MajesticDonkey wrote: » Just had an eir sub-contractor call about hedge cutting in preparation for the fibre rollout - to say I'm excited is an understatement! My house is down for winter 2018, so it seems very early to be cutting hedges. Anyone have experience with timescales from when hedges are cut to fibre being available?
KeRbDoG wrote: » While getting the splice boxes on the poles is one step closer, I've noticed that in my area they have yet to bring the feeding fiber to the start of the fiber runs across the poles. The blow tube/pipe is in and waiting. For me, most likely another 2 months maybe. The Openeir site says second half of 2017 for me, but when you mail OpenEir with your eircode you get a more accurate idea which for me is March'18.
fritzelly wrote: » Could do with Digiweb charging and Eir doing it free
oscarBravo wrote: » Hah. I'm picturing the reaction of OAOs up and down the country to this theory... :pac:
RoYoBo wrote: » ...I have a suspicion that there must be some deal going on somewhere that is giving the likes of Digiweb customers an edge.
Marlow wrote: » That is as such correct. But the difference is, how the provider takes care of the customer, when OpenEIR or the contractor lets the customer down. And there are acres of difference between providers there. /M
edgari0kas wrote: » whats the upload speeds for 150 , 300 and 1000 mb ?
ED E wrote: » Gandie wrote: » I have the 150MB FTTH package. It drops to about 60-70Mb at peak times. I'm thinking this is normal ? What does the 300 or 1000MB FTTH package drop to at peak times ? Are you testing wirelessly?
Gandie wrote: » I have the 150MB FTTH package. It drops to about 60-70Mb at peak times. I'm thinking this is normal ? What does the 300 or 1000MB FTTH package drop to at peak times ?
Grimsvotn wrote: » Yeah existing phone line present, seems to come in via duct as no overhead cables are connected to the house.
The Cush wrote: » If you have an existing phone line does it come in via a duct or overhead from a pole? If via a duct, issues could include blocked duct or duct too small, such issue will have to be resolved by the householder before install goes ahead.
Grimsvotn wrote: » What should i expect in terms of installation, are there normally any difficulties involved in installing FTTH?
fritzelly wrote: » All the problems with installations not happening/needs an hoist/needs 2 men etc are really OpenEir/Wholesale issues and not the retail side of eir which the average Joe deals with - wouldn't matter if it was thru Vodafone, Sky etc as they all have to go thru the same company Might be the "same company" but they have to operate as 3 separate companies
The high horse brigade wrote: » They fit it using cat5 Ethernet running back to the modem
chrismon wrote: » That was my thinking alright. Do you know if it needs a phone cable along with Ethernet?
Wanderer78 wrote: » I don't to be honest, I've limited knowledge on these things, but I'm sure someone will be along soon to inform us both. It obviously needs to be connected to their socket some how, but I'm wondering if an rj11 (phone connection) could carry the load? I suspect an rj45 (Ethernet) is required for the load.
chrismon wrote: That was my thinking alright. Do you know if it needs a phone cable along with Ethernet?
Wanderer78 wrote: » Iptv(internet protocol tv), I.e. the tv signal is streamed over eirs broadband network, I.e. no satellite. I'm not hearing amazing things about their boxes though
chrismon wrote: Hi all. What's the crack with the eir TV box? What connection does it use? Does it work over the network or is it the satellite? The engineer said it needed a phone cable? Surely he meant Ethernet?
fritzelly wrote: » No argument I'm in Dublin city center on a smallish street and while every other street around me is on FTTH I can only get up to 100Mb (as everyone can only get on the street) - very annoying as I would have probably made the jump from VM. The woes of living in the city
Marlow wrote: » That is as such correct. But the difference is, how the provider takes care of the customer, when OpenEIR or the contractor lets the customer down.