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Standard User zzing123
(regular) Tue 07-Apr-20 21:53:58
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: Zarjaz] [link to this post]
 
Out of curiosity, does the fact the observed speed being below the handback threshold mean this is something to act upon here?
Standard User RobertoS
(elder) Tue 07-Apr-20 23:57:42
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: zzing123] [link to this post]
 
It depends on your home wiring.

If that is optimised and there are no problems with your kit or wired connections, (loose or damaged ethernet cable or socket), and it isn't a speed test over wifi, probably yes.

If it is sub-optimal and Openreach come out and diagnose, (not necessarily fixing it in some of those cases), you are almost certain to get a bill of over £100 from your ISP, as Openreach will bill them as not their problem. Though at the moment OR probably wouldn't be interested at the moment as it, (normally but not in the case of a joint under the eaves), needs access to the premises.

In this precise case, of a bridge tap outside the premises in a location where it is unlikely to be a DIY-caused problem, it should be as Zarjaz recommended. Openreach to fix FOC.

My broadband basic info/help site - www.robertos.me.uk. Domains, site and mail hosting - Tsohost.
Connection - Three 4G, tbb tests normally 35-45Mpbs down, 65Mbps off-peak, 9-24 up.
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Standard User deleted
(deleted) Wed 08-Apr-20 07:59:12
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by partial:
>>The only time I can think that there would be a bridge tap in the network ...

As with many things there will be regional differences.

In my manor there are quite a few exchanges that have some teed up local main cables. One bar pair feeding 2 different cabinets. In some cases cabinets being a couple of km apart!

There are also frames that were condensed / moved and the old frames left teed in in the cable chamber or manholes close by. I had a contract to recover the tees on one of the largest exchanges in the UK a year or two back.


Interesting. But that wouldn’t affect the test result for the FTTC. Did you ever see similar on the D-side? Only example I could think of was a cabinet changeover.

In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
I’ll take your word for it. I never once saw that myself.

I was incredibly confident in that “bridge tap” test result whenever I saw it even if I couldn’t find the actual culprit sometimes, maybe it was buried behind a wall or that sort of thing. If I couldn’t locate it I’d run a new lead-in entirely straight into the master socket and that would then return a normal test result.

I used to be like you ... had heard a couple of colleagues claim they’d had it, but I was very dubious myself.

.. but, about three weeks ago, had exactly this . You could fit an NTE on the UG pair in the 66, put your tester in sync, and get the ‘bridge tap’ test result on FT2. This was repeatable. Two pair armoured feed. It was on the green/black already. Passed the PQ well. I tried a single ended test of the orange/white failed, small earth, very low A/C.
At the UG radial DP, it would test 100% OK, time after time.

Interestingly, I tested on FT2 to the 66 again, and then it was ‘potential HR’


Strange stuff.


Always interesting ones those, odd result at the BT66 compared to the DP. Has to be some kind of buried joint, you’d think?

Edited by deleted (Wed 08-Apr-20 08:01:05)


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Standard User Zarjaz
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Wed 08-Apr-20 13:01:54
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
Has to be some kind of buried joint, you’d think?

I’m not so sure, maybe just the cable pinched UG somewhere, so making a contact with the 2nd pair ?
Have since heard from a colleague who had the same issue on an overhead fed property, ‘potential HR’ at the eaves, good at the DP ... a replacing the DW fixed that.

No I think of it , my ‘contact with a spare pair’ theory might hold good for that too, if the original was DW10 or CAD55 maybe ??

Standard User burble
(committed) Wed 08-Apr-20 13:41:05
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: Zarjaz] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
Has to be some kind of buried joint, you’d think?

I’m not so sure, maybe just the cable pinched UG somewhere, so making a contact with the 2nd pair ?
Have since heard from a colleague who had the same issue on an overhead fed property, ‘potential HR’ at the eaves, good at the DP ... a replacing the DW fixed that.

No I think of it , my ‘contact with a spare pair’ theory might hold good for that too, if the original was DW10 or CAD55 maybe ??


Our line has shown a bridge tap on occasions, also the problem sometimes relates to rainfall(but not 100%) so I'm wondering if this relates.
Standard User Zarjaz
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Wed 08-Apr-20 14:32:49
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: burble] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by burble:
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
Has to be some kind of buried joint, you’d think?

I’m not so sure, maybe just the cable pinched UG somewhere, so making a contact with the 2nd pair ?
Have since heard from a colleague who had the same issue on an overhead fed property, ‘potential HR’ at the eaves, good at the DP ... a replacing the DW fixed that.

No I think of it , my ‘contact with a spare pair’ theory might hold good for that too, if the original was DW10 or CAD55 maybe ??


Our line has shown a bridge tap on occasions, also the problem sometimes relates to rainfall(but not 100%) so I'm wondering if this relates.

It really was just a thought that struck me as writing that last reply. Is your line OH or UG ?

Standard User burble
(committed) Wed 08-Apr-20 16:58:44
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: Zarjaz] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
In reply to a post by burble:
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
... nested quotes trimmed ...

I’m not so sure, maybe just the cable pinched UG somewhere, so making a contact with the 2nd pair ?
Have since heard from a colleague who had the same issue on an overhead fed property, ‘potential HR’ at the eaves, good at the DP ... a replacing the DW fixed that.

No I think of it , my ‘contact with a spare pair’ theory might hold good for that too, if the original was DW10 or CAD55 maybe ??


Our line has shown a bridge tap on occasions, also the problem sometimes relates to rainfall(but not 100%) so I'm wondering if this relates.

It really was just a thought that struck me as writing that last reply. Is your line OH or UG ?


Our line runs under ground to the pole, the chamber next to pole fills with water in wet periods, and has to be bailed out for any work to be done!
Standard User Zarjaz
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Wed 08-Apr-20 17:14:25
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: burble] [link to this post]
 
But a wet joint would usually give you a battery contact fault, this would easily show on any testing.
If my (half arsed) theory is right, it would need actual metallic contact with a spare pair.

Standard User Ancient_Mariner
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Thu 09-Apr-20 23:02:15
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: RobertoS] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by RobertoS:
Domestic bridge-tap installations probably weren't a factor in the days of morse code and telegrams wink.

There were actually! When i was first at sea, 1977 communications to/from home were mainly by letter to from the next port (no mail drops from aircraft like North Wales Police tried to suggest to my father!) No satellite on the ships that I was on, so at sea it was either Morse telegram or a Ship Letter Telegram which was posted rather than Telegram delivery or HF radio telephone.Even telephoning from ashore could take hours for a connection from Central America to UK. Problem from ship was that the UK only had about 6 telephone channels in total and in 1977 there were a lot more ships than there were in later years. So if you wanted to phone from say south Atlantic, you called BT's Portishead radio immediately after they had concluded with another ship and you were given a Turn or a QRY as it was known as. When your turn came, after exchanging details of the telephone number and the ship's charging authority, Portishead Radio attempted to put the call through. If the line was engaged, they could if they were not too busy, interrupt the ongoing call and connect the ship. If too busy to waste time, you would go back into the queue. It could be a drawn out process.

Anyway, heard from home in a letter that BT were going to make our telephone line a Party line. This because our next door neighbour, the only house out of the 57 that had been built in 1973, did not have a phone line. So we ended up as a Party Line with the house opposite - all three houses plus other fed from the same pole. I found this strange, since when the house was built, we had to wait for telephone lines to be laid from the local exchange a couple of miles away and I would have expected the cables to have had sufficient capacity. Being a party line increased the chances of our number being effectively engaged and prevented Portishead Radio from interrupting a call in progress.
When I eventually arrived home, spoke with BT and they were a bit surprised that the neighbour wanting the phone was not on a party line. Not long after our line was reverted back to a normal line.

So there we have it, a Bridge Tap causing telephony problems wink

On a technical note, there was no suitable place due to a solid pathway around our house, for an earth rod to be installed for the ringing current and identifying which party wanted to dial out by pressing the Party Line button, so the electricity earth was used. Not ideal?

Strangely, a few years later, I wanted a second line installed and this was done within a couple of weeks without to my knowledge any one having to go on a party line.

Despite the distance, both lines could give full speed on a V.90 56K modem - wow that was fast!

Cheers!

Clive

Andrews & Arnold Home::1 FTTC DrayTek Vigor 2762ac Cisco SPA112 and HUAWEI E5776 with O2 Data SIM
Standard User RobertoS
(elder) Thu 09-Apr-20 23:11:58
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Re: Slow speeds and bridge tap


[re: Ancient_Mariner] [link to this post]
 
Party lines.
I remember those, and having to press the button.

That would have been when we lived in Blackpool.

My broadband basic info/help site - www.robertos.me.uk. Domains, site and mail hosting - Tsohost.
Connection - Three 4G, tbb tests normally 35-45Mpbs down, 65Mbps off-peak, 9-24 up.
==================================================
"Democracy means simply the bludgeoning of the people by the people for the people." Oscar Wilde
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