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I've recently moved up to DSLmax/maxDSL/whatever, and my line noise is somewhat variable. It might be down to a strange aspect of my house wiring, but unfortunately it's something BT won't help me with. You see I've got two Master sockets.
The estate I live on is about 25 years old, and the phone cables come up from underground to a "British Telecommunications" little plastic box on the wall. This box then feeds out left & right to two sockets in the house. BT on 151 have no record of a second socket, and refuse to admit we even have a second socket, even though I tell them it's not an extension, since it isn't connected to the first one.
I'm wondering if the existance of this socket (which is an old style oblong socket, not a newer white plastic one) is causing problems with my line. Can anyone on here avise me?
cheers
Dave
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Unlikely that the old style oval box is causing any problems. You shouldn't have 2 master sockets, though. How many actual wires are connected inside these boxes ? Are they the NTL-5 type ones, with removable faceplates ?
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The socket is a DPA1184/A, and it's definitely a master socket, as there's circuitry in there. 4 wires connected. I have a jpg of it with the faceplate off, but no way of posting it on here.
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Register (or login) on our website and you will not see this ad.
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Why not upload it to tinypic.
IDNet Home Lite up to 8Mbps
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Nice link!
http://i15.tinypic.com/2ryhc41.jpg
Since my last posting I disconnected the wires and plugged the modem into the master socket & got my laptop online. SNR jumped from 18db/15.5db (Upstream/downstream) to 21db/15db, and the bitrate jumped from 2624 to 3135.
Does anyone know if this socket can be "converted" to a non-master socket? I guess if I report it to BT they'll just come along & remove it, leaving me with a hole in the wallpaper and no extension within reach of my PCs. But if I leave it, I'm not getting the full potential out of my ADSL connection.
Bummer.
Edited by lorisarvendu (Fri 02-Feb-07 08:29:41)
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that could easily be replaced with a standard extension socket, you can get a pre-filtered one or one with both ADSL and phone outputs from ADSLnation.com as well as Homebase etc.
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Whoa there ! The picture clearly shows a spark gap and a ring capacitor - it's a master socket, and replacing it with a slave could stop the phone from ringing. The OP needs to get a BT engineer in to sort it out. Best bet would be to request a regrade to a new master socket. Don't mention the fact that you currently have two - the engineer will sort that out, and you can run as many extensions as you like from the NTE5.
P.S. We're not BT engineers - most of them lurk in the "BT Wholesale Implemetation" forum.
Edited by deleted (Fri 02-Feb-07 09:40:44)
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Hi Zeb
What angle do you think I should take about requesting a new socket? I'm very cautious about phoning 151 because they always tell you they'll charge you loads of money if you waste their time. What reason do you reckon I can give for wanting a socket regrade?
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but its on an ADSL line and will have to have a filter, so the capacitor is not required.
As the other master will have the other components I don't see an issue.
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This is an issue that was recently debated in the forums, and I'm not sure anyone came up with a definitive answer. Your best bet is to talk to someone in BT Sales, who should be able to give you a quote for this work (if it is chargeable).
Yarwell is basically right - one master socket is enough, so you could replace one socket with a slave.
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