I don't know if I just got somewhat unlucky with my FTTP build, but in 2 years I've had 2 major issues where it has knocked our entire village of 30-40 odd houses offline for over a week.
The FTTP line follows the same route as the FTTC line to the FTTC cabinet, however in 2 stretches they installed poles for the FTTP instead of using the ducting all the way like the FTTC. I guess it was at capacity or blocked. The FTTP line then zig zags across each side of the road several times.
The first time, a car hit the pole and knocked it out. The 2nd time apparently rats chewed the line. Although you'd get the same even if that was the route of the FTTC.
I don't know if it's standard practice or technical reasons, but they used the same cable underground, then up overhead instead of having each section isolation with a track node on the pole where it exits the ground. That then meant when the cable was damaged, they had to organise traffic management etc instead of just being able to replace the underground part. That then meant it took ages to get fixed. There's track nodes there, just they are 1 pole further along, after it's hopped the road from underground.
I do wonder if there's an economic point where OR will redesign a portion of the network to save future costs, but who knows.
Edited by zebb_edi (Thu 02-Jan-25 10:15:38)