Routers take around 1-2 minutes to re-boot (well the el cheapo's the ISP give us). If that is too much time out of your life per month then quite frankly it's tough, you need to accept it and move on. It is absolutely acceptable downtime. If you are so bothered about it effecting your quality of life, then simply restart the bloomin' thing in the middle of the night and then it'll likely restart at this point in the future.
You are likely the only person who has noticed this, because it's in effect un-noticable unless you spend most of your life looking at the router statistics page. I noticed yesterday my Now TV WAN connection reset at around 28 days ish. It did this whilst I was watching Hoovies Garage on YouTube at 15:00. Shock Horror, the video stopped for a whole minute. The kids came down with their tablets and said the internet had stopped. Guess what, no soon as they had said this it came back on, and life continued.
Get over it. No one EVER apart from you would think that a 30 day restart of a router would be in anyway faulty. You are making a mountain out of a molehill. These routers restart, or worse than that some really bad ones don't and you are left with no WiFi and have to do the reset yourself.
It's fine if the router does reboot every 30 days, I don't have problems with that as long as it was clearly stated as part of the contract agreement using their TalkTalk router.
I am the only person who probably noticed this 30 day connection reboot for TalkTalk. But like wolvesmad mentions, the SmartHub does it every 14 days, which is even worse. Some people also spotted 30 days on the BT SmartHub router. The question is why some BT HomeHub routers reboot 14 days and others using exact same model have them reboot every 30 days.
The reason why I noticed and most do not, is because I kept a close eye every day on the connection to see how much up-time can be achieved. My problem with ADSL used to be horrendous. 5-6 times drop-outs per day (sometimes as much as 20 times) until finally I had Sky in 2017 set my noise margins to 9dB and it was stable ever since.
And then when I switched to Plusnet ADSL once again I had to contact the ISP to cap at 9dB or it was going to drop out again as I was on a long Exchange Only Line until October 2019 when I finally got upgraded to a new cabinet.
Of-course the 30 day reboot on FTTC right now is nothing compared to the nightmare experience I had with ADSL on EO Line. At least on FTTC my connection no longer drops out with a 4 or 6dB noise margin profile.
This is great news as FTTC has definitely improved the reliability of the connection since there is 1000 meters reduction of copper. I am now on FTTC 300 meter from cabinet compared to 1300 meter ADSL EO Line, big difference!
Now it was natural for me to concentrate on the uptime because I wanted to see how much more reliable my connection will be with FTTC compared to my old unreliable ADSL.
Most people do not have this particularly bad line that I used to have with ADSL so they naturally will not check their router stats. Now if I hadn't carefully observed that this 30 day reboot occurred at a particular time like 1:32pm for example most people in my position will think it was a fault that caused the reboot. That's what I feared, I'm glad to know the router isn't faulty as repeated 30 day tests confirm it is simply programmed!
Frankly speaking, if you didn't pay attention yourself, how did you know you had a connection up-time of 28 days?
BT's Smart Hub reboots every 14 days - well at least mine did. Incredibly annoying if you're up online gaming.
If you want a stable connection as possible, either buy a VDSL modem and separate router or an all in one - from the likes of TP-Link, Netgear, ASUS.
I've been with TalkTalk and now EE with my own kit and the service has been absolutely rock solid.
Major benefit is you can also make changes to your home network without impacting the VDSL side, which we all know can cause issues.
Yeah 14 days is definitely much worse, I've heard of it from other users too! I have never been with BT and I guess if the 14 day policy still exists in their latest routers in future, it will be best to avoid BT unless we use our own router.
Buying my own router will definitely resolve this issue. But it is a little bit unfair that there is no router setting option to configure for removing the 30 day reboot. I just question the rationality whether it is worth spending another £100 or so on a new router just to fix this.
I hope TalkTalk will have a look into fixing this in future with a new firmware update because other than that, I have no other complaints so far.
I'll monitor again to see if the connection will be stable for another 30 days. And I'll probably consider rebooting the router somewhere between 5-6am that would be the best time. At least it won't affect me once I resume employment again after the corona lock down and get back to my correct sleeping pattern. Then after that it will not be a problem and at least I will be aware of the time in case I am in a ranked online game.