Quick update as I've been investigating this all day lol
I think the OpenReach engineer has faceplated the wrong socket, or used the wrong set of wires; hear me out...
In my living room there are two phone sockets, one on an outside wall and one on an internal wall. I've just moved in and we're told one is a wired link to the socket in the bedroom, as in you use a splitter from the main socket into the other one and you then have a working socket in the bedroom too. The engineer has fitted a faceplate on the internal one.
Trouble is, even when using the master socket on the new faceplate the other one is still active, i can even connect to Infinity on it; so they're linked even via the master socket. Each socket has two sets of wires, twisted together into the same connectors (pins 2 and 5) on the non faceplated one and also the bell wire (pin 3) is connected on both, if that matters.
The engineer did see the other socket but didn't open it, he just said that's not the right one, presumably as it has a fancy faceplate on it.
My guess is this:
The outside socket is the main BT one and this links directly (pins 2, 3 and 5) to the other one on the internal wall. The internal wall one then links to the bedroom so using the new master socket only disconnects the bedroom; nothing is plugged into there anyway. However using the master socket does net me a 5Mbps gain, I can�t explain this. Plugging into the outer wall socket gives me the same sync speed as if I�d not used the master socket. Saying that, the new faceplate has the new bell wire inductor installed, could be that?
Would taking out the bell wire on either/both do anything, do you think?
Edited by deleted (Wed 24-Aug-16 21:40:18)