Headshot wrote: » I cannot wait to learn more about FTTH when I hopefully get it.
Ameer Howling Baritone wrote: » Just connect the firewall machine directly to the ONT. Once it can do VLAN tagging on WAN you don't need the eir router at all.
Headshot wrote: » I work for an I.T company and we've heard whispers that the modem cannot be bridged but unsure is it true or not. I think it's the same modem they are going to use with FTTC I bridge all my modems as I want my firewall to do all the routing. I want my network behind a strict firewall which will have all my NAT rules and firewall rules.
tuxy wrote: » Where did you hear that? I'd be interested to know what model that router is so I can find out more about it. The guys on here are not great for such info as most have ditched Eir by now
Ameer Howling Baritone wrote: » Sagemcomhttps://www.sagemcom.com Assuming what you say is correct, why would you need bridging on a FTTH connection?
tuxy wrote: » It's new and from a different company, not Huawei. It's re-branded and uses a different outer case but has the internal electronics from a French company that I've forgot the name of. I don't think we have figured out which re-branded model it is yet.
Headshot wrote: » I heard that modem can't be bridged, is that correct?
JohnC. wrote: » What's the new modem they're supplying with their fibre now? Is it actually a new one or a Malibu F2000 with a new hat?
tuxy wrote: » Did you pay for KN to do the work or the installer to do is as a nixer? Sounds like you got lucky as they can be very picky about what nixers they take on. That said it's your property so your choice, you may have found someone to do it cheaper if you got quotes form as many different sources as possible.
cnocbui wrote: » Yes, the cable is safer undrground, but it's above ground for many km before it gets to my pole where it then travels 'safely' underground for all of 12m. :-)
cnocbui wrote: » ...apart from arranging ducting to said pole. Yes, the cable is safer undrground, but it's above ground for many km before it gets to my pole where it then travels 'safely' underground for all of 12m. :-)
Richieq wrote: » There’s already infrastructure there to get the line in, they just need to trim the trees. I don’t understand why I’d have to get someone in to build 20 metres of suction? Also, if I have to get work done, would it not make sense to let me know.
AstraMonti wrote: » Eir is using KN people to install or unblock ducts, I had to pay 300 euro for them to unblock mine so they can bring the fiber from the pole in the house.
Richieq wrote: » Hi all, I ordered FTTH in August. I’m about 250 metres from the DP. An engineer arrived to do the install. However it was a failed install. There are a lot of trees that my current copper line threads through. My next correspondence was that they would have this resolved by 30/11. So yesterday I call them to see if I needed to book time off. During my conversation, he said that my issue was a ducting/underground cabling issue. So I asked him to clear this up as there are none of these at my home. It’s all provided via telegraph pole . After some investigation, he said that open Eir are going to put in ducting rather that have the trees pruned and cut down. Is this a thing? I’ve not heard of it before. Also the last leg from the pole goes through the biggest tree. Will they install a duct right to my home? Thanks
cnocbui wrote: » Did anyone else have an outage with Airwire? Lasted for about 50min.
Headshot wrote: » Could be the thread I finally get FTTH. Best thread everrrrrrr
Gonzo wrote: » Eir's rural FTTH rollout must be heading into it's final stages by now. Are there any areas still not started?
AirBiscuit wrote: » 1st off topic post of the new thread: Anyone know how to get PXE booting working on a network with a Fritzbox 7530 as the DHCP server?