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A BBC article I read last week suggests speeds on G Fast can be affected by wet weather.
That was the first I had heard of that. However today we have had just over half an inch of rain and my download speed has dropped by about 30% to around 135Mbps. Upload is unchanged at around 32.
So it seems there is something in the article.
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Got a link?
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One sentence towards the end of this.
BBC - 03 Jul 17
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Stroll down the page on this bbc link: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-40481561 as it been saying below:
G.fast's advantage is that it is cheaper to install as it does not require roads and pavements to be dug up since it can piggyback on existing cables.
However, the service can become degraded in wet weather conditions.
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U got it first than me! lol
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However, the service can become degraded in wet weather conditions.
This is the UK fgs, wet weather conditions are normal!
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The faster it goes, the fussier it becomes ........
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Seems a bit of a generic statement.
I don't think it's anything specific to g.fast, it can apply to any xDSL product if the circuit gets wet.
It doesn't mean that everytime it rains, every G.fast circuit will reduce in speed
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This is the UK fgs, wet weather conditions are normal!
In which case surely the headline should be "However, the service can improve in dry weather conditions".
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No rain since 01:50 and the speed is back to the previous level this morning.
Too early to read much into it on the basis of one wet day.
Keeping it in perspective, I was still getting faster speeds than Infinity 80/20!
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I suspect there's a dodgy joint somewhere letting in water.
Rain in the atmosphere will not cause G.fast speeds to drop.
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Should only affect speeds if a dodgy link - and is the poster talking about sync speeds?
Wet days people are more likely to be at home and using the Internet, rather than sat outside with a cold drink late into the evening trying to cool day after a hot day.
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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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