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Does anyone have Sky 900MB Fibre connection?
Recently Full Fibre has been made available to me, and I'm debating with either EE or Sky. I wanted EE 1.6 Gbps but I can't have TV with that so that I resorted to 900MB with TV. But EE has less channels than Sky and with Sky most packages are rolling contracts which means you can cancel at any time (for e.g. TNT Sports).
Now I'm gravitating towards Sky with the Entertainment Package, Sky Sports, TNT Sports, 4K pack which will get me Sky Sports UHD whereas with EE you can only get Sky Sports channel via NOWTV which sucks in quality.
EE 900Mb + full package is coming up to £115.99 no upfront
Sky 900Mb + full package is coming up to £125 + £20 upfront (but the addons are rolling which means you can cancel it anytime, for e.g. TNT and Sky Sports can be cancelled when there is no football games on and also the 4K addon)
But the only concern I have is the download speed of Sky. I know they both use OpenReach network, but has anyone seen issues with Sky as opposed to EE/BT?
Sky guaranteed speed is 600Mb - https://i.imgur.com/8ucKIqP.png
EE Guaranteed speed is 700Mb - https://i.imgur.com/HdYoRNP.png
What would you recommend? Are they both the same? Should I go with whichever will save me more money?
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EE 900Mb + full package is coming up to £115.99
Sky 900Mb + full package is coming up to £125 I really can't believe people are stupid enough to pay these prices per month
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EE 900Mb + full package is coming up to £115.99
Sky 900Mb + full package is coming up to £125 I really can't believe people are stupid enough to pay these prices per month
During Football games it will cost that much, when football is off, it will be just the price of the broadband which is around £60 (for Sky only)
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What would you recommend? Are they both the same? Should I go with whichever will save me more money?
From the Broadband point of view, they are essentially the same. Both use the Openreach 1000/115 service. The service providers have their own backhaul networks, but both are well managed, and they provide similar services (dynamic IPv4+IPv6). Possibly EE will include 4G/5G failover, I don't know if it's included in the package you're looking at.
However, it sounds like you're more interested in the content than the broadband, so I think you should make your decision based on the content packages - the content that you want, at a price you're happy to pay - given that both will be fine broadband.
If you want to save a bit more money then you could consider 500M or 300M, which would be plenty for that content.
The other approach would be to buy a broadband package from any supplier (gigabit is in the £43-£55 price range) and build your own content on top from the likes of Netflix, Now, AppleTV etc - but if you have specific sports requirements that may not work.
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What would you recommend? Are they both the same? Should I go with whichever will save me more money?
The other approach would be to buy a broadband package from any supplier (gigabit is in the £43-£55 price range) and build your own content on top from the likes of Netflix, Now, AppleTV etc - but if you have specific sports requirements that may not work.
Good point and it was something i was going to do some quick napkin maths but the sky website crashed for me last night but its something RiDER07 should look into
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What would you recommend? Are they both the same? Should I go with whichever will save me more money?
From the Broadband point of view, they are essentially the same. Both use the Openreach 1000/115 service. The service providers have their own backhaul networks, but both are well managed, and they provide similar services (dynamic IPv4+IPv6). Possibly EE will include 4G/5G failover, I don't know if it's included in the package you're looking at.
However, it sounds like you're more interested in the content than the broadband, so I think you should make your decision based on the content packages - the content that you want, at a price you're happy to pay - given that both will be fine broadband.
If you want to save a bit more money then you could consider 500M or 300M, which would be plenty for that content.
The other approach would be to buy a broadband package from any supplier (gigabit is in the £43-£55 price range) and build your own content on top from the likes of Netflix, Now, AppleTV etc - but if you have specific sports requirements that may not work.
One difference I just found is that with EE, you can plug your 3rd party router directly into the ONT and enter PPOE username and password and you are good to go. With Sky it's DHCP Option 61 which my 3rd party router doesn't have. Do you know if Sky router has a bridge mode/modem mode where I can then use my 3rd party router?
FYI: I use the Omada hardware, router is ER707-M2.
About your second point of buying the broadband and build up my content on top of that. Do you mean going to the website, ordering the broadband then adding addons to it? And see how much in total it comes to? Or some other ways?
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One difference I just found is that with EE, you can plug your 3rd party router directly into the ONT and enter PPOE username and password and you are good to go. With Sky it's DHCP Option 61 which my 3rd party router doesn't have. Do you know if Sky router has a bridge mode/modem mode where I can then use my 3rd party router?
There would be no point in Sky offering a bridge/modem mode, because it would simply pass the ethernet frames through, and your router would still have to do DHCP with the same settings.
However, upgrading to a more capable router is not a big outlay, compared to the monthly sums you're talking about.
You could also consider a router plus separate wifi access points (ideally cabled back to the router) for much better wifi speed and coverage.
About your second point of buying the broadband and build up my content on top of that. Do you mean going to the website, ordering the broadband then adding addons to it? And see how much in total it comes to? Or some other ways?
No, I mean buying plain FTTP broadband from any provider you like, and then buying separate "over the top" services which run over the Internet.
That is, you subscribe directly to Netflix, Now TV, AppleTV, Amazon Prime, DisneyPlus, ad-free itvX ... whichever combination has the content you want. Generally you're talking £6-£12 per month per service.
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With Sky it's DHCP Option 61 which my 3rd party router doesn't have.
Most of Sky's customers can connect with nothing more than DHCP-V6 Prefix delegation (PD).
If your router supports this turn it on and see if it authenticates.
Less than 20% of their customers need to use DHCP Option 61.
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One difference I just found is that with EE, you can plug your 3rd party router directly into the ONT and enter PPOE username and password and you are good to go. With Sky it's DHCP Option 61 which my 3rd party router doesn't have. Do you know if Sky router has a bridge mode/modem mode where I can then use my 3rd party router?
There would be no point in Sky offering a bridge/modem mode, because it would simply pass the ethernet frames through, and your router would still have to do DHCP with the same settings.
However, upgrading to a more capable router is not a big outlay, compared to the monthly sums you're talking about.
You could also consider a router plus separate wifi access points (ideally cabled back to the router) for much better wifi speed and coverage.
About your second point of buying the broadband and build up my content on top of that. Do you mean going to the website, ordering the broadband then adding addons to it? And see how much in total it comes to? Or some other ways?
No, I mean buying plain FTTP broadband from any provider you like, and then buying separate "over the top" services which run over the Internet.
That is, you subscribe directly to Netflix, Now TV, AppleTV, Amazon Prime, DisneyPlus, ad-free itvX ... whichever combination has the content you want. Generally you're talking £6-£12 per month per service.
Yes I have an enterprise grade router which will handle of the DHCP stuff. I just want to connect my own router directly to the ONT and my router will manager DHCP, firewall, etc. This is my current config - https://i.imgur.com/uD0geP9.png
So when it comes to coverage, my whole house is wired with Wireless Access Points via Ethernet cable, so I've got that covered.
And your second point, I don't need those services, all I need is the Sports channels, so I guess in the long run it will be much cheaper with SKY than EE, even though I will have a double NAT issue with Sky router and my own.
Thanks for your response.
Edited by RiDER07 (Thu 28-Mar-24 10:39:03)
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With Sky it's DHCP Option 61 which my 3rd party router doesn't have.
Most of Sky's customers can connect with nothing more than DHCP-V6 Prefix delegation (PD).
If your router supports this turn it on and see if it authenticates.
Less than 20% of their customers need to use DHCP Option 61.
This is my router's Internet settings, https://i.imgur.com/MddqBUG.png
Would this ^ suffice? Or would I need to add Prefix Delegation Size and other options?
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