Do you have a filtered faceplate?
Running a VDSL service on an extension and/or on a master socket that does not have a filtered faceplate or if a standard socket does not have the bell wire removed can certainly impact the sync speeds.
To quantify this, I have an old style BT master socket, the type without a filtered faceplate. Initially the bell wire was connected (the orange wire) and my VDSL was running on an extension elsewhere in the house.
Since cleaning up the wiring, remove the bell wire and plugging the modem into the master socket I gained about 8Mbps. I actually also gained another 2Mbps just by switch out the supplied modem for a highly stable TP-Link TD-W9970. I even noticed about 1Mbps gain just for using a very short flat RJ11 modem 26 AWG cable.
So there are plenty of small wins IF you have the old style socket. If you have a filtered faceplate then of course the gains are limited.
P.S. just this week I realised my home plugs that I use caused quite a bit of interference. I have always been on fast path, but since using the home plugs over the last year, I was switched to interleaved, loosing about 5Mbps. This week I stopped using them, SNR Margin is now rock solid and I suspect I will be back on Fast Path soon, with a nice speed bump.
Edited by oldskool (Tue 11-Feb-20 19:25:28)