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Oh I get it No you don't.
Yes I do. This is the post I was referring to, not some theoretical discussion involving Fourier lower speeds give lower attenuation - which is totally wrong.
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lower speeds give lower attenuation - which is totally wrong.
Because the router measures against the frequencies available, some users may notice a very slight increase in attenuation if say moving from a fixed rate 512 kb connection up to 2Mb.
Higher frequencies such as those used to transmit faster speeds are more likely to be attenuated (higher frequencies = higher attenuation).
ADSL 2+ has an increased frequency spectrum, therefore an increased attenuation of around 3-4dB is not unusual. As a very rough guide a speed increase of 4Mb is said to increase the attenuation by 1dB.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband moderator but it does not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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ADSL 2+ has an increased frequency spectrum, therefore an increased attenuation of around 3-4dB is not unusual This is because the frequency range is doubled therefore the attenuation is also doubled.
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This is because the frequency range is doubled therefore the attenuation is also doubled. Ah, I see... so increasing the frequencies in use leads to higher attenuation, but lowering the frequencies in use doesn't lead to lower attenuation.
I'm most grateful for your insight.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband moderator but it does not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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This is because the frequency range is doubled therefore the attenuation is also doubled. Ah, I see... so increasing the frequencies in use leads to higher attenuation, but lowering the frequencies in use doesn't lead to lower attenuation.
I'm most grateful for your insight.
The frequencies are fixed, changed only by switching from ADSL to ADSL2+. Therefore the attenuation is fixed for ADSL and it is fixed for ADSL2+.
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The frequencies are fixed, changed only by switching from ADSL to ADSL2+. Therefore the attenuation is fixed for ADSL and it is fixed for ADSL2+. The available frequencies are fixed, which ones are actually used depends on the negotiated sync speed.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband moderator but it does not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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The frequencies are fixed, changed only by switching from ADSL to ADSL2+. Therefore the attenuation is fixed for ADSL and it is fixed for ADSL2+. The available frequencies are fixed, which ones are actually used depends on the negotiated sync speed.
The available frequencies are used to calculate the attenuation.
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The available frequencies are used to calculate the attenuation. No, the actual frequencies are used to measure the attenuation.
Calculation of the attenuation of a phone line possibly several kilometers long, with unknown properties, over a range of frequencies is not a practical proposition.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband moderator but it does not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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The available frequencies are used to calculate the attenuation. No, the actual frequencies are used to measure the attenuation.
Calculation of the attenuation of a phone line possibly several kilometers long, with unknown properties, over a range of frequencies is not a practical proposition.
The reported attenuation is a result of a calculation.
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The reported attenuation is a result of a calculation. Of course it is.
The attenuation at a range of frequencies is measured, a (probably weighted) average is calculated and the result given.
If certain frequencies, or a range thereof, aren't used then they don't provide an attenuation figure and don't contribute to the reported average.
The important point is that the individual attenuations for each frequency are measured, not calculated.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband moderator but it does not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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