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Eir rural FTTH thread

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,584 ✭✭✭Pangea


    d31b0y wrote: »
    How many minutes? Vodafone used to do this but the number of minutes assigned was higher than the number of minutes in a month.

    I tried viewing it now, but i just get an endless buffering saying getting last bill, Il post it when I can.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,498 ✭✭✭Jpmarn


    Update from the Inch St. Lawernce exchange. Yesterday on my line in Bohermore and Inch St.Lawernce North they were putting up the last of the Splice boxes and connecting up to the exchange. Today some senior OpenEir staff are inspecting all the splice boxes for signal. So far so good. There is now a wait from Comreg before they can sanction ready for selling which the staff say could be over a months time.
    Elsewhere they where activity in Lunddenbeg about half way between the Exchange and Ballyneety village. They were connecting Fibre cables from the Cul de sac roads serving Killcullen West and Luden graveyard. No splices boxes yet between Caherconlish and Beary's Cross on the main road towards Limerick City. Only one or 2 splices boxes up with many more to be installed in the Boher area. I reckon there should be some activity in those two areas as I post.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 17 Fabarm


    Can anyone give me a head's up please - I have my eircom master socket in the hallway & my landline phone sockets & alarm landline speech dialler are spliced from there.
    If I install open eir's FTTH, will I lose the use of the alarm speechdialler & existing phone sockets ?
    Thanks


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,498 ✭✭✭Jpmarn


    Fabarm wrote: »
    Can anyone give me a head's up please - I have my eircom master socket in the hallway & my landline phone sockets & alarm landline speech dialler are spliced from there.
    If I install open eir's FTTH, will I lose the use of the alarm speechdialler & existing phone sockets ?
    Thanks

    I presume your copper line would be retained. I don't think your present phone installation would be touched. It will look like that there is a second line coming into your house wether it is overhead or by duct depending what way your copper comes in.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,050 ✭✭✭✭The Cush


    Fabarm wrote: »
    If I install open eir's FTTH, will I lose the use of the alarm speechdialler & existing phone sockets ?

    Only if you change your telephone service over to VOIP/VOBB, which is via fibre access.


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  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    d31b0y wrote: »
    How many minutes? Vodafone used to do this but the number of minutes assigned was higher than the number of minutes in a month.

    Attached a screen-grab of parent's Eir a/c allowances. Calls to Irish landlines aren't included in the section, so I'm guessing it's the only type of call that actually is unlimited.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,584 ✭✭✭Pangea


    I see my minutes are lower, Im on the Unlimited Local/UK and Mobile calls


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,584 ✭✭✭Pangea


    Has anyone found a manual way to fix the slow webpages/loading issue for older devices? Without the use of the app DN Set? I was reading up that if you set a static ip for the phone it may help. One of the phones in my household wasnt working well with the fibre, it can only use the 2.4g. I installed DN set as suggested on this forum, it works well now but the fact it says network activity monitored puts me off.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 64 ✭✭Blogin


    Pangea wrote: »
    Has anyone found a manual way to fix the slow webpages/loading issue for older devices? Without the use of the app DN Set? I was reading up that if you set a static ip for the phone it may help. One of the phones in my household wasnt working well with the fibre, it can only use the 2.4g. I installed DN set as suggested on this forum, it works well now but the fact it says network activity monitored puts me off.

    This guy claims he got it working without dnset.

    https://community.eir.ie/broadband-25/slow-wifi-coming-from-the-f2000-router-292049


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,017 ✭✭✭tsue921i8wljb3


    oleras wrote: »
    My order is stalled due to a lack of ports...

    Considering this is a ftth installation and noone is even connected on the Patrickswell exchange.

    Something dodge going on by making areas live on the map when reality they are not.

    It's the lies that p1sses me off.

    oleras can you check your premises on the DCCAE map? They have updated it with eir's claimed Q2 premises. It would be interesting to see if your home is dark blue meaning you should be live.

    Also can anyone else who suffered the "allowed to order but not live" experience check also please?

    http://www.dccae.gov.ie/en-ie/communications/topics/Broadband/national-broadband-plan/high-speed-broadband-map/Pages/Interactive-Map.aspx


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 856 ✭✭✭RoYoBo


    oleras can you check your premises on the DCCAE map? They have updated it with eir's claimed Q2 premises. It would be interesting to see if your home is dark blue meaning you should be live.

    Also can anyone else who suffered the "allowed to order but not live" experience check also please?

    http://www.dccae.gov.ie/en-ie/communications/topics/Broadband/national-broadband-plan/high-speed-broadband-map/Pages/Interactive-Map.aspx

    My home is in the BLUE area alright and I have no problem'ordering' FTTH with the providers available. I cancelled my original order with Eir, who kept maintaining it was live and ready to go when the evidence (or lack thereof) on the poles outside indicated otherwise.

    There are some splice boxes in position now, but no other activity and no one I know getting connected. Since I can't prove that my defunct order is not being fulfilled, is there any point in emailing the address given? I'm reluctant to reinstate the order until I know it can be fulfilled.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,391 ✭✭✭rob808


    RoYoBo wrote: »
    My home is in the BLUE area alright and I have no problem'ordering' FTTH with the providers available. I cancelled my original order with Eir, who kept maintaining it was live and ready to go when the evidence (or lack thereof) on the poles outside indicated otherwise.

    There are some splice boxes in position now, but no other activity and no one I know getting connected. Since I can't prove that my defunct order is not being fulfilled, is there any point in emailing the address given? I'm reluctant to reinstate the order until I know it can be fulfilled.
    I would definitely email open eir they should be able to tell you if it live or not.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,017 ✭✭✭tsue921i8wljb3


    My home is dark blue on there, had the product sold to us by an agent, and eventually after numerous cancellations got full installation. The service still isn't working.

    As in it has never worked? Surely it must be live if they actually installed.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 5,017 ✭✭✭tsue921i8wljb3


    RoYoBo wrote: »
    My home is in the BLUE area alright and I have no problem'ordering' FTTH with the providers available. I cancelled my original order with Eir, who kept maintaining it was live and ready to go when the evidence (or lack thereof) on the poles outside indicated otherwise.

    There are some splice boxes in position now, but no other activity and no one I know getting connected. Since I can't prove that my defunct order is not being fulfilled, is there any point in emailing the address given? I'm reluctant to reinstate the order until I know it can be fulfilled.

    If you mean emailing the Department to complain I don't imagine you'll get far. As Rob said probably best to contact Openeir to hopefully get a more definite date.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 384 ✭✭sean72


    Do any of the FTTH providers offer actual unlimited data? Or any with more than 1TB limit. And are any of these national providers?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 79 ✭✭Ricta


    d31b0y wrote: »
    How many minutes? Vodafone used to do this but the number of minutes assigned was higher than the number of minutes in a month.

    eir Talk Unlimited Mobile & UK
    different minutes again, this is with the 150Mbps bundle


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,050 ✭✭✭✭The Cush


    Fibre rolling out in my area at the moment, had a first look at the aerial cabling being installed

    UND1534 manufactured by Acome in France
    Single-mode fibre G652D (N8228A)
    36 Fibres (3x12)
    O.D. 8.3mm

    Can anyone with FTTH installed identify the 2 strand fibre drop-cable used from pole to ODP, suspect it might be UNB1629 or UNB1630

    DSC_0039.jpg

    Disassembled an offcut of the cable

    untitled1.jpg

    Outer sheath on the left
    2 fibre tubes (blue & green)
    3 strands of Aramid yarn as strength member
    1 fibre tube (orange) followed by the 12 strands of fibre from that tube, coloured - turquoise, violet, orange, brown, red, blue, pink, grey, black, yellow, green, white

    http://www.acome.fr/index.php/en/Telecoms2/Telecoms-and-Infrastructures-Networks/Products-and-Systems/Optical-FTTH-access-network


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,170 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    We have our very own Clouseau it seems.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 856 ✭✭✭RoYoBo


    rob808 wrote: »
    I would definitely email open eir they should be able to tell you if it live or not.
    If you mean emailing the Department to complain I don't imagine you'll get far. As Rob said probably best to contact Openeir to hopefully get a more definite date.

    Yes, I have emailed OpenEir and they've said November is the best estimate. It's only Eir and the other sellers that are telling me I can get it now because the map says yes and my Eircode and number both pass.

    Resigned to waiting now, but I hate all the lies and subterfuge ...


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,850 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    The Cush wrote: »
    ...the 12 strands of fibre from that tube, coloured - turquoise, violet, orange, brown, red, blue, pink, grey, black, yellow, green, white

    /fibre nerd mode

    Strictly speaking: blue, orange, green, brown, slate, white, red, black, yellow, violet, rose, and aqua. The fibres are numbered 1-12 in that order, as are the loose tubes they're in. So the blue tube contains fibres 1-12, the orange contains 13-24, and the green contains 25-36.

    You can see how this approach allows easy identification of up to 144 fibres in a single cable.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,392 ✭✭✭vintagevrs


    Does that mean one of the cables that you see on the road has a capacity of 144 users?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 64 ✭✭Blogin


    The mobile broadband seems to have got a lot slower in the last few months in my area. This could be as more people switch to the same provider.

    Or possibly related to ftth going live in our exchange a few months back ? Do the mobile masts feed back into the exchange and now have to contend with more traffic as a result of ftth users using more traffic ?


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,850 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    vintagevrs wrote: »
    Does that mean one of the cables that you see on the road has a capacity of 144 users?
    It's not that simple. Some cables have a single fibre per customer; others have fibres that feed splitters, each of which will feed multiple customers. There are also different numbers of fibres in different cables.
    Blogin wrote: »
    The mobile broadband seems to have got a lot slower in the last few months in my area. This could be as more people switch to the same provider.

    Or possibly related to ftth going live in our exchange a few months back ? Do the mobile masts feed back into the exchange and now have to contend with more traffic as a result of ftth users using more traffic ?
    Mobile masts have their own backhaul networks. Mobile networks don't contend with fixed line traffic.

    If your mobile network has slowed down, it's probably because of people using their mobile devices and dongles for more and more data-intensive applications.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 90 ✭✭iioklo


    vintagevrs wrote: »
    Does that mean one of the cables that you see on the road has a capacity of 144 users?

    The cable openEir is using along the roads has only 36 Fiber's, however that cable company manufacturers a cable with 144 Fiber's, each fiber in the cable can be split up to 32 times, depends on the amount of houses at a DP (black box on pole or in manhole). Eir are using a combination of 8 way splitter box's and 4 way splitter box's to acheive the 32:1 spit. 1152 (36 x 32) potential connections per fiber route. However from what I have read in this thread they are only using 24 of the fiber's and the other 12 will be used to extend out further when the NBP is activated.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,737 ✭✭✭oleras


    oleras can you check your premises on the DCCAE map? They have updated it with eir's claimed Q2 premises. It would be interesting to see if your home is dark blue meaning you should be live.

    Also can anyone else who suffered the "allowed to order but not live" experience check also please?

    http://www.dccae.gov.ie/en-ie/communications/topics/Broadband/national-broadband-plan/high-speed-broadband-map/Pages/Interactive-Map.aspx

    Yes, I am dark blue.

    The reps here keep mentioning that there isnt a port available in the cabinet or exchange.

    can anyone who knows how this is wired up on the eir side explain if ports are used for FTTH ?


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,850 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    oleras wrote: »
    Yes, I am dark blue.

    The reps here keep mentioning that there isnt a port available in the cabinet or exchange.

    can anyone who knows how this is wired up on the eir side explain if ports are used for FTTH ?

    I've only heard about ports in the context of the DPs on poles or in manholes. Each DP has a number of ports, and each port is assigned to an eircode at design stage.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 79 ✭✭Ricta


    The Cush wrote: »

    Can anyone with FTTH installed identify the 2 strand fibre drop-cable used from pole to ODP, suspect it might be UNB1629 or UNB1630

    On mine is "3m outdoor optical drop cable (KFRP) 2c/sm 00470m" it crosses road from pole to pole then underground through duct.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 90 ✭✭iioklo


    What about the Fibre Patch Cable that connects the ODP to ONT, are there any markings on it. I think it is SC-APC to SC-APC Simplex Single Mode type lead. Would be usefull to know as people could order a longer patch lead to move the ONT closer to the Router, I've seen installations where Fibre is located far away from router location, and a Fibre link might be better than the Cat5e/6 cable they use to link the ONT to Router.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,170 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    iioklo wrote: »
    and a Fibre link might be better than the Cat5e/6 cable they use to link the ONT to Router.

    Nope, not in a domestic setting.


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  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,850 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    Remember also that the fibre patch cable isn't "yours" or even "the ISP's"; it's open eir's. The ONT is the demarcation point between open eir and the ISP, even if that ISP is eir retail.

    By way of analogy, if you don't use the ISP-supplied router but supply your own instead, it can complicate things when it comes to troubleshooting with the ISP. Equally, if you use your own fibre patch instead of the open eir-supplied one, it introduces a layer of complication that you might regret later.


This discussion has been closed.
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