I don't know why you seem to defend why people's adsl connections all of a sudden drop (like the OP's and mine). You see loads of the same thing posted on here, and people get asked to check this, check that, change this, post stats, rewire this, change filters et al. All to no avail.
Something is going on at the other end... not at the user end.
If he's anything like me, then he's reacting at the apparent stubbornness of your position.
The largest source of subscriber problems with ADSL *is* from within their own homes. That is a plain, simple, unavoidable fact.
Insisting that the problem is NOT your end, without proper justification, is akin to burying your head in the sand. And just because things worked before, and do not work now, is not a sufficiently proper justification.
One reason, therefore, to get people to check, change, post, rewire etc is precisely because it isn't to no avail. It does actually work. Not for everyone, but for enough people.
Another reason is explained by the fact that many apparent faults are inexplicable, intermittent, and hard to trace. Any work done to both isolate the fault, and identify correlation between fault cause and effect all helps here. An Openreach engineer attends for 2 hours, and is highly unlikely to time his visit to coincide with a repeat of an intermittent fault. Analysis work performed without an engineer present can be helpful.
But all of that, and all of the gains from it, require you to be open-minded. It requires you to stop insisting that the fault CANNOT be here just because you feel like insisting.
Every fault is different, every subscriber is different, and every attempt to troubleshoot is therefore different squared.
After all, pavements don't explode do they? They worked yesterday, so how could they just go up in a flash, bang, cloud of smoke today?



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