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-   -   Broadband speed in the UK (https://www.worldphotographyforum.com/showthread.php?t=977)

Roy C 18-04-06 08:12

Broadband speed in the UK
 
I expect most members already know but this is a reminder that over 99% of telephone exchanges in the UK have now been upgraded to 8mbit capability. My ISP allows a regrade of my 2mbit line for a one off payment of £5 (monthly fee stays the same). The exact speed you get is down to how far you are from the exchange and line quality. I have been switched today and am now getting 5.6 mbit (wow -big differance from 2mbit). It is worth checking you ISP for a regrade.

Canis Vulpes 18-04-06 09:09

I use NTL cable and currently subscribe to a 1MBit/s service. I do know a chap who uses NTL's 10Mbit/s and he claims he gets around 6Mbit/s. Overall bit rate depends upon the far server and all routers etc along the way subject to lowest common denominator.

I used to pay £37.99 for 3Mbit/s and now use greater speed as a saving rather than performance, 1Mbit/s costs £17.99 and is perfectly acceptable.

Roy C 18-04-06 09:14

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stephen Fox
I use NTL cable and currently subscribe to a 1MBit/s service. I do know a chap who uses NTL's 10Mbit/s and he claims he gets around 6Mbit/s. Overall bit rate depends upon the far server and all routers etc along the way subject to lowest common denominator.

I used to pay £37.99 for 3Mbit/s and now use greater speed as a saving rather than performance, 1Mbit/s costs £17.99 and is perfectly acceptable.

For info Stephen, I pay £14.99 for my now 5.6Mbit/s line.

Andy 18-04-06 09:24

As Stephen says, even with my 2mb connection I find I'm still restricted by speeds at the other end of the equation sometimes. Depends what and where you're downloading from.

I think the bigger benefit of upgrading is send speeds... you can get less than 15% of what is quoted.

I am within 500yrds of an exchange, so I look forward to 8mb for sending big photos off to print.

Canis Vulpes 18-04-06 09:33

Quote:

Originally Posted by Andy
I think the bigger benefit of upgrading is send speeds... you can get less than 15% of what is quoted.

Now, thats where ASDL falls over with its limitation of 256kbit/s upload speed. Cable modems run at whatever they are instructed to and technically possible to send and receive upto 18Mbit/s. Cable modems pulse providing the subscribed average speed. However my 1Mbit/s service has a pathetic 100kbit/s upload but I save £20 each month compared to NTL's finest.

Roy C 18-04-06 09:41

I am now getting 399 Kbps upload with my new connection according to the line speed test. Previous to my upgrade I was getting around half of this. Also the download speed increase from 2 Mbit/s to 5.6 Mbit/s is very noticable, esp on birdforum.net. As a lot of ISP's will allow a regrade with no extra cost per month it is crazy not to go for this faster speed.

Andy 18-04-06 10:04

BT's ADSL Max can offer send speeds at over 800kbps, though for normal 'joe public' it'll be 400kbps.

I just found this on the web, gives quite detailed info on your local exchange
http://usertools.plus.net/exchanges/

Canis Vulpes 18-04-06 10:24

Quote:

Originally Posted by Roy C
For info Stephen, I pay £14.99 for my now 5.6Mbit/s line.

Sounds great but now add monthly PSTN line rental. From memory approx £8.50 per month making a sole ASDL service £23.50. However Mbit/s for £ its a very good deal. Does this service come with equipment such as USB ASDL modem or a real ADSL router?

Roy C 18-04-06 11:08

Quote:

Originally Posted by Stephen Fox
Sounds great but now add monthly PSTN line rental. From memory approx £8.50 per month making a sole ASDL service £23.50. However Mbit/s for £ its a very good deal. Does this service come with equipment such as USB ASDL modem or a real ADSL router?

Hi Stephen, We are not all dummies out here - for info I am a recently retired IT manager who set-up and ran a thin client network over five locations with over 100 users (recently upgrading the leased lines to ADSL) so please give me a tiny bit of credit for knowing what I am doing. And by the way I am with a 'real' ISP not Wanadoo,Tiscali or BT for instance. My intial posting was to remind people using a BT line that they could now get up to 4 times the speed if ther require, very often for no more monthly fee, I am begining to regret even making the post with all the negativity flying around.

Canis Vulpes 18-04-06 11:31

I am not sure what is meant by negativity, I point out 5-6MBit/s is normal for high speed lines and compare costs from other providers. The post is welcome and informative. I setup and recommend ADSL for use with CCTV systems and believe me, 400 - 800kbit/s upload speed will really make a difference. I am seriously considering dumping NTL in favour for ASDL with performance v's cost of this. Could you provide details so myself and others can take advantage of this.

Canis Vulpes 18-04-06 12:25

Please find details from BT website.

http://www.btplc.com/News/Articles/S...f-743862935266

phill666 31-07-08 00:26

I have BT broadband 8mb service but because i am farther away from the exchange i only recieve 4mb but BT do say service is upto 8mb so carnt complain.

walwyn 31-07-08 14:33

My ISP uprated our connection about 2 years ago, currently we get a connection speed of between 4.5 and 5.1 MBit and we are way out in the warks countryside about 2 miles from the nearest exchange.

Our only problem is that the ADSL signal drops out 2 or 3 times a day on average and the router has to be reconnected.


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