When they ask to reboot CBT it comes back up for anywhere from 5 to 60 min and then everything goes dead again.
A CBT is completely passive, it cannot be rebooted.
Did you mean reboot the ONT, i.e. the little box inside your house where the fibre terminates? I doubt they have been rebooting the OLT (the active equipment in the exchange) - that would affect hundreds or thousands of users.
I'm sure its something to do with OLT (ONT can be rebooted to no avail, doesn't affect a thing) whether full thing or specific port is reset. An engineer mentioned that software can power signal to specific CBT(s) if it detects something faulty. That's why it comes back up from time to time. They checked it on the pole - no signal was there...
I'm also sure I'm the only connection on the CBT and the rollout is still ongoing on nearby streets, so its very new install altogether, so there can't be many users yet on it...
No that's not correct.
At the exchange the OLT (really just a very large Layer 2/3 switch) is a chassis with a series of active cards installed. Each of these cards has a series of optical ports (typically 8 or 12-way). Each of the optical ports then drives up to 32 end-user devices (the ONTs) on a Passive Optical Network or PON.
As the individual strand of fibre for a given PON leaves the exchange (amongst hundred of other similar fibre strands that make up a fibre spine cable) the fibre runs to an Aggregation Node where it is spliced to another strand of fibre in another cable that runs to a Splitter Node. This is where the (completely passive) optical splitters are located and the light from that one fibre from the exchange is split 32 ways - dividing the one strand of fibre and its light into each of 32 separate outputs. Each output at the splitter represents a single customer connection going to an ONT at the customer premises.
From the Splitter Node the fibre outputs are then connected to a sequential series of CBT's (connectorised block terminals). As the name suggests these are simply environmentally hardened terminal units that the drop fibre connection to an an individual property is connected to and thence to an ONT in the premises. These are located locally to the properties served, typically on top of poles or underground in chambers (depending on howe FTTP is reticulated in that area) and typically are sized as 4-way, 8-way or 12-way devices. The CBT is just a chunk of plastic with special sealed screw-in connectors for the optical terminals, for the drop fibre property connection, embedded in it.
In a user premises, when an ONT is first powered up (or reset) it undertakes a preset handshaking, authentication and registration process with the OLT at the exchange. The OLT authorises the ONT to 'speak' (transmit) on the PON and the OLT has the capability to specially exclude an ONT from participating in the PON. Basically the OLT can tell the ONT to shut-up and stop transmitting if the OLT thinks it a rogue device, faulty or otherwise shouldn't be part of the network. The OLT however cannot stop sending 'light' to an individual ONT, as the rest of the network is just a passive 'tree'.
Furthermore there is no way an OLT can in any way tell any other part of the network to power on or off - because the network is totally passive. The only active things on a PON are the OLT in the exchange and the ONT in the user premises - everything else in between is 'dumb' and just passes the light in either direction.
Edited by Pheasant (Mon 22-Nov-21 19:20:09)