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Hi
Fibre broadband (FTTC) will shortly be available in my area & I was wondering if/how to prepare for this.
Currently my router is connected to an extension socket off the master socket.
I would prefer to have it connected to the master socket but as is usual, due to the location of the master socket this is not feasible.
Would it be OK to connect the router to the master socket & then, using powerline adaptors, connect my PC to it that way?
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Connecting the PC via Ethernet would be best, but the 500 or faster HomePlug devices can cope with FTTC type speeds There are faster devices but not had chance to test their throughput e.g. Devolo 1200 with AC wifi at £150
The more reasonable £50 devices without Wi-Fi should suffice, but with plans to up the speed of FTTC if you are near to the maximum estimates consider homeplugs a stop-gap or buy the more expensive stuff.
With HomePlug and VDSL2 sharing such a similar radio band might also be worth ensuring the phone line is kept away from the mains wiring as much as possible.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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Thanks.
So I'd be better routing an ethernet cable from the router at the master socket to the room where my PC resides. Would 20 metres of ethernet cable incur much loss.Then of course there's phones to supply in two rooms. What would be the best solution. Do you know of any other source of info including diagrams of cable routing options?
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You may want to investigate an engineer installation for your FTTC rather than a self install - all depends on our ISP - but BT can come out and install a fibre extension where your computer is as part of the install - for no extra charge I think
Regards
Sunil
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Yes, the more I read it seems I'm worrying unnecessarily. It seems that many ISPs will move the master socket to where it's required when the fibre goes live.
Thanks
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20 metres of CAT5e will incur no loss. Cat5e can manage Gigabit over 100m of cable and would represent the best solution.
Perfect world -
1. CAT5e socket at each end and use infrastructure cable
2. Then use simple short patch cable to connect cables
RJ45 socket the sort of faceplate you would use, back boxes for wall mounting are available. Copper cable CAT5e solid core copper should be used between the sockets. Krone tool for connecting cable to the wiring blocks.
In terms of instructions just match the colour scheme of the connection blocks on the socket, or if you want to do a quick job or temporary test then tool less connectors like RJ45 Gigabit Connector at £6 each are worth adding to the toolbox.
If you need to colour match your Ethernet cable for d�cor reasons then people like BlackBox do different colours http://www.blackbox.co.uk/gb-gb/fi/1234/11407/GigaBa...
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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Thanks for that. Maybe I'll just wait until it's live & have the engineer do it.
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The engineer WILL NOT do you an Ethernet extension, if you get an engineer install (which the majority are NOT) then a data extension from the master socket can be added.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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Is that not the often mentioned Data Extension Kit?
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It is, and its just a dedicated phone extension from the new master socket faceplate, nothing fancy, just you get someone else to hammer in the cable clips, and ISP may charge for install rather than do it free. Cost to them is £50 for no engineer install or £99 with engineer.
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The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband staff member. It may not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
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A phone extension only? Now I'm getting confused. I wouldn't need a 'phone' extension - I already got those. But I understand that with fibre the router/modem must be connected to the master socket so I would need a data extension. But you say a Data Extension Kit is just a dedicated phone extension.
I'm sorry, I seem to have misunderstood all I've learned today.
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It extends the VDSL signal from the master to the new location. That is before the modem converts the VDSL signals into usable Ethernet format.
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M H C
taurus excreta cerebrum vincit
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Ah, I see. So I'll just get a sufficient length of CAT5e ethernet cable, plug one end into the master socket, take the other end to my office and connect it to the fibre socket on the router/modem and take from there?
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Well, that is bring out a cable from the master socket to a RJ45 socket & plug the patch lead into that.
Thanks for your help.
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The router/modem doesn't have to be connected to the master socket when connected to Fibre. It will work perfectly well on a properly installed phone extension.
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No, I guess all that's needed is to run a ethernet cable from the master box to my preferred location of the modem/router.
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