adslmax,
I was simply wondering how you'd identified that EMI coming from the Billion's power-supply brick was the problem. Did you, for example, draw your conclusion based on a test using an AM radio, as briefly described by a contributor earlier in this topic?
As someone who's now planning to get an 8800NL and switch from ADSL to FTTC, you've left me in a bit of a quandary. Normally, you wouldn't expect an experienced manufacturer like Billion to be knocking out power-supply bricks that produce troublesome amounts of EMI, but on the other hand it does appear that the 8800NL has been built down to a price and so a few corners in respect of its power supply may have been cut. That said, nobody else writing about the 8800NL in these forums has been complaining about EMI coming from the brick, or their setup showing constant retransmissions due to excessive line errors.
One possibility is that yours was merely faulty - a one-off manufacturing fault. I take your point, though, that it'll be up to me - and anyone else - to assess their 8800NL brick on an individual basis. But perhaps in the meantime it might be an idea for you to return your Billion brick to the retailer and ask for a replacement Billion brick (maybe put a small identifying mark on the returned one, to ensure the retailer doesn't erroneously send the same one back to you). If you find that the replacement also gives trouble, then you can be more sure that the brick is indeed a source of unwarranted EMI.
Incidentally, I don't understand what your quoted ES figures are all about. Is this some measure of line error rates, or what? Are you using some sort of special software application to measure EMI from the brick? The way the professionals would do this would be to use a spectrum analyser.



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