Thanks so much for the helpful response - I'm not a OR network expert by any means, so just looking at this in a very general way. The knowledge on this board is outstanding, so defer to greater knowledge.
Knowledge for us consumers = proper power.
The veil of mysteries about how the nation's key infrastructure is being built out and delivered (particularly where heavily subbed by central government) is a fascinating topic.
The original price list for FTTPoD says this:
In reference to www.openreach.co.uk/orpg/home/products/pricing/loadProductPriceDeta...:
96% of premises are expected to be within 2km of the nearest NGA Aggregation Node
Not far off your target.
Yes totally true, but the devil is in the detail as we're seeing here with high FTTPod quotes to end users, the extra quarter of a mile above my 1 mile suggestion costs on most plausible basis at a gross cost of more than £10k
each to deliver.
Can it really be right in the long-run that initially the assumption is that 1,400 ish premises per Ag node will incur that cost to extend the network out (on current pricing)?
Wouldn't it have been better to anticipate that while extending the fibre network to each DSLAM, that using new hardware and remote distribution points it would make sense to use an architecture that was easily expandable?
The general point is that for every Ag node in non commercial areas there appears on the figures you quote to be around 4.5 cabinets at the moment. Each Ag node therefore has 4 or more links making their way deeper to end-user's premises, all of which has been incentivised by central government subsidy.
Having gone to all the trouble of clearing or building ducts to deliver "Fibre to the cabinet" - the question of how to get fibre to the last mile doesn't appeared to have been considered in any depth from a tax-payer's perspective.
BT's accounts say they have received a total of £1.1bn so far (running at ~£60m per quarter at present), but have earmarked £530m for return to the local authorities.
Other suppliers will be taking in money, but nowhere near as much as BT has accumulated since 2013. It really isn't billions.
I'm sure you're right, but in the spring budget the Chancellor has allocated £200m to be used to roll out full-fibre including the imminent £3,000 voucher scheme.
When you aggregate the £1.1m BT has received and assume that the £530m claw-back in that sum will probably largely be spent expanding OR's network & add onto that the £200m (which at £3k per premise = max 67k premises) - that's plausibly very close to having put £1.5bn into the OR network.
As people are clearly finding in this thread with ECC estimates, the £3,000 DCMS voucher will be swallowed entirely by OR bringing fibre effectively to the same or shorter distance to the shiny green cabinets a second time.
I'm personally not convinced that is a win for the treasury where they have already paid for network extension once. To the untrained eye this just looks like the government paying for the same thing twice in their procurement.
It's a given I'm a neophyte in understanding OR's fibre architecture, but the common sense approach as a lay-person is that the fibre itself is cheap whereas the civils to deliver it is expensive.
The civils have already been done to the cabinet once, so planning for each BDUK cabinet to have a chamber to provide for deeper network access seems like a no-brainer.
At least we know now that FTTP is maturing to the point that FTTC builds are a little limited in ambition (but as mentioned a very clever interim solution) then the clawback spend & voucher spend should be done first in such a way to make FTTP deliverable deeper into the network, rather than allowing OR's network to be grow randomly to serve first movers (at full cost).
I do accept that I may be simplifying what's going on, but then again it is clear that many on here have made the assumption that a DSLAM or FTTC cabinet would also be a logical point to start the point of measuring how you take Fibre deeper into the network. It is after all sold as 'Fibre to the Cabinet'.
Anecdotally I was told by one of the ISP's offering the new FTTPod pricing that they had nearly 400 people asking for quotes in total since the new scheme came into force. My guess is that a few thousand installs in the next year or so under the current regime is the most plausible take-up.
It will definitely change up again soon, when the inefficiency of OR's FTTPod offering becomes clear & there's no real alternative currently available.