Hi guys,
I hope you're well.
Yesterday, when the phone rang, the upstream SNRM plunged and many errors were recorded. I am led to believe that a sharp decrease in upstream SNRM coinciding with an incoming phone call is the start of a developing HR/Open/Semi-conductive fault. I have also noticed that the upstream SNRM can be wild when it's blowing a hoolie (potentially a tree is hitting the cable somewhere?)
Here's a screenshot of the SNRM graph over the past 24 hours. The spike is shown towards the far left off the graph: http://prntscr.com/pg0pvh
What is strange is the phone rang again earlier and nothing happened, and I cannot seem to replicate this on an outgoing call and the line is clear, but I know that these type of faults can start off intermittent. Is this something I should monitor?
The line hasn't lost sync recently, and the attenuation has remained fairly consistent, if gradually increasing (obviously not a good sign).
I'm probably making a big deal out of this, though just want to see what people's opinions are on this (though this looks like it's external as I've had the phone and router plugged into the test socket for ages).
Thanks,
Will



Print Thread
