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Standard User Piscatorian
(learned) Wed 05-May-21 20:34:15
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Line dropouts


[link to this post]
 
Hi Everyone,
My first time posting here in quite a while but I hope you can help?
For sometime now I’ve been getting irregular dropouts on my fttc connection.
I’ve purchased a new router (tp-link ac4000) in the hope it would solve the problem but sadly it’s not.
Today I’ve since discovered that I’m unable to make phone calls out and when I try calling the answer doesn’t come on.
I’ve tried testing by connecting a lead from the test socket on the master box (mk3) straight to the dsl socket of the bt modem.
I’m finding that while I have both the router and the modem on the LAN1 port flashes amber very quickly on the modem. When I turn off the router the amber light goes out.
So bypassing my internal wiring I’m still having the same problem.
I should also mention that I’ve logged a call with BT as I have no phone!

If anyone has any thoughts I’d love to hear
Many thanks
Standard User Zarjaz
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Wed 05-May-21 20:41:54
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: Piscatorian] [link to this post]
 
The historic drop outs are symptomatic of a one leg dis fault, this would hang with the no dial tone issue too.

Once the line fault is fixed, the t’interweb will be sorted.

Standard User GonePostal
(committed) Wed 05-May-21 21:29:45
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: Zarjaz] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
The historic drop outs are symptomatic of a one leg dis fault, this would hang with the no dial tone issue too.

Once the line fault is fixed, the t’interweb will be sorted.


Dialect lessons needed here. "t'" in Yorkshireish is short for "the" so "the t'interweb" is a tautology. "t'interweb" would do quite nicely on its own.

In regard to the whole issue of Yorkshireish I have the profound benefit of not being from Yorkshire but I have learnt over the years that you can always tell a Yorkshireman. The problem is you can't tell him much.


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Standard User Zarjaz
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Thu 06-May-21 06:12:03
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: GonePostal] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by GonePostal:
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
The historic drop outs are symptomatic of a one leg dis fault, this would hang with the no dial tone issue too.

Once the line fault is fixed, the t’interweb will be sorted.


Dialect lessons needed here. "t'" in Yorkshireish is short for "the" so "the t'interweb" is a tautology. "t'interweb" would do quite nicely on its own.

In regard to the whole issue of Yorkshireish I have the profound benefit of not being from Yorkshire but I have learnt over the years that you can always tell a Yorkshireman. The problem is you can't tell him much.

The sad thing is, I knew I’d made that mistake, but couldn’t be arsed to rectify it.

Laziness personified

Standard User GonePostal
(committed) Thu 06-May-21 09:11:47
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: Zarjaz] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
In reply to a post by GonePostal:
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
The historic drop outs are symptomatic of a one leg dis fault, this would hang with the no dial tone issue too.

Once the line fault is fixed, the t’interweb will be sorted.


Dialect lessons needed here. "t'" in Yorkshireish is short for "the" so "the t'interweb" is a tautology. "t'interweb" would do quite nicely on its own.

In regard to the whole issue of Yorkshireish I have the profound benefit of not being from Yorkshire but I have learnt over the years that you can always tell a Yorkshireman. The problem is you can't tell him much.

The sad thing is, I knew I’d made that mistake, but couldn’t be arsed to rectify it.

Laziness personified


smile smile smile
Standard User Rhynchelma
(newbie) Thu 06-May-21 09:44:19
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: GonePostal] [link to this post]
 
There's nowt wrong with a bit of laziness.
Standard User GonePostal
(committed) Thu 06-May-21 12:49:13
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: Rhynchelma] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by Rhynchelma:
There's nowt wrong with a bit of laziness.


When I was working I preferred to call it masterly inactivity. Better than confusing motion with progress.

Edited by GonePostal (Thu 06-May-21 12:50:16)

Standard User Piscatorian
(learned) Thu 06-May-21 14:13:27
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: GonePostal] [link to this post]
 
Thank you I'll keep my fingers crossed that get things sorted asap!
Standard User gary333
(experienced) Fri 07-May-21 12:44:29
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: GonePostal] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by GonePostal:
In reply to a post by Zarjaz:
The historic drop outs are symptomatic of a one leg dis fault, this would hang with the no dial tone issue too.

Once the line fault is fixed, the t’interweb will be sorted.


Dialect lessons needed here. "t'" in Yorkshireish is short for "the" so "the t'interweb" is a tautology. "t'interweb" would do quite nicely on its own.

In regard to the whole issue of Yorkshireish I have the profound benefit of not being from Yorkshire but I have learnt over the years that you can always tell a Yorkshireman. The problem is you can't tell him much.


Why is not being from Yorkshire such a profound benefit “because, if it’s outside Yorkshire, it’s not worth bloody visiting”, “alright”.

The ‘t’ replaces “to” and “the” usually, although in Yorkshire we “wunt” really use “the” often anyways so it’s more the “to” it’s replacing with just the ‘t’.

Not many people left who speak “Yorkshire” in the way all you Southerners think. Only likely to hear it in oldies from deepest darkest Barnsley. More people now just seem to miss letters off words rather than replacing the joining words, like “I’m gouwin pub” rather than “I’m going ‘t’ pub”.
Standard User GonePostal
(committed) Fri 07-May-21 14:10:13
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: gary333] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by gary333:
Not many people left who speak “Yorkshire” in the way all you Southerners think.


As someone from the North of England I find comments like that a bit rich coming from those living in the North Midlands rather than the North of England.

London to Leeds 195 miles
London to Berwick 339 miles

So Yorkshire is just over halfway from London to the Scottish border. However, in true Hear All, See All style, those North Midlands residents make big play about being from the North when we all know that it is all mouth and trousers.

And they aren't even scratching the surface of being from the North when you consider that there is another country which is part of the UK which goes for another 335 miles past Berwick (before you start counting the offshore islands).
Standard User Ancient_Mariner
(eat-sleep-adslguide) Fri 07-May-21 15:29:47
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: gary333] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by gary333:
Why is not being from Yorkshire such a profound benefit “because, if it’s outside Yorkshire, it’s not worth bloody visiting”, “alright”.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6VLYpKGVBUg

Cheers!

Clive

Andrews & Arnold Home::1 FTTC DrayTek Vigor 2762ac Cisco ATA191 and HUAWEI E5776 with O2 Data SIM
Standard User gary333
(experienced) Fri 07-May-21 17:21:38
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: GonePostal] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by GonePostal:
In reply to a post by gary333:
Not many people left who speak “Yorkshire” in the way all you Southerners think.


As someone from the North of England I find comments like that a bit rich coming from those living in the North Midlands rather than the North of England.

London to Leeds 195 miles
London to Berwick 339 miles

So Yorkshire is just over halfway from London to the Scottish border. However, in true Hear All, See All style, those North Midlands residents make big play about being from the North when we all know that it is all mouth and trousers.

And they aren't even scratching the surface of being from the North when you consider that there is another country which is part of the UK which goes for another 335 miles past Berwick (before you start counting the offshore islands).


Winge winge winge. Typical Northerner
Standard User GonePostal
(experienced) Fri 07-May-21 18:29:41
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: gary333] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by gary333:
Winge winge winge. Typical Northerner


But at least we can spell.
Standard User gary333
(experienced) Fri 07-May-21 21:38:04
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: GonePostal] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by GonePostal:
In reply to a post by gary333:
Winge winge winge. Typical Northerner


But at least we can spell.


Won’t help you get that big chip off your shoulder though!
Standard User MHC
(sensei) Fri 07-May-21 22:34:51
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: gary333] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by gary333:
In reply to a post by GonePostal:
In reply to a post by gary333:
Winge winge winge. Typical Northerner


But at least we can spell.


Won’t help you get that big chip off your shoulder though!


That's not a chip, it's a black pudding!



And to add a correction:

The Midlands or "Border Region" starts at Hemel Hempstead, St Albans, Hatfield and the North begins at Milton Keynes.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

M H C


taurus excreta cerebrum vincit
Standard User gary333
(experienced) Fri 07-May-21 23:00:32
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Re: Line dropouts


[re: MHC] [link to this post]
 
In reply to a post by MHC:
In reply to a post by gary333:
In reply to a post by GonePostal:
... nested quotes trimmed ...


But at least we can spell.


Won’t help you get that big chip off your shoulder though!


That's not a chip, it's a black pudding!



And to add a correction:

The Midlands or "Border Region" starts at Hemel Hempstead, St Albans, Hatfield and the North begins at Milton Keynes.


Haha smile, whatever it is he's deffo got it on his shoulder with regards to Yorkshire folk.

I am not sure there is a distnct demarcation of what constitutes North and South. Like many issues there is no hard and fast rule. From a government statistics point of view they class Yorkshire as the start of the North of England. I have never seen or heard any group of people ever suggest Yorkshire isn't in the North though as even two thousand years ago it was referred to as the North by the north celts.
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