As I know everyone here is so good and friendly :thup: would someone please cast a eye over my line stats. I am very happy with the speed but not to sure if I am pushing my line to much. Sky have capped my line at 8.5 meg but say it should only be about 5. Any views please.
DSL Line (Wire Pair): Line 1 (inner pair)
Protocol: G.DMT2+ Annex A
Downstream Rate: 8542 kbps
Upstream Rate: 828 kbps
Channel: Interleaved
Current Noise Margin: 5.9 dB (Downstream), 11.3 dB (Upstream)
Current Attenuation: 47.2 dB (Downstream), 26.9 dB (Upstream)
Current Output Power: 20.4 dBm (Downstream), 12.3 dBm (Upstream)
DSLAM Vendor Information: Country: {0xFF} Vendor: {GSPN} Specific: {0x1000}
PVC Info: 0/38
(NM holds at 8.9 during the day)
Collected for 11:50:19
Since Reset Current 24-Hour Interval Current 15-Minute Interval Time Since Last Event
ATM Cell Header Errors: 205 205 1 0:03:21
ATM Loss of Cell Delineation: 42 42 0 0:46:50
DSL Link Retrains: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Training Errors: 1 1 0 11:49:42
DSL Training Timeouts: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Loss of Framing Failures: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Loss of Signal Failures: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Loss of Power Failures: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Loss of Margin Failures: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Cumulative Errored Seconds: 82 82 1 0:03:21
DSL Severely Errored Seconds: 2 2 0 4:21:58
DSL Corrected Blocks: 3475 3475 52 0:00:02
DSL Uncorrected Blocks: 220 220 1 0:03:21
ISP Connection Establishment: 1 1 1 0:02:05
All looks good, bill, as long as your noise margin doesn't drop too much during the night. :)
I'd say you're at the max (no pun intended), Bill, given that your noise margin is ~6dB at night, but things look absolutely fine.
Just to give you an idea, my sync is just over half of yours, and our attenuation is identical, although my target SNRM is 9dB (for stability) and I'm not on ADSL2+. :)
When I was on ADSL (up to 8 meg) my nm never moved from the default of 7. Now that I am on ADSL2+ it seems to drop quite quickly in the evening. Sky put me on the uncapped Sky Max package. My sync went up to 9.8 meg but my connection was just unuseable.
Just spoke to soon. NM was holding at 5.5 then it just lost sync. No warning no big drop in NM. Very strange.
It could be the router. Some are more sensitive than others. As ADSL2+ is a different technology, I'd recommend you try posting on skyuser.co.uk as they're a lot more clued up. :)
Hi many thanks for everyones help. Tried posting over on the Sky user forum, but it seems that no one was keen to help me. Have just dug out my old Speedtouch 585. The nm is a bit higher but it seems to create a LOT more FEC errors then the 2700. I am sure I read some ware that the 585 was very generous with the amount of errors on the line.
Uptime: 0 days, 1:18:25
Modulation: G.992.5 Annex A
Bandwidth (Up/Down) [kbps/kbps]: 828 / 8,541
Data Transferred (Sent/Received) [MB/MB]: 24.35 / 195.13
Output Power (Up/Down) [dBm]: 12.5 / -25.4294967291
Line Attenuation (Up/Down) [dB]: 26.5 / 47.5
SN Margin (Up/Down) [dB]: 11.0 / 8.0
Vendor ID (Local/Remote): TMMB / ÿµGS
Loss of Framing (Local/Remote): 0 / 0
Loss of Signal (Local/Remote): 0 / 0
Loss of Power (Local/Remote): 0 / 0
Loss of Link (Remote): 0
Error Seconds (Local/Remote): 3 / 0
FEC Errors (Up/Down): 5 / 3,043
CRC Errors (Up/Down): 1 / 3
HEC Errors (Up/Down): 0 / 3
It is, Bill. Use the 2700 and don't worry. :)
Quote from: old Bill on Jun 11, 2008, 10:42:45
Hi many thanks for everyones help. Tried posting over on the Sky user forum, but it seems that no one was keen to help me.
Probably because they all know that Sky insist on their customers using the router pre-programmed and supplied by them. ::)
If Skys router was any good I would be happy to use it. It makes a good door stop. The only reason I was trying the 585 was to see if it would hold the line better in the evening.
No experience, may be complete nonsense :blush: but what about using the 585v6 and DMT modem tools to tweak the margin apparently its compatible with firmware 6.1 I think :)
Don't worry about FECs, Bill, they are corrected errors. I would leave things as they are, with whichever router you prefer. :)
A quick update. I have 2 2700 routers one using the SBC software and one using the BT software. I had for sometime just been using the SBC version as I liked the higher wireless power. Anyway I decided to try the BT version and it seems to hold on to the line and nm so much better. No loss of sync and a nice steady connection.
Collected for 1 day 17:32:07
Since Reset Current 24-Hour Interval Current 15-Minute Interval Time Since Last Event
ATM Cell Header Errors: 975 389 1 0:00:45
ATM Loss of Cell Delineation: 160 35 0 1:29:59
DSL Link Retrains: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Training Errors: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Training Timeouts: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Loss of Framing Failures: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Loss of Signal Failures: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Loss of Power Failures: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Loss of Margin Failures: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Cumulative Errored Seconds: 636 262 1 0:00:45
DSL Severely Errored Seconds: 0 0 0 0:00:00
DSL Corrected Blocks: 19695 11403 20 0:00:30
DSL Uncorrected Blocks: 1080 438 1 0:00:45
ISP Connection Establishment: 1 1 1 0:01:56
DSL Connection Details
DSL Line (Wire Pair): Line 1 (inner pair)
Protocol: G.DMT2+ Annex A
Downstream Rate: 8542 kbps
Upstream Rate: 828 kbps
Channel: Interleaved
Current Noise Margin: 6.1 dB (Downstream) 10.1 dB (Upstream)
Current Attenuation: 47.3 dB (Downstream) 26.9 dB (Upstream)
Current Output Power: 20.4 dBm (Downstream) 12.3 dBm (Upstream)
DSLAM Vendor Information: Country: {0xFF} Vendor: {GSPN} Specific: {0x1000}
PVC Info: 0/38
Thanks for everyones advice.
Excellent. :thumb:
I wouldn't say my dual SSID BT model is better in terms of sync or holding the line, but it doesn't suffer the 12 day reboot like the SBC firmware, which is a big plus for me. :)