Everyone is unsure about how to connect their DSL line.
Everyone is unsure about how to connect their DSL line.
Performing any activity on the street outside your home is generally not advisable since such areas usually fall under the telecom provider's jurisdiction. If the issue worsens, they may charge a significant amount to resolve it. It seems unexpected that they haven't visited to address the problem, though in the UK, internet services are treated as essential, so work continues even outside homes. Are these phone lines identical or distinct? If they're the same, it creates a poor setup for DSL, and you should avoid branching a DSL line because reflections can occur from the end not connected to the modem. The best approach is to connect directly to the first socket, then link from there to the next, with the modem at the very beginning.
Are you sure no one can service it? As far as I know ISPs are not doing new installs, but I thought they are still servicing existing customers.
I reside in the states and AT&T will handle any necessary repairs. I recently had fiber installed at my home during these times. My speed jumped from 24mbps to 1000mbps—it's really fast. This upgrade has been helpful since schoolwork is now done from home and many people are working remotely.
In certain areas, altering telecom gear can lead to legal consequences. Unless local conditions remain stable, the issue may stem from a source further down the network.
the ISP listed the modem/router as much higher on the suspect list than your wiring. contact customer support and ask if you can bring the device to a store for replacement with new equipment. I know someone who couldn’t get a service call but managed to swap their hardware at a store. The ISP’s offerings are essentially low-quality, poorly made products that don’t last.
Gather the specific location and internet service provider for a clearer perspective. Advice from Alex Atkin in the UK can still be relevant here.
I thought that even when it functioned, it might have operated more efficiently if the socket wiring were improved. It seems like a bridge-tap scenario, where the DSL signal moves in both directions and neutralizes itself. The UK DSL tester estimates how this could affect your connection speed, suggesting that on a standard ADSL2 line over a long distance you could lose half of your maximum potential speed.
I believe I grasp the situation now. Thank you all for your help. I’m sorry I didn’t bring it up earlier. I’m based in India where people generally don’t pay much attention, and there are many service workers who fix things without keeping records of their work. Even if something goes wrong, they’ll come and repair it for free. They only charge for the equipment like cables and boxes.
I’ve been reaching out to customer care for seven days now, but no one can confirm whether an upgrade is possible. After reviewing the details, I removed everything from one end, so now it looks like a single wire coming in with a splitter connected to both the phone and modem. The issues persist.
I used to have 8mbps before anything changed, which matched my internet plan. I never thought anything was wrong. I’ve been applying for an upgrade, but my local ISP representative said my connection is 15 years old and they can’t proceed. I don’t understand why they can’t just give me a new line—though I’m willing to pay for installation. With this speed, streaming a full HD movie isn’t even possible. I’ll keep trying to resolve it, thank you all.
This makes sense when no one maintains records. They don’t understand the layout of their network or past activities, so testing the line is the only way to gauge current capabilities. The full picture remains unclear. That’s why companies keep logs. In the early days, the IS operated telephone systems with random connections—wires linking buildings through chaotic, unstructured trunks. Eventually, a single wire failure caused a collapse, resulting in injury and prompting changes.