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Eir urban FTTH

1568101115

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,036 ✭✭✭BArra


    same as my area

    eir ifn moving into certain areas that the nbi are covering also

    eir ifn has no rollout map, the eir rural map is seperate to the ifn urban rollout afaik


  • Company Representative Posts: 668 ✭✭✭Airwire: MartinL


    z0oT wrote: »
    Airwire's checker which is generally the go to checker doesn't even recognise those eircodes.

    That may be because the Eircode data for this quarter was released on the 11.08., but only available to us a short while ago.

    We have actually updated that portion of our database today, so you may try check again. All new eircodes from the last quarter should resolve now. If they can get service (or not) is a different matter.

    As for the IFN, over the next month or so, our data will include indicators for future IFN covered premises. We also hope to have NBI data soon, when they become available to us.


  • Registered Users Posts: 121 ✭✭vanti


    This is a bit of a strange one. I checked airwire around 2 months ago and website said available from 27 july. I placed order around 10 August with Digiweb. KN Engineers came out and examined the house. (2 DPs near my house - one on pole around 20 meters from front of house and another 2 DPs are underground nearby which I saw with the KN lads). Got a letter from Eir last week to say Fibre is now available (Aug 20th). Yesterday Digiweb rang to cancel my order saying it's not available. When I check the airwire site it's not available now either - I swear I wasn't dreaming (even received the digiweb fritz box). Is it a case the DP was associated with the wrong address/Eircode? Not a big deal either way still have decent broadband but it's pretty odd.


  • Company Representative Posts: 668 ✭✭✭Airwire: MartinL


    vanti wrote: »
    Is it a case the DP was associated with the wrong address/Eircode? Not a big deal either way still have decent broadband but it's pretty odd.

    That can happen. Yes.

    PM me your Eircode and I can have a look at the files, what and when it changed. It might take me a day or two, before I get to it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,910 ✭✭✭✭whatawaster


    We have updated the database for OpenEIR FTTC/FTTH today.

    It can be found at https://www.airwire.ie/avail

    Our Eircode now lists FTTH as “available soon”

    Any idea what sort of timeframe we might be looking at?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 740 ✭✭✭z0oT


    z0oT wrote: »
    An update - The online checker on Eir's website now says FTTH is available in numbers 15 & 16, but not in numbers 1-14. Some of the other house addresses don't even pop up in their system.

    It's a bit bizarre, given those two were just built in the last 6 or so months, and their eircodes would be the newest. Airwire's checker which is generally the go to checker doesn't even recognise those eircodes.

    I suspect it'll be corrected as the eircodes and various databases are updated. Is this a sign that the fibre has actually been laid in the estate?
    Update - the answer to that is no. The builder has been able to tell me nobody has been in the estate as of yet laying any fibre cables.

    Some of the other addresses that weren't showing before are now showing on Eir's website. The newest two are still showing being ready to order 1Gbps FTTH.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 8,679 Mod ✭✭✭✭Rew


    They came out and replaced the pole today, first they have been back since April. Still no DP but the guys today said another team would be out to do that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,182 ✭✭✭ondafly


    Rew wrote: »
    They came out and replaced the pole today, first they have been back since April. Still no DP but the guys today said another team would be out to do that.


    you must live near me :pac: They replaced all the poles on my road with new ones and for the last few days, KN have been installing black boxes on the poles, and I assume splicing in the fibre. There was a smallish machine being used at one stage and it was pushing I guess the fibre through.


    Hopefully not long to go now.


    F1jVngY.jpg


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 8,679 Mod ✭✭✭✭Rew


    ondafly wrote: »
    you must live near me :pac: They replaced all the poles on my road with new ones and for the last few days, KN have been installing black boxes on the poles, and I assume splicing in the fibre. There was a smallish machine being used at one stage and it was pushing I guess the fibre through.

    The boxes are the dispersion points once they are up you should be good to go. They have been all over my town since the start of the year doing all this but my little estate has hand no love since they did the initial cables back in April.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,036 ✭✭✭BArra


    once those black boxes are up it means i think that fibre is there and is spliced in

    the final step being provisioning, how long that can take is pie in the sky


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭FastFullBack


    Just got FTTH installed with Vodafone on a 500/50 package. It was an upgrade from FTTC which was coming in about 90MB.
    Wired tests come in at around 450 and WiFi upto 350 for the FTTH.
    But I'm having problems with homeplugs. I have 5 of them( All TP Link, 3 TL-PA411t1 and 2 TLPA4010PKITV22. They are capable of 500MB and 600 MB respectively).

    Previously they got between 50-80 MB download on my 90MB FTTC connection.
    With the upgrade to FTTH, I'm still only getting about the same range and worse on some plugs. Oddly the upload is good. Mostly getting the max 50. I've tried resetting them all and it didn't help. I expect some loss but even if it was 50% loss I should still be getting 200MB download speed.

    Anyone have any ideas. Should I upgrade so I have the exact same plugs everywhere. Any plugs that are better for FTTH connections?

    Thanks


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 788 ✭✭✭babi-hrse


    Just got FTTH installed with Vodafone on a 500/50 package. It was an upgrade from FTTC which was coming in about 90MB.
    Wired tests come in at around 450 and WiFi upto 350 for the FTTH.
    But I'm having problems with homeplugs. I have 5 of them( All TP Link, 3 TL-PA411t1 and 2 TLPA4010PKITV22. They are capable of 500MB and 600 MB respectively).

    Previously they got between 50-80 MB download on my 90MB FTTC connection.
    With the upgrade to FTTH, I'm still only getting about the same range and worse on some plugs. Oddly the upload is good. Mostly getting the max 50. I've tried resetting them all and it didn't help. I expect some loss but even if it was 50% loss I should still be getting 200MB download speed.

    Anyone have any ideas. Should I upgrade so I have the exact same plugs everywhere. Any plugs that are better for FTTH connections?

    Thanks

    Have you got two plugs cabled to the same router or switch?
    Could have them looping traffic between themselves causing a broadcast storm? If one sees the other on the same socket they will get traffic and keep sending echoes back at each other completely clogging up the network!

    Does your old Vodafone modem perform better could be the modem itself?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭FastFullBack


    babi-hrse wrote: »
    Have you got two plugs cabled to the same router or switch?
    Could have them looping traffic between themselves causing a broadcast storm? If one sees the other on the same socket they will get traffic and keep sending echoes back at each other completely clogging up the network!

    Does your old Vodafone modem perform better could be the modem itself?

    No the 5 plugs are separate; 1 at router, 2 at 2 TV, 1 at he office and 1 at smart home hub.

    Not sure on modem (old vs new). Obviously because of FTTH vs FFTC it seems to me like the new one is alot better.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,122 ✭✭✭dam099


    JThey are capable of 500MB and 600 MB respectively).

    In a lab under ideal conditions, real world usually much less than that (though shouldn't be worse than previously).


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,114 ✭✭✭user1842


    I can confirm powerline homeplugs are crap. You are lucky to get the speeds you are getting from them. Also dont bother upgrading the plugs, it does not help. A light breeze can interfere with them.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭FastFullBack


    user1842 wrote: »
    I can confirm powerline homeplugs are crap. You are lucky to get the speeds you are getting from them. Also dont bother upgrading the plugs, it does not help. A light breeze can interfere with them.

    Fair enough, but I was getting only about 10%-40% drop in download speed when I was on FTTC. I'm now getting a drop of 80%-85% in download speed when on FTTH. Any the upload oddly seems fine.

    The only difference is that there is a now a modem & huawei optical network terminal plugged in beside the homeplug that distributes the network. Previous it was only a modem. Maybe the extra device is causing some interference.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 740 ✭✭✭z0oT


    Just got FTTH installed with Vodafone on a 500/50 package. It was an upgrade from FTTC which was coming in about 90MB.
    Wired tests come in at around 450 and WiFi upto 350 for the FTTH.
    But I'm having problems with homeplugs. I have 5 of them( All TP Link, 3 TL-PA411t1 and 2 TLPA4010PKITV22. They are capable of 500MB and 600 MB respectively).

    Previously they got between 50-80 MB download on my 90MB FTTC connection.
    With the upgrade to FTTH, I'm still only getting about the same range and worse on some plugs. Oddly the upload is good. Mostly getting the max 50. I've tried resetting them all and it didn't help. I expect some loss but even if it was 50% loss I should still be getting 200MB download speed.

    Anyone have any ideas. Should I upgrade so I have the exact same plugs everywhere. Any plugs that are better for FTTH connections?

    Thanks
    I have personally never seen anywhere near the max capable speed from Home Plugs when I used them. They used to do about 50Mbps to 60Mbps for me max.

    The actual speed you'll see depends on many things:
    • How your house is wired - Did your electrician do any funny things with the cables when installing?
    • Are you connecting across different wiring loops?
    • Is your connection going across a line with a high power load that supplying something like a Drying Machine?
    You could put the two homeplugs right beside each other in the same socket to test them if you want to emulate a best case scenario.

    Homeplugs are fine if you want to get wired ethernet to something and you don't care that much about the speed. However, if you really want to max our your FTTH 100% reliably, you'll need wired ethernet.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,122 ✭✭✭dam099


    Fair enough, but I was getting only about 10%-40% drop in download speed when I was on FTTC. I'm now getting a drop of 80%-85% in download speed when on FTTH. Any the upload oddly seems fine.

    The performance of your new connection is largely irrelevant to the homeplugs, they wont give you X% of your connection, they give you their own maximum performance.

    Sounds like your old connection was near the limits of their ability, now you have a better one their limitations are being shown up. Also the as the plugs often have similar upload and download capability your upload is still under their max speed so you can get near 100% on it.

    To get full advantage of a 500Mbps connection you need to start looking at Ethernet and/or good quality Mesh setups.


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,820 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    But I'm having problems with homeplugs. I have 5 of them( All TP Link, 3 TL-PA411t1 and 2 TLPA4010PKITV22. They are capable of 500MB and 600 MB respectively).

    Previously they got between 50-80 MB download...

    Then they're not capable of 5-600Mb/s; they're capable of 50-80Mb/s.

    Homeplugs are the classic attempt to polish a turd/make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. Mains wiring is a house is not designed to carry high-speed data. In fact, if you were setting out to design a system that's explicitly crap at carrying high-speed data, mains wiring would be a useful place to start.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,457 ✭✭✭FastFullBack


    Thanks for the feedback everyone. Looks like I've reached the limit of homeplugs. I'll see how the wifi performs first and then might look into finding a way to run some Ethernet cable. Anyone recommend a good Cat 6/7 cable that could be run outside? I might have a path to run a cable from modem to TV area by going taking the cable outside.


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  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,820 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    Just make sure it's UV-rated cable, which is almost invariably black in colour. You don't need to go mad with gel-filled or armoured, and you don't need it to be shielded - UTP will do fine.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,182 ✭✭✭ondafly


    so theres been 2 more visits to the pole outside :D - both times I've just missed the guys to ask them, but what is the general flow of events ? Do I get notified by postal drop the service is available ? is Eir the only option as K/N OpenEir did the work, or is it ISP agnostic ?


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,820 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    ondafly wrote: »
    so theres been 2 more visits to the pole outside :D - both times I've just missed the guys to ask them, but what is the general flow of events ? Do I get notified by postal drop the service is available ? is Eir the only option as K/N OpenEir did the work, or is it ISP agnostic ?

    You're unlikely to be notified at all. It's ISP agnostic; open eir is a wholesaler.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,896 ✭✭✭✭Spook_ie


    babi-hrse wrote: »
    It means the 7th dp on the a switch comes through to that manhole the 8th in the next and so on the dp will usually be 003007a the a denotes that they'd all be going back to the same point in the splitter further on you'll see them start over on a b circuit. If you plug a fibre cable in 007a or 008a there's a fair chance it'll work and lock on. However if you plug someone who's meant to be on an a but plug them into a b there's no chance of it synching up. The numbers are just telling the people installing the boxes which box to put the dps

    Any thoughts on what marking a cover with just an X means?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 788 ✭✭✭babi-hrse


    Spook_ie wrote: »
    Any thoughts on what marking a cover with just an X means?

    Not a clue they spray F on some joint boxes or an L on a pole to mark fibre locations don't know what an X means


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,942 ✭✭✭✭banie01


    OpenEIR FTTH has won the race with SIRO to become active/available for service at my address.
    I'm looking forward to finally dropping Virgin Media and seeing some better value.
    527699.PNG


    Now its time to pick a service provider, the new tier of packages will have me aiming for the 500/50 package and a provider that will allow my own router without bridge mode.
    With reduced work for the Mrs, and me being a student/pensioner price really does become my biggest consideration.
    Currently that leaves me looking fairly squarely at VF for service.
    Anyone have any alternatives? Or is there anything I'm missing?

    Considering the effort Airwire put into their line-checker, I'd love to go with them just as a "thank you" ;) but cant really countenance the monthly cost currently for their service.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,555 ✭✭✭✭Marlow


    As a pensioner, the cheapest would be the pensioner deal with eir, wouldn't it ?

    But then again .. their support is complete and utter non-existant.

    And as for pricing ... the cheap prices are only there for a limited period. You'll have to re-negotiate or move provider every year, to keep it like that. Pensioner pricing being the exception.

    /M


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,942 ✭✭✭✭banie01


    Marlow wrote: »
    As a pensioner, the cheapest would be the pensioner deal with eir, wouldn't it ?

    But then again .. their support is complete and utter non-existant.

    And as for pricing ... the cheap prices are only there for a limited period. You'll have to re-negotiate or move provider every year, to keep it like that. Pensioner pricing being the exception.

    /M

    I say pensioner, but as a medical/invalidity pensioner so I don't get OAP pricing and my household income is above the threshold for the free allowance package.

    So I'd probably be far more fairly described as cheap ;)
    Honestly tho, much like everyone else I am facing a restricted income and likely even worsening for the foreseeable as I go through the joys of being a student again.

    I'm long used to the yearly dance of move or negotiate, but even at that most of the FTTH deals are at @60% the price I'm currently paying so happy to do it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 61 ✭✭NotAnotherOrange


    banie01 wrote: »
    OpenEIR FTTH has won the race with SIRO to become active/available for service at my address.
    I'm looking forward to finally dropping Virgin Media and seeing some better value.



    Now its time to pick a service provider, the new tier of packages will have me aiming for the 500/50 package and a provider that will allow my own router without bridge mode.
    With reduced work for the Mrs, and me being a student/pensioner price really does become my biggest consideration.
    Currently that leaves me looking fairly squarely at VF for service.
    Anyone have any alternatives? Or is there anything I'm missing?

    Considering the effort Airwire put into their line-checker, I'd love to go with them just as a "thank you" ;) but cant really countenance the monthly cost currently for their service.

    What a sight that is! Being able to see it's finally coming...

    I got excited about our estate 6-8 weeks ago as Fibre was being pumped in.

    Last week I found out only half the houses in the estate are getting it. The rest of us are just left with nothing.

    It's crazy! Houses at the front of the estate have it, then it has to come past my house to enable the houses at the back.

    Those of us in the middle left with nothing and I can't find out from OpenEir why this is. Frustrating after doing all the chasing for it, only to get half the houses connected, but left with nothing myself


  • Company Representative Posts: 668 ✭✭✭Airwire: MartinL


    We have updated the database for OpenEIR FTTC/FTTH today.

    It can be found at https://www.airwire.ie/avail


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,036 ✭✭✭BArra


    We have updated the database for OpenEIR FTTC/FTTH today.

    It can be found at https://www.airwire.ie/avail

    martin, any update on the ifn future premises being included in your updates, remember i read you mentioned something on this a while back


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,942 ✭✭✭✭banie01


    banie01 wrote: »
    I say pensioner, but as a medical/invalidity pensioner so I don't get OAP pricing and my household income is above the threshold for the free allowance package.

    So I'd probably be far more fairly described as cheap ;)
    Honestly tho, much like everyone else I am facing a restricted income and likely even worsening for the foreseeable as I go through the joys of being a student again.

    I'm long used to the yearly dance of move or negotiate, but even at that most of the FTTH deals are at @60% the price I'm currently paying so happy to do it.

    I ended up booking my FTTH service with Sky. VF do have a free install offer but they were absolutely painful to deal with and they would still only allow me to order FTTC.

    Sky on the other hand, the ordering process was smooth. Yes there is an install fee but as I paid that via a cashback card and setup payment from the same card I will at get 2% back on all the charges.

    Submitted my cancellation request to virgin yesterday. They emailed me back confirming my 30 days and that service would terminate on the 28/10.
    Then they immediately cut the service!
    Despite this billing period being paid up to the 3/10 and still having the notice period to serve!?

    Luckily my router has a dual WAN option and I was able to fall back over to a 4G service once I'd twigged what had gone wrong with the provisioning ;)

    I must be the 1st person ever to complain about not serving a notice period!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,155 ✭✭✭Xithus


    There's a few threads on here about Vodafone and how bad they are. Avoid unless absolutely necessary I always say.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,711 ✭✭✭kaisersose77


    We have updated the database for OpenEIR FTTC/FTTH today.

    It can be found at https://www.airwire.ie/avail

    For my family home it says Available soon for Fibre to the Home (150-1000 Mbit/s). Do you have any idea how soon that could be? within the next few months or could be a lot longer than that?


  • Company Representative Posts: 668 ✭✭✭Airwire: MartinL


    For my family home it says Available soon for Fibre to the Home (150-1000 Mbit/s). Do you have any idea how soon that could be? within the next few months or could be a lot longer than that?


    Generally 2-6 months. There are no guaranteed time frames. The reason, it's listed as "Available soon", is that OpenEIR now has indexed it for FTTH. So they are in the process of bringing it online.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,182 ✭✭✭ondafly


    Tried searching for this on Eir's website - and also admittedly a quick search here. Also engaged with their online chat, to be told they cannot guarantee an upload speed.

    What is the upload speed on the 1Gb package from Eir - trying to compare them with Virgin et al


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,820 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    ondafly wrote: »
    What is the upload speed on the 1Gb package from Eir - trying to compare them with Virgin et al

    100Mb/s.


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 8,679 Mod ✭✭✭✭Rew


    Virgins is pretty poor at 55, which is the bare minimum (if even) to support a 1 Gbit/s download.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,182 ✭✭✭ondafly


    oscarBravo wrote: »
    100Mb/s.

    thanks - I had a feeling it was that - but no where on their site do they state it, at least that I can find easily.


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  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 16,967 Mod ✭✭✭✭Gonzo


    100 is the maximum upload you can get on residential broadband in this country from both OpenEir and Siro.

    Siro used to give 200 on their 1 gig plans but this has since been reduced to 100 for all new customers. I get the feeling this upload will not increase for possibly several more years.

    100 upload is more than enough for most people however, but it is a shame there isn't a higher upload option for those who really need it, even as an add on at additional cost.


  • Company Representative Posts: 668 ✭✭✭Airwire: MartinL


    We have updated the database for OpenEIR FTTC/FTTH today.

    It can be found at https://www.airwire.ie/avail


  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 2,975 Mod ✭✭✭✭LoGiE


    Open Eir rolled out fibre in my parents street during the summer and it's now gone live. Looking to move them to a 500/50 connection.

    Here's what the suppliers websites say:

    Eir - Can't fine their Eircode! Using their landline number it tells me VDSL is available (It's installed already in the house)

    Vodafone - says FTTH is available.
    Airwire - says only VDSL is availlable.

    Which is correct? You would think this information comes from the one database.

    Thanks,
    LoGiE


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 36,169 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    One database but its manually replicated once OE publish a new version. Martin from Airwire will post when they ingest it. Main ops can be a few weeks behind.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,555 ✭✭✭✭Marlow


    LoGiE wrote: »
    Vodafone - says FTTH is available.

    Either Vodafone have it wrong or you are covered by SIRO, but not on one of the interconnects, that Airwire covers (Airwire does not cover SIRO everywhere. Only where their backbone passes).

    Where in the country are you ?

    /M


  • Moderators, Computer Games Moderators Posts: 2,975 Mod ✭✭✭✭LoGiE


    Marlow wrote: »
    Either Vodafone have it wrong or you are covered by SIRO, but not on one of the interconnects, that Airwire covers (Airwire does not cover SIRO everywhere. Only where their backbone passes).

    Where in the country are you ?

    /M

    In Malahide and can see the poll is a few metres from the house.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,122 ✭✭✭dam099


    Marlow wrote: »
    Either Vodafone have it wrong or you are covered by SIRO, but not on one of the interconnects, that Airwire covers (Airwire does not cover SIRO everywhere. Only where their backbone passes).

    Where in the country are you ?

    /M

    I think Airwire still flag those SIRO premises as available from other providers though? (Which is to their credit as they may lose potential VDSL customers to an alternative SIRO provider).


  • Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 28,820 Mod ✭✭✭✭oscarBravo


    dam099 wrote: »
    I think Airwire still flag those SIRO premises as available from other providers though? (Which is to their credit as they may lose potential VDSL customers to an alternative SIRO provider).

    Probably not. SIRO don't provide availability information to providers who don't have interconnects in the towns in question.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,122 ✭✭✭dam099


    oscarBravo wrote: »
    Probably not. SIRO don't provide availability information to providers who don't have interconnects in the towns in question.

    Maybe not universally but they have SIRO data for some areas they don't service e.g. my own Eircode returns below on their site:


  • Moderators, Sports Moderators Posts: 8,679 Mod ✭✭✭✭Rew


    LoGiE wrote: »
    In Malahide and can see the poll is a few metres from the house.

    My brother is in Malahide and his house cant get it but directly across the road can, in his case I think the other side is poles and his side is underground.


  • Company Representative Posts: 668 ✭✭✭Airwire: MartinL


    LoGiE wrote: »
    In Malahide and can see the poll is a few metres from the house.

    We don't cover Malahide on SIRO, so that's the reason it would not be listed on our checker.
    dam099 wrote: »
    I think Airwire still flag those SIRO premises as available from other providers though? (Which is to their credit as they may lose potential VDSL customers to an alternative SIRO provider).

    We do, but only premises that were added to the SIRO network before 2019. We don't have nationwide data for premises covered by SIRO after that date.

    Airwire currently offers SIRO in Athlone, Castleconnell, Clarecastle, Ennis, Galway, Limerick, Oranmore, Portlaoise, Shannon, Sixmilebridge, Sligo and South Dublin. So anything outside and build after 2018 will not show up in our check.


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