wasn't aware of the ring wire noise issue, I'll use a filter to split the signal from the master socket fo now (that's effectively what the faceplate does right?)
Not quite; unless you use a filtered face-plate (or one of BT's iPlate things - or whatever they're called), or you remove the ring wire, it will still be connected.
Even though the ADSL & voice will be filtered by plugging an ADSL micro-filter into the front of the master socket, the ADSL will still be connected to every single socket in the house and will still be affected by the ring wire.
The only way to resolve this is to take mine, Phil's or Zarjaz's suggestions;
Either....
1) Remove the ring wire in all sockets (better still, do this and connect the router at the master socket).
2) Fit an iPlate (which does little more than cuts the ring wire for you).
3) Fit an ADSL filtered face-plate.
Again, all options will work just that bit faster if you site your router at the master socket and either use CAT5 cables to carry the Ethernet, or power-plug networking.
In my case I went for option 3 (plus siting the router at the master socket) and went from 1.6Mbps (on ADSL1) to around 3.5-4Mbps (again ADSL1), which is now boosted to 4.5-5Mbps by the switch to ADSL2.
Ade
ADSL2+ with BE
DL Sync around 4.8Mbps
UL Sync 1088kbps
DG834GT with DGTeam firmware