internal wiring

Started by ou7shined, Mar 02, 2010, 21:46:19

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ou7shined

So my new connection in my new house got activated today. :thumb:

However.... :red:  it being the new house I didn't know where the master socket was and simply plugged into the socket best suited for my needs which was 1 of 2 in my livingroom (for future reference hereafter known as socket 1). It turned out that it didn't work for BB although it has been working fine for my phone and caller ID box thing since the line went live a week ago. I moved my BT 2700HGV over to the other socket in my living room (socket 2) and hey presto I had BB. There is a phone connected to socket 3* upstairs in the bedroom. BB was coming in at just over 2 Megs - which compared to the luxury of my old 13 Meg connection was a bit of a let down... but hey ho, maybe it is just part of the burn in period.



I've had a few dropped connections throughout the day - mostly caused by plugging in my caller ID box and phones in - especially into socket 1 ??? and some spontanious ones too. So with this playing on my mind tonight I located my NTE5 master socket (by the front door in the electric box ::)) and plugged my router into it and suddenly I'm getting 5.5 megs - which I believe is standard for the training period.



So it looks like I have internal problems :D
Do I get in touch with BT now to sort out the wiring?

Btw I cracked open some brand new filters today (ones that came with my BT 2700's) so I think we're ok on that front plus I have gone around and disconnected the ring wire as per Rik's awesome FAQ just in case. I'm going to leave it plugged in all night with the phone still disconnected and see if there are any drop outs - which I doubt as it "feels" really good now.


*I'd forgotten about the upstairs phone until tonight (in fact I don't even think my g/f had told me she'd plugged one in - it's at her side of the bed ::)) I believe that socket 3 branches off of socket 2 so I guess I'll have to play about with it later to see if having the phone in socket 3 caused the socket 2 drop outs. I'll leave it for now as I don't want too many disconnects in a row.
Rich.

Klaatu barada nikto!

Steve

Hopefully disconnecting the ring wire has solved the problem and your IP profile will catch up. :thumb:
Steve
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

ou7shined

Yeah I hope so as I'll need to shift the router back into the livingroom and not have cables running all over the shop.

Do I get in BT to sort out the internal wiring or is that down to me to fix?
Rich.

Klaatu barada nikto!

Steve

I didn't think BT was much interested after the master socket,if you move your router back onto an extension you may see the problem returning depending on the cable quality as it can act as an aerial for any in house noise. Perhaps its time to think about a few portables and then you won't need all the extensions.
Steve
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

D-Dan

Personally, if trailing wires are that much of a problem, I'd use the ADSL modem as just a modem, and buy a dumb router. Take a single cable from the modem to the router, and then build the network from there. This will minimise noise since the modem (ADSL router) goes into the master socket. You may also consider a filtered faceplate to the master socket, and remove the trailing ADSL filter from the equation.

Steve

Edit: Get Cat5e or Cat6 network cable to bridge the gap from the ADSL router to the none-ADSL router.
Have I lost my way?



This post doesn't necessarily represent even my own opinions, let alone anyone else's

ou7shined

Steve (oh no here I go again) Portable whats?  :red:
The extensions are all behind the wall jobs and were here before I moved in.

D-Dan That would work if I had a power socket in my electric box. As it stands either way I have a phone cable or a power cable for the router coming out of the box then crossing the hallway in front of my livingroom door. Sod's law eh.
Rich.

Klaatu barada nikto!

Steve

Portable phones with caller ID and one base unit.
Steve
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

ou7shined

Ah ok. I thought it was more router speak. ;D
Rich.

Klaatu barada nikto!

D-Dan

Quote from: ou7shined on Mar 02, 2010, 22:38:55
D-Dan That would work if I had a power socket in my electric box. As it stands either way I have a phone cable or a power cable for the router coming out of the box then crossing the hallway in front of my livingroom door. Sod's law eh.

I had a similar problem - I had to use an extended socket to modem lead because I had no powerpoint anywhere close to the master socket. I solved it by having a single socket extension made to a length that I could route it unobtrusively within range of the master socket, then I bought 20M Cat6 cables and routed them around the walls and doors (I went fully wired - no second router). You could acheive the same with a single 20m Cat6 cable and a single mains extension.

Steve
Have I lost my way?



This post doesn't necessarily represent even my own opinions, let alone anyone else's

Ted

You could have a 2 gang electric socket put in your electric cupboard (shouldn't cost a lot, given the location) and then use "mains networking" like these http://www.homeplugs.co.uk/acatalog/Solwise_HomePlugs.html#a23

No wires to run and you can move them around to suit your needs, or you can just add more units. They come in wired and wireless versions, or both.
Ted
There's no place like 127.0.0.1

ou7shined

I might have a crack at putting a electric socket in my electric box then.
It's quite central to the house and seems to be giving good wifi coverage to the rest of it.
Rich.

Klaatu barada nikto!

ou7shined

update:

Well for the princely sum of £20 I had a sparky install a double socket in my electric box. My 2700 now lives in there...



I get full bars (wifi) all around the house from here so I'm very chuffed.
My profile seems to have settled at 4MB, which although is a 1/3 of what I was getting before, I can live with.

Unfortunately the wiring is still skew-whiff. Everything is fine as long as I go into the inner master socket but as soon as I put the NTE5 back together and plug anything in either the faceplate or any extensions along with my router it all goes phut again - either broken internets or no connection at all. Phones still work fine from the extensions but they knock off the internet. The only working solution is to put my router and 1 phone into the inner master socket.

Could the the NTE5 faceplate be faulty? (it looks ok - brand new in fact)



If it's the problem then perhaps the wiring to the extensions could well be ok.

Is it a BT job now?
Rich.

Klaatu barada nikto!

Steve

Wait for Rik et al to confirm but I think you've got a bell/ring wire attached at pin 3 which if so will cause a lot of interference
Steve
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Rik

He has, Steve. Get rid of that connection from terminal 3 at the master and all other sockets, or fit a filtered master, Ou7.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

ou7shined

Are you guys sure? The one terminal that has nothing in it says "3" next to it (5 at the top). I have removed all other ring wires in the house myself after reading your FAQ Rik but the master one I left untouched - I peeked in saw nothing in 3 and left it. I presume that loose dark orange wire was in term 3.

Looking back at your faq my master socket isn't wired at all the same as your example. Perhaps I should copy this layout on mine?

Rich.

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Rik

From the bottom you have signal wire in terminal 2, ring in terminal 3, nothing in 4 and signal wire in 5. The orange wire is usually used for the ring wire, which adds to my suspicions. You can see the 3 under the wire, next to the terminal.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

ou7shined

The pic above is yours Rik.
My master socket pic is the one above that with the gnarly hand in shot. :D
Rich.

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Rik

No wonder I thought it looked so good. ;) Still remove the orange wire, it's not needed.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

ou7shined

Weeeeeell that seems to have done the trick.
I've probably lost a point or two off my profile for successive disconnects but at least everything seems to be running as it should all around the house. I keep you updated.


Thanks to you both. :thumb: :thumb:
Rich.

Klaatu barada nikto!

Rik

Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Simon

Quote from: ou7shined on Mar 09, 2010, 16:11:23
The pic above is yours Rik.
My master socket pic is the one above that with the gnarly hand in shot. :D

:pmsl:  Senility rules!  ;D 
Simon.
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Gary

#21
Isn't having a router surrounded by electrical wiring a possible cause of interference? Normally you keep wiring well away  :dunno:
Damned, if you do damned if you don't

joe

as a matter of interest in the pic of ou7shined why is the Ethernet LED (the top one of the central five) not lit?

Gary

Quote from: joe on Mar 10, 2010, 08:20:37
as a matter of interest in the pic of ou7shined why is the Ethernet LED (the top one of the central five) not lit?
Because he has the Ethernet cable plugged into number 3 instead of 1?
Damned, if you do damned if you don't

Rik

There's only one light Gary, any connection and it comes on.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.