No, you THINK a fault is developing because you have a slightly fluctuating noise margin and a few errors.
No loss of sync or noticable affect on throughput = no fault.
Actually, the changes in the last day (aside from the ongoing 3dB trial) do point at something suspicious happening. There is a huge increase in FECs and a huge increase in retransmission counts, which have increased further with today's switch from 4dB to 3dB.
Error protection has been working extra-hard on that line in the last day.
https://s30.postimg.org/l7y42l1hd/William3db_And_Odd...
But, while something is happening under the hood, there is little extra evidence appearing at CRC, ES or LEFTRS level. There's no impact to the service.
(I am impressed, actually, at just how little is getting through)
Of note to people watching the 3dB trial: Whatever has happened over the last few days didn't happen on the first run through the 6-5-4-3dB steps. And DLM seems to have allowed the 3dB step to happen anyway.
@william:
On the main part, though, @lee111s is right - it isn't really a fault until it becomes an
actionable fault. Up until that point, it really only classes as "normal behaviour that DLM is designed to cope with".
On the data side, you are a long way from an actionable fault. Your speed needs to drop hugely to get there.
However, on the telephony side, you already have an actionable fault. If you can hear things on the line, then it is something your telephony provider should react too. At a minimum, they will run some copper tests. (Note, as ever, it is important not to confuse them by mentioning any broadband problems at the same time).
I had this kind of issue a couple of weeks ago. Plusnet (my ISP and telephony supplier) have a webpage that triggers the line test. The webpage ran the test, but failed to tell me the result. However, behind the scenes, it had logged a fault with Openreach, and organised a fix. Someone was out fixing that a day later, with no need for an appointment.
That issue caused noisy crackles on the line. Nothing faint or subtle about them. But they didn't affect broadband. I expected an E-side problem. Imagine my surprise when, after chatting to the engineer, the issue was on the D-side.