I do question how a Sky test can determine I am receiving the full Monty, when there are no stats on the router (unlike the old sync speed, etc on FTTC) for me to reference.
With full fibre (FTTP) there is no sync speed, it actually either works or does not. Similar to Virgin Cable. The FTTP network operator, Openreach in your case, provides a 2.4 Gbps connection to a max of 32 homes, at that full speed, and your ONT reduces the speed your router achieves.
Unlike FTTC/VDSL or ADSL where due to the use of copper wires there was a distance decrease in performance.
The network operator (Openreach) get stats from the ONT, but the Sky router doesn't see any of this. Sky can contact Openreach and ask them to check, but one of the benefits of FTTP is that faults on this side are dramatically lower than on the copper network.
However Openreach only connect you to Sky's data centre, via one of the regional areas. Openreach FTTP probably doesn't use your local exchange, unless its a regional centre.
From there to the internet is Sky's responsibility, and if they have a fault, or a capacity issue, then you get poor performance.
Similar to the days of dial up, you'd dial one ISP and get a modem link at 33.6kbps but you could only download at 8kbps you knew the ISP was broken
23 years of broadband connectivity since 1999 trial - Live BQM
Edited by jchamier (Sun 29-Jan-23 16:51:19)