plodder wrote: » But, they are claiming FTTH installs have been done already (500 in May). So, there must be fibre up on poles already.
marno21 wrote: » Yes, that's correct. Eir will likely finish the FTTC/eir Fibre rollout before moving onto the FTTH rollout. Especially seeing as they are working on most of the rural exchanges/cabinets at present
Gonzo wrote: » that kinda worries me because by the time Eir finish rollout of FTTC (still alot of cabinets to go).. it will be much closer to winter and bad weather and short days. Will Eir really work on poles during November, December and January?
pegasus1 wrote: » Gonzo any hedges/trees that were not finished by march the first will have to wait until september 1st.
legocrazy505 wrote: » Oh dear, I saw KNN a week ago cutting back some really high hedges around some poles near Tipperary. Better report them to the farmers and then the EU, killing the environment and the poor birds. They didn't cut it that much, just away from the top areas of a few poles.
daraghwal wrote: » It's actually legal to cut the tops of hedges. Just not the sides. And farmers actually want the hedges to be cut!!
daraghwal wrote: » It's actually legal to cut the tops of hedges.
pegasus1 wrote: » where does it state this Daraghwal? sorry for going off topic...
daraghwal wrote: » I have no idea where to find it in writing. I think it was a council worker could have told me? Also hedges and trees can be cut down on grounds of health and safety too.
pegasus1 wrote: » I think he was giving you some bs...:rolleyes: Yes, hedges can be cut for safety but they over do the cuttingbut cutting hedges for easier pole access isn't allowed unless its for repair work...imo council worker aka man on a shovel said to me once, that hedge cutting was legal from 1st of Aug. I put him in his place...
“40(1) (a) It shall be an offence for a person to cut, grub, burn or otherwise destroy during the period beginning on the 1st day of March and ending on the 31st day of August in any year, any vegetation growing on any land not then cultivated. (b) It shall be an offence for a person to cut, grub, burn or otherwise destroy any vegetation growing in any hedge or ditch during the period mentioned in paragraph (a) of this subsection.” Exemptions to the Closed Period (2) Subsection (1) of this section shall not apply in relation to “(a) the destroying, in the ordinary course of agriculture or forestry, of any vegetation growing on or in any hedge or ditch;” “(b) the cutting or grubbing of isolated bushes or clumps of gorse, furze or whin or the mowing of isolated growths of fern in the ordinary course of agriculture; “ “(c) the cutting, grubbing or destroying of vegetation in the course of any works being duly carried out for reasons of public health or safety by a Minister of the Government or a body established or regulated by or under a statute;” “(cc) the clearance of vegetation in the course of fisheries development works carried out by the Central Fisheries Board or a regional fisheries board in the exercise of its functions under the Fisheries Acts, 1959 to 1999;” 7 “(d) the destroying of any noxious weed to which the Noxious Weeds Act, 1936, applies; “ “(f) the removal or destruction of vegetation required by a notice served by the Minister under section 62 (1) of the Act of 1946 to be removed or destroyed;” “(e) the clearance of vegetation in the course of road or other construction works or in the development or preparation of sites on which any building or other structure is intended to be provided; “
daraghwal wrote: » Yeah probably was bs when I can't find it in writing. Obviously KN aren't supposed to be cutting now and it wasn't a health and safety so it wasn't right but I suppose they can probably find some way to bend the rules. Anyway are people here worried about the hedge with little or no wildlife in it around the pole or are they worried about getting broadband before we're all on our pensions!
MMFITWGDV wrote: » I know some people that have stopped using a strimmer on long grass near hedges in case they hurt hedgehogs! :eek: I'm an animal lover and all, but there has got to be some practical limits. They've made me feel guilty for cutting dandelions cos of the bees!!! :rolleyes:
(e) the clearance of vegetation in the course of road or other construction works or in the development or preparation of sites on which any building or other structure is intended to be provided; “
pegasus1 wrote: » So they should..there is a big push nationally as well as in the north for the all ireland pollinator plan to save the bees and other pollinators..without the bees etc live as you know it will cease.. when september 1st comes there will be loads of work done on hedging and pulling of fibres along poles The esb are constrained by the no cutting as well...cause they bring trees and hedging right back...unless there is danger of wires being shorted.. Darraghw, if you are looking to become a vet think of the small critters...the ones you don't see...go read that other thread..and good luck in getting to be a vet..
Barney224 wrote: » On the Eir site, when it says speeds of up to 1000 Mbps, what exactly does this mean? Does it depend on which ISP you choose and what package you purchase in what speeds you can get? Would anyone ever get the full 1000 mbps speeds, even if they were available?
Service - FTTH Effective From Effective to Price € NGA Bitstream Plus Standalone 150Mbps 31/08/2015 20.50 NGA Bitstream Plus Standalone 300Mbps 31/08/2015 25.50 NGA Bitstream Plus Standalone 1000Mbps 31/08/2015 35.50
Barney224 wrote: » I have a question on FTTH (hopefully not too naive!) I'm waiting for FTTH in my area and am looking forward to it as I've been on a poxy mobile dongle for the last 5 years! On the Eir site, when it says speeds of up to 1000 Mbps, what exactly does this mean? Does it depend on which ISP you choose and what package you purchase in what speeds you can get? Would anyone ever get the full 1000 mbps speeds, even if they were available?
MMFITWGDV wrote: » It means you can get download speeds of up to 1,000Mbps! :rolleyes: Yes - eir and some other ISPs will offer packages up to an including the full 1,000Mbps speeds. You probably will not get all the way to 1,000Mbps, but likely in the 950-975Mbps range, all going well. In the lower packages I'd expect them to deliver closer to the stated target. Of course you will need to be sure that your equipment can handle these speeds (Cat-5e cabling minimum, Gigabit NICs and switches, etc.). I'm not sure what speeds will be attainable over WiFi, but you will probably get nowhere near 1,000Mbps on that.
The Cush wrote: » Just to add, eir retail offer 3 FTTH packages, with phoneline (eir Fibre Broadband) or without phoneline (Standalone eir Broadband) eir Fibre Extreme 150Mb eir Fibre Extreme 300Mb eir Fibre Extreme 1000Mb See page 3 of this eir document for pricing - https://www.eir.ie/opencms/export/sites/default/.content/pdf/pricing/Part3.1.pdf
ads20101 wrote: » Am I reading that right. €55.49 for a 1Gb/s FTTH rental
The Cush wrote: » + phoneline rental. €70 without phoneline/standalone.