here goes
BT have installed fiber in our area does this run in conjuction with the old telephone lines and therefore their pricing tiers of standard broadband against fiber broadband being cheaper is correct,or do all the telephone lines all now have fiber and you would still get the benefit of fiber on standard broadband prices,there is fiber in our area to the exchange which is quite local to our houses then the signal runs on the old lines into the houses,my question is we are being charged for fiber broadband but our neighbour pays only standard broadband,is ours faster or are we both getting the broadband signal in the same way at the same speed etc but I am paying more for it?hope this makes sense |
23 Aug 19, 10:27 AM |
#2
|
|
Apprentice Imagineer
|
You’d only get fibre speeds if you pay the higher price. So if you wanted to keep paying the same price you wouldn’t really notice a difference in speed (maybe a small difference)
|
|
|
23 Aug 19, 10:32 AM |
#3
|
|
Imagineer
|
There are two types of fibre products, Fibre To The Cabinet and Fibre To The Home. FTTC is just using fibre to the streetside cabines and then copper wires to your home whereas FTTH is fibre all the way to your home. The latter is faster and tends to be at a higher costs.
BT usually only do FTTC so you won't notice any speed difference over copper to the cabinet unless you pay for the fibre product.
__________________
Next Trip Feb '24 Jun98 Apr99 Dec99 Apr00 Mar03 Jun/Jul04 Dec/Jan05/06 Jul06 Dec06 Jun/Jul08 Jun/Jul09 Jul/Aug11 Sep13 Jun/Jul14 Nov15 Sep16 Villa/BWV May18 Villa/BLT/AKL Sept19 Villa/AKL Feb/Mar20 AKL/SSR Sep22 AKL Apr/May 23 CS/CC/AKL Nov 23 SSR Feb/Mar 24 RR/BR |
|
|
23 Aug 19, 10:43 AM |
#4
|
Thread Starter
Relaxing at the Grand Floridian
Join Date: Sep 17
|
|
23 Aug 19, 10:55 AM |
#5
|
|
Apprentice Imagineer
|
|
|
|
23 Aug 19, 01:01 PM |
#6
|
Imagineer
Join Date: Mar 12
|
If your neighbour is still on the old "Dial Up" ADSL solution then they will have speeds up to 16Mpbs depending how far they are from the exchange and that has its own pricing. They will have copper from the exchange to the street cabinet and then copper from the cabinet to the house.
BT then have two FTTC offerings of up to 34mbps and 72mbps (speed depends on distance to the cabinet rather than exchange). This has the copper from the exchange to the cabinet replaced with fibre cable. It still uses the same copper from cabinet to the house. So, if they are on ADSL then they are on copper all the way back to the exchange and will have the speed that can provide. The price of ADSL can be the same or more than the cost of the lower speed FTTC. So they could be paying the same for slower speeds. |
23 Aug 19, 01:18 PM |
#7
|
|
Disney Cruise Line VIP!
|
Have you actually asked BT for a fibre connection?
Unless you've ordered it, you won't get it. Once you do order it, Openreach (they own the network of poles, holes and wires) will come out and change your connection in the cab (the green box by the side of the road) from a pair of copper wires to a new fibre connection). But you won't get fibre speeds unless you've ordered fibre, no matter what Openreach (not BT) have upgraded in your area.
__________________
30 cruises with DCL and counting ... |
|
|
23 Aug 19, 01:33 PM |
#8
|
Imagineer
|
Copper suits us fine.
Mostly we just download catch-up programmes onto Sky+. Didn't seem to do that any faster with fibre, maybe the limitation is the speed the Sky box can download. Depending on your purpose it might not be worth paying for fibre. We only pay £5 for unlimited downloading. (Plus £19.99 for the landline.) |
25 Aug 19, 03:29 PM |
#9
|
|
Stuck in the Tower of Terror
|
Bt is only fiber to the box so its not a true fiber optic connection, only virgin is able to do that,it is still copper from the exchange box to the house. now dependent on how far away you are from that box you will experiance atenuation (degradation of the signal ) the further away you are ,so slower speeds (this is why the never say you will get x only up to x.) then if there is bad weather the lines get wet and you get patchy internet again and crackly phone lines.
|
|
|
|
DIBB Savings |
AttractionTickets.com
Get £10 off each Disney Ticket with the code ATDIBB10 Get up to £50 off per room at Disney or Universal with the code DIBBHOTELS |
theDIBB Blog |
Guests can book their 2025 Hotel and Ticket package early to enjoy Free Dining &... Read More »
The iconic 1900 Park Fare restaurant is opening its doors once again at Disney’s Grand... Read More »
One of the the five worlds found in Epic Universe, How to Train Your Dragon... Read More »
|
theDIBB Menu |
Exchange Rates |
US Dollar Rates
Euro Rates |
DIBB Premium Membership |
Did you know you can help support theDIBB with Premium Membership? Check out this link for more information and benefits, such as... "No adverts on theDIBB Forums" Upgrade Now |