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Apologies on that. There are three handsets. I have removed them one by one to isolate if it was one of them however the problem still replicates itself with a wired handset.
I have not tried a different handset as yet, however I plan too when I can grab one from my neighbour
Any other thoughts at all? Thanks for the information by-the-way.
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When you say in one post In reply to:
There is no line filter on any socket except the extension lead which connects to the modem.
but in another post In reply to:
There are filters in place - I even purchased new ones - no luck with those.
it is unlikely that you will get very much help here. I suggest you call in BT to fix your problem.
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I realise that I said that although it seems to make no difference if they are connected or not.
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Register (or login) on our website and you will not see this ad.
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You are giving people (who are trying to help you) bogus information because you have decided that that particular part isn't the problem. May I remind you you are the novice and as such should follow instructions given.
You: I can't get to sheffield
Us: Are you on the correct side of the road
You: I don't see why that would matter, as I've always driven on this side and got to my destination successfully
Us: Try driving on the correct side of the road and follow signs for sheffield
You: Nope, no joy.
Us: Are you on the correct side of the road
You: Well no, but I don't see why that would matter.......
As ETEE said, you don't have to take the advice, but it is of questionable benefit if you select parts of it to ignore on a somewhat arbitrary basis.
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Fair point. I must remind you that it is not deliberate on my part. I have read those documents and others, and have followed the steps recommended.
I am a novice, and yes I understand this and I have attempted the basics:
+ Add / remove line filters
+ Purchased new line filters
+ Disconnect each phone one-by-one to resolve the issue
I have also inspected the wiring as advised and to my eyes it appears as the original poster's information suggested. eg. to make certain that only two wires (2+5?) are connected for each socket - this is the case.
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If you can provide photographs as per your earlier invitation I expect that would help.
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Not a problem. Will get on to it.
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I recently replaced my DECT phone for just that reason - played havoc with my router as far as wireless was concerned (phone was BT and router was BT!).
Got a non BT DECT phone and guess what - no problems at all since.
 If the Universe is infinite - how can it be expanding....... 
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Of course, you could always do what you should have done to start with - contact your ISP, and log it as a fault. I've been doing a little more digging, and although the main culprits for your fault are still bad filters and/or bad internal wiring, the problem can be caused on rare occasions by a BT line fault, so you should ask your ISP for a line test.
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Easier said than done with Bulldog, or pipex or whomever is managing them these days
I shall keep that in mind.
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