(A general response).
I think several people have been confused by Icaras's post.Is it possible that the jumpers previously connected ADSL service and were left in place when the line was moved to FTTC?
Yes. That's exactly what it means, left in jumpers in the cabinet from when the line had previously been FTTC.
If someone orders ADSL these will need removing by an engineer before the service will work. I'm not sure why the public need to know this though.
I think he meant to say either "from when the line had previously been ADSLx" or "from when the line had been upgraded to FTTC". Both mean the same, but I think he might have started with the second, changed it to the first, and made a mistake in the editing.
I too have the "This line has jumpers in place". BT Retail line and FTTC from Plusnet.
All the previous posts follow the pattern suggested by my version of his post.
No I didn't mention ADSL jumpers. It's hard to explain because it's not something that the public should have any knowledge of, it isn't necessary.
We call the wires in the cabinet linking to the FTTC tie pairs "jumpers". So if the checker says your line has jumpers it means you probably currently have an FTTC connection.
Alternatively, it means your physical line in the cabinet still has left in FTTC jumpers. These will stop ADSL from working as your line is still connected to the fibre cabinet. These "left in FTTC jumpers" need removing before ADSL will work. I know exactly what I'm trying to say but it's hard to explain, if there's anything you don't understand I'll do my best to clarify for you.
So it means the line has FTTC on it?
No, it means that your line is physically connected by jumpers to the FTTC cabinet. So the previous person who used your E-side (the cable from the exchange to the cabinet), or your D-side (the cable from the cabinet to your house) had an active FTTC service.
Edited by deleted (Sun 17-May-15 12:53:31)