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I live in the City of London where I thought broadband speeds might be high and rising.
Is there a simple explanation why all five exchanges in the City are "Not currently in rollout plans" for superfast broadband?
Just curious ...
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Presumably because BT and other telecoms companies make lots of money supplying leased lines to the businesses there and the number of lines connected to each cabinet supplying domestic premises is very small?
BT Infinity 2 - IP profile 77 / 20 - super fast!
Previously BE Unlimited - 21,000 Download 1,200 Upload but then moved house - 6,500 Down, 1Mb/s up - gutted!
Ex <n>ildram , been to SKY MAX - 15,225 Download
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Post deleted by 5km
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Register (or login) on our website and you will not see this ad.
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I just put my postcode (EC2Y8DD) into http://www.superfast-openreach.co.uk/where-and-when/ (the link in ThinkBroadband) and it showed Wood St, Faraday, Moorgate (my exchange), Fleet and Monument as all "Not currently...".
What is the site you are checking?
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I deleted my post as I had mistakenly checked exchanges just outside "The City".
As already said it will be a combination of protecting leased line profits, lack of residential customers, small number of customers on each exchange (as they are all so close) and everyone probably gets more than 10Mbps so hardly a slow spot.
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One factor may be that a far higher proportion of lines in the City are EO, with relatively few cabinets
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eg. Address 123, CROMWELL TOWER, BARBICAN, LONDON, EC2Y 8DD on Exchange MOORGATE
No cabinet number.
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People in our position - flat dwellers (usually no cable) on EO lines (no FTTC) are in an uncertain position regarding next-generation broadband.
As far as I know no wide-scale solution for this type of premises has been proposed or implemented by any of the NGA rollouts, other than a small-scale trial by BT in Canary Wharf which I have not heard of for many months.
The only saving grace is that we usually (but not always) get acceptable speeds from previous-generation technology - which may also be what is delaying the solution.
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hyperoptic.com/web/guest/home believe they have a solution. The building owners need to take this on really.
--
Phil
MaxDSL - goes as fast as it can and doesn't read the line checker first.
MaxDSL diagnostics
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Thanks for the suggestions which sound right. I had missed the point that we might not have cabinets!
My speed is adequate most of the time (download 7+) but then it will drop to 1-2 for a couple of weeks before picking up again. So I am looking for consistency as much as outright speed.
There is much discussion with our landlord - the City Corporation - but no certain action.
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I agree Hyperoptic is your best bet and far more future proof then BT's FTTC.
I wanted to wire up the estate I live in with something similar but BT announced FTTC and I know that the competition would make it not viable. That and it's not one block of flats so would also need wireless ptp links between each block to share a gig fibre leased line.
If the flats are wired with an entry system this might use Ethernet cable and there might be enough spare pairs (2 pairs) for 100Mbps Ethernet over this existing cable. If you wanted Gbit then you'd need all 4 pairs so would need a new cable run.
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Hi David
Do please get in touch with more details and I'll follow up at this end and find out the latest update for your building.
[email protected]
Best wishes
Sunita
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