RoYoBo wrote: » I have conflicting dates from Eir and Open Eir - Eir said July 19th (still not happening on my road) and Open Eir told me November by email, twice (which looks more likely). My entire area is included in the live figures for June! Make of that what you will ....
grouchyman wrote: » Was due to get fibre installed today, but it wasn't to be. Bringing the line in from the pole would have left it hanging too low at the wall of the house. but it would be so low down that a child playing with a stick or something like that could bring it down. After a good discussion with the KN Engineer the only viable option is to put it under ground, but that means digging up the lawn and a concrete path. I won't be doing that this year. Disappointing, but sure there ye go! If anybody's got a suggestion which could save the lawn etc, I'd appreciate hearing it. Thanks
Indestructable wrote: » Hi, do you have the email address that you used for open eir? I emailed them on one but never got any acknowledgement at all. Thanks.
vintagevrs wrote: » Try thisfibrepower@openeir.ie
RoYoBo wrote: » That's the one I used - might take a few days.
Johnboy1951 wrote: » What information did you provide them with? Your eircode?
vintagevrs wrote: » How does the phone line come in? Not sure what is causing the line to come in so low? Can it not be run from the pole to the top of the Gable or chimney?
The Cush wrote: » Less of a magical mystery tour with FTTH it would appear, fibre cable to the house, then routed externally to a point where it enters the house up to 1m for connection to the ODP/ONT.
RoYoBo wrote: » We have a porch at the front, with double sealed doors there - more than a metre to get into the house anyway. Similar at the back. Can they use the sides of windows maybe?
The Cush wrote: » Very few install pics posted here other than Gonzo's, difficult to know what way they are doing it now since the attic ban was enforced.
grouchyman wrote: » My house is a bungalow one of those with no gable end. So the existing phone line has to come in low to get under the eaves. The engineer says that the fibre cable has to be about a foot below the current line. Hence my problem. The engineer was quick to say that they don't do attics roofs or chimneys.
knipex wrote: My fiber comes off the pole, just along side my old copper line and attaches to the gable probably 3 feet above the copper point..
plodder wrote: » I have a similar situation. Why can't the fibre just take the same path as the existing line? I don't follow this "has to be a foot below the current line" business. He said his house doesn't have a gable end. If it's like mine, it's a four sided roof so to speak.
knipex wrote: » yes but why does it have to be below the copper. Its above the copper in my house..
plodder wrote: » If you have a gable then it can go three foot above the copper. In my house it can't, the copper comes in at the level of the eaves. Higher than that would be through the roof, lower would be too low.
grouchyman wrote: » My problem as well. Do you have the underground option plodder?
plodder wrote: » It's gets messy once you get near the house, which is why I'm trying to understand what the problem is. Are you keeping the copper phone line as well?
Blogin wrote: » I just got a reply from that fibrepower@openeir.ie Estimated availability by end of October. That's 6 months after the area went live.
ACLFC7 wrote: » There's a note on http://fibrerollout.ie/rollout-map/ which says that the next map update will be on the 10th August.