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Eircom fibre for direct to exchange news?

  • 04-08-2014 6:41pm
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 567 ✭✭✭Kencollins


    Hi all,

    i was looking at the Eircom wholesale NGA map today, and I noticed that a lot of exchanges now have fibre planned, right at the exchange location.

    http://www.eircomwholesale.ie/Our_Network/

    Is this possibly good news for the 10,000 or so people who are directly wired to the exchanges and currently stick on ADSL2?

    Ken


«13456749

Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 19,015 ✭✭✭✭murphaph


    Interesting stuff alright. Looks pretty concrete now.


  • Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 4,621 Mod ✭✭✭✭Mr. G


    YES!!!!


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 16,675 Mod ✭✭✭✭Gonzo


    its really only good news for those who are up to 1km-1400meters line length from the exchange, after that the signal would be not much different than ADSL2+ speeds.


  • Registered Users Posts: 389 ✭✭yomamasflavour


    Instead of wasting money on these exchange cabs, why not just allow those direct fed line customers that want the service to be connected to a nearby cab?

    You still have to send out a technician to switch over the customer at the exchange as well as do a home install so it's not as if you're saving much.


  • Registered Users Posts: 567 ✭✭✭Kencollins


    I would imagine the amount of cable pulling through ducts would be immense. Everytime a customer wanted to switch to fibre then an engineer would have to re route the cable to an existing cabinet which could be km's away.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,186 ✭✭✭MBSnr


    Gonzo wrote: »
    its really only good news for those who are up to 1km-1400meters line length from the exchange, after that the signal would be not much different than ADSL2+ speeds.

    True but I dream of the much increased upload.... :D


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 16,675 Mod ✭✭✭✭Gonzo


    I would think anyone on a direct line who is getting less than 18meg currently won't really benefit much from Fibre, anyone less than 14meg probably are too far from being able to get it at all. Those who currently get 20-24meg would be the ones who will benefit from this alot.

    What I would also like to see is Eircom placing ADSL2+ gear into the cabinets that are furthest away from the centre of towns and connect everyone up to 4km away to this, would greatly increase speeds to many people beyond the towns. Im just about 1.8km/2km away from nearest cabinet and not connected to it, but if Eircom were to place ADSL2+ gear to that cabinet I would go from 8meg up to 14, maybe 16meg if Eircom were to do such a thing, Im sure many other people are in the same boat. This to me makes perfect sense as there has to be alot of unused ADSL2+ gear lying around idle right now.


  • Registered Users Posts: 45 Braytek


    im confused, im not near a cabinet but am along the line of orange, does that mean anything? I can currently get 7.5mb but haven't seen any decrease in attenuation


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,015 ✭✭✭✭murphaph


    Doesn't mean anything to you no.


  • Registered Users Posts: 45 Braytek


    murphaph wrote: »
    Doesn't mean anything to you no.

    Glad to hear, thought maybe for a change something good would come out but thankfully not


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  • Registered Users Posts: 3,711 ✭✭✭Praetorian


    This is good news although it is expected. If they enable all exchanges at the same time then a huge number of lines will come on stream at the same time.

    It's really good news for business's as they tend to be limited by adsl 1 / 2+ upload speeds. I know my company is severely hampered by having to have 3 adsl lines. A direct fiber link is priced too high to be affordable for sme's. VDSL will solve a lot of our problems.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,034 ✭✭✭dalta5billion


    Praetorian wrote: »
    It's really good news for business's as they tend to be limited by adsl 1 / 2+ upload speeds. I know my company is severely hampered by having to have 3 adsl lines. A direct fiber link is priced too high to be affordable for sme's. VDSL will solve a lot of our problems.

    Do you do bonding with eircom or via your own VPN? I was thinking of getting a second line in and doing VPN bonding with the two VDSL lines.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,186 ✭✭✭MBSnr


    Just to expand on the OP - I just noticed that if you select nothing (on the map status) and zoom in you can see the all the cabs including the ID's in the local exchanges. They are listed as XXX1_EXX whereas the VDSL street cabinets are listed as XXX1_XXX. Most larger towns have them listed as planned.


  • Registered Users Posts: 13,981 ✭✭✭✭Johnboy1951


    I am presently about 3.5Km from the exchange and getting an average 4.5 to 5Mb/s download, & ~0.37Mb/s upload.

    I see from the map there will be a cabinet (sometime in the future) about 2Kms from me.

    Hopefully this will mean a considerable improvement in speeds .... hopefully :)

    Thanks MBSnr for the tip about the map ;)


  • Registered Users Posts: 160 ✭✭sparky63


    Looking at the map, it looks like its the fibre core network from the main data centres to the various exchanges. Not seeing anything that points towards direct fed lines.


  • Registered Users Posts: 36,161 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    sparky63 wrote: »
    Looking at the map, it looks like its the fibre core network from the main data centres to the various exchanges. Not seeing anything that points towards direct fed lines.

    The dots on the exchanges themselves (as this in an NGA map) indicate DF lines being planned. Also the E on the ASAM ID.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 22,345 Mod ✭✭✭✭bk


    Gonzo wrote: »
    What I would also like to see is Eircom placing ADSL2+ gear into the cabinets that are furthest away from the centre of towns and connect everyone up to 4km away to this, would greatly increase speeds to many people beyond the towns. Im just about 1.8km/2km away from nearest cabinet and not connected to it, but if Eircom were to place ADSL2+ gear to that cabinet I would go from 8meg up to 14, maybe 16meg if Eircom were to do such a thing, Im sure many other people are in the same boat. This to me makes perfect sense as there has to be alot of unused ADSL2+ gear lying around idle right now.

    From what I've heard, Eircom are using different and newer gear and tech for the direct feed lines and that it seems to be performing at the very least as good as ADSL2+ and in many cases better then ADSL2+ at distances greater then 2km.

    So it seems that it maybe cheaper and easier for Eircom to ignore ADSL2+ all together and instead go straight to VDSL2 at all exchanges.

    - Those living within 2km of the exchange get high speeds, particularly helpful for small businesses, community centers and schools in small towns and villages.

    - Those living more then 2km from the exchange will get ADSL2+ speeds or better, a potentially big welcome jump for these people who might be stuck on ADSL1 at the moment.

    - Probably cheaper for Eircom to just install, manage and maintain this new VDSL gear, then trying to move old ADSL2+ gear between exchanges.

    A win win for everyone.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 16,675 Mod ✭✭✭✭Gonzo


    bk wrote: »
    From what I've heard, Eircom are using different and newer gear and tech for the direct feed lines and that it seems to be performing at the very least as good as ADSL2+ and in many cases better then ADSL2+ at distances greater then 2km.

    So it seems that it maybe cheaper and easier for Eircom to ignore ADSL2+ all together and instead go straight to VDSL2 at all exchanges.

    - Those living within 2km of the exchange get high speeds, particularly helpful for small businesses, community centers and schools in small towns and villages.

    - Those living more then 2km from the exchange will get ADSL2+ speeds or better, a potentially big welcome jump for these people who might be stuck on ADSL1 at the moment.

    - Probably cheaper for Eircom to just install, manage and maintain this new VDSL gear, then trying to move old ADSL2+ gear between exchanges.

    A win win for everyone.

    that sounds great, didnt know the tech would be a bit different than what is available in the cabinets. Im living about 2.1km from the exchange but my line length is about 2.8km. Im currently getting downstream of 9272Kb and upstream of 670kb.

    When the exchange is upgraded (it's down for a fibre upgrade on the map), will I likely see any sort of speed increase when it goes live?

    Another thing Ive noticed is that over the past 3 days the KN vans have been going up and down my road, but they seem to be just replacing telephone polls and installing newer ones which seem to have small boxes on them, dunno if this means anything tho.

    Also does this mean that Eircom are abandoning ADSL/ADSL2+ altogether and people on direct fed lines will be moved to fibre regardless of the speed they get and receive new modems etc?


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,186 ✭✭✭MBSnr


    bk wrote: »
    .
    - Those living more then 2km from the exchange will get ADSL2+ speeds or better, a potentially big welcome jump for these people who might be stuck on ADSL1 at the moment.
    .
    A win win for everyone.

    I'm 2.5Km from the exchange on ADSL1.... ADSL2+ speeds imagine - whooo hooo! This sounds promising..... Let's hope Eircom deliver this :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,711 ✭✭✭Praetorian


    Do you do bonding with eircom or via your own VPN? I was thinking of getting a second line in and doing VPN bonding with the two VDSL lines.

    Actually nothing too complicated

    currently our setup is

    one adsl connection for email server
    one adsl connection for general use / web browsing / wifi
    one adsl connection for remote users


    Vdsl will change what we can do and how we can do it

    I'm looking forward to very fast transfers for remote users (some international). Very fast email for increasingly larger attachment sizes. Overall improvement in responsiveness and usability.

    I'm thinking about using two vdsl lines, load balancing them somehow and seeing if offsite backup over the net can replace tapes (finally) :)


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  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 22,345 Mod ✭✭✭✭bk


    Praetorian wrote: »
    I'm thinking about using two vdsl lines, load balancing them somehow and seeing if offsite backup over the net can replace tapes (finally) :)

    If you decide to do that, I'd recommend you use two different companies (e.g. Eircom and Vodafone).

    While obviously they will be sharing infrastructure at a local level (phone line, VDSL cab, probably fibre between the cab and the local POP/exchange), so you won't get any benefit there, at least they use different networks at the national and international level, including routing and peering, so you would benefit from some greater redundancy if one of them suffers issues or congestion at these levels.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,711 ✭✭✭Praetorian


    Good advice BK! Just need a good network specialist to set it up :) (when the time comes).


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,034 ✭✭✭dalta5billion


    Praetorian wrote: »
    Good advice BK! Just need a good network specialist to set it up :) (when the time comes).

    This guy does it using VPN's so that any single TCP connection can get 2x bandwidth, but alternatively as bk says if you load balance TCP connections across two different carriers you can get redundancy, and potentially 2x speeds if you backup using multiple TCP connections.


  • Registered Users Posts: 226 ✭✭mobil 222


    I am all confused over this 'direct line 'stuff now.

    Earlier this year in Sligo 12 new combinations of both copper and fibre cabinets were set up bringing all direct lines

    into these .

    Some cabinets were set up within 1 km of the local exchange while others were set up on areas more than 3 kms from

    the exchange

    I think that this means fibre connections for business and homes within 500 mtrs from exchange


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,711 ✭✭✭Praetorian


    This guy does it using VPN's so that any single TCP connection can get 2x bandwidth, but alternatively as bk says if you load balance TCP connections across two different carriers you can get redundancy, and potentially 2x speeds if you backup using multiple TCP connections.

    That sort of solution is cool, but I would worry about the complex nature of the setup causing issues. Down time is a total pain and the last thing I need on a busy day is to be tracing down a unique and possibly unsolvable bug!

    Ethernet over vdsl could also be interesting! We are right beside our exchange so we should get good speeds if eircom finish the trial and release for sale!


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,042 ✭✭✭kaizersoze


    Praetorian wrote: »
    That sort of solution is cool, but I would worry about the complex nature of the setup causing issues. Down time is a total pain and the last thing I need on a busy day is to be tracing down a unique and possibly unsolvable bug!

    Ethernet over vdsl could also be interesting! We are right beside our exchange so we should get good speeds if eircom finish the trial and release for sale!

    Amen to that.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,186 ✭✭✭MBSnr


    MBSnr wrote: »
    Just to expand on the OP - I just noticed that if you select nothing (on the map status) and zoom in you can see the all the cabs including the ID's in the local exchanges. They are listed as XXX1_EXX whereas the VDSL street cabinets are listed as XXX1_XXX. Most larger towns have them listed as planned.

    I see that a lot of Mayo has cabinet IDs listed in the exchanges now (And as posted in another thread the Eircom fibre map has been updated to reflect this). I guess it's just an oversight on the map but my local exchange doesn't have a cab listed for some reason....... :eek:


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,859 ✭✭✭Simi


    Damn, still nothing for Strandhill. The map is certainly filling out nicely however.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 66 ✭✭timmydel1


    Eircom proposal to Comreg for changes in regulations to allow VDSL in exchanges.

    http://www.comreg.ie/_fileupload/publications/ComReg1472.pdf


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 9,088 ✭✭✭SpaceTime


    What I don't want to see is exchange-launched VDSL being sold as "e-fibre" as it's not FTTC by any means, it's just an upgrade to ADSL really.

    If you're in the immediate vicinity of the exchange, you'll get a good speed, but a lot of homes around this area of Cork City for example wouldn't benefit from this at all.

    Most of the non e-fibre homes are in quite large 1940s/50s housing estates where all the phone line distribution is underground (i.e. no cabinets, just large breakout points in underground vaults where the lines are connected, I assume).

    Those developments are a good 1.5 to 3km from the exchange, some would be even further. I would expect that applies in many urban areas in places cabinets didn't exist. For example, most of Crown Alley's footprint in Dublin 1 and 7 would be like that. You're a fairly big distance of wiring from Crown Alley exchange if you're in Stoneybatter for example.

    In most of those cases, the VDSL service will be pretty pointless unless it's installed locally in cabinets.

    I just wouldn't like to see it being used as one of those permanent stop-gap measures.

    They really need to re-organise the copper lines and install cabinets in many of those areas.


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