Is upgrading a Router really that Important

Something to consider if you have 3 or 4G in your area is a 4G router from EE. My mate was on a 1Mb BT ADSL connection and now gets 50Mb as as he's in a double speed 4G area. Price not to bad for 25GB usage a month either.
 
I was with another ISP a while back and there were some line issues. An engineer came round and speeds were up to 1.5-1.8 MB for a while. Then they dropped to just under 1 MB coincidently at the same time as I went above the fair usage for just a month. BT never managed to improve on 1 MB and claimed it depended on other users in the area.

Changed to a different ISP and speed has been about 1 MB. Another line at home only shows 0.5 MB though.

Contacted my ISP a few months ago and they suggested a new router but I don't really want to do this. They're always very reluctant to do a line test or send out an engineer.

I'm sure the line is such that it needs to tweaking every so often by an engineer. If I used to get nearly 2 MB before then surely it's possible now ?

Another issue is that when an outgoing call is made via the home phone the internet cuts out completely and has to be reset.
 
Is the phone filtered? If so where is the filter? If not, then it should be. If the extension comes from the master socket and this is where the broadband is plugged in then does the extension plug into the phone side of the filter?
 
I was with another ISP a while back and there were some line issues. An engineer came round and speeds were up to 1.5-1.8 MB for a while. Then they dropped to just under 1 MB coincidently at the same time as I went above the fair usage for just a month. BT never managed to improve on 1 MB and claimed it depended on other users in the area.
Entirely possible but most of your issues are just down to a poor line.
Changed to a different ISP and speed has been about 1 MB. Another line at home only shows 0.5 MB though.
Which indicates you are just too far from the exchange to get a decent speed.
Contacted my ISP a few months ago and they suggested a new router but I don't really want to do this. They're always very reluctant to do a line test or send out an engineer.
A new router on its own is not going to help, you would have to get a new router and adjust the SNR on it, and with your earlier report line stats even if you could bump it up to near 2Mb it would be unstable and prone to disconnecting.
I'm sure the line is such that it needs to tweaking every so often by an engineer. If I used to get nearly 2 MB before then surely it's possible now ?
When the engineer came he probably reset DLM which in turn temporarily boosted the speed, no doubt within a matter of weeks to around a month is when it dropped as DLM would had realised at that speed you will not be stable.
Another issue is that when an outgoing call is made via the home phone the internet cuts out completely and has to be reset.
That is either a line filter as suggested by MissChief above..... A faulty phone/extension cable/wiring or if your Master socket is the new filtered type that is faulty/not filtering extensions. The other issue that could be affecting your speeds a little is the ring wire on the telephone extension if it is connected.....
http://www.kitz.co.uk/adsl/socket.htm

Id suggest you unscrew your master socket as detailed in that link and connect your modem to the test socket also as detailed. IF that then gives a boost of more than another 512k then check the ring wire and if needed disconnect that. Either way id still buy a new filter for the phone on an extension also, they can be had for well under £10 (buy a decent one and not some fleabay 99p rubbish). See if that helps, it may a little but do not expect miracles, you stats you mentioned indicate you are going to be stuck around 1-2Mb regardless of what you do.
 
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Is the phone filtered? If so where is the filter? If not, then it should be. If the extension comes from the master socket and this is where the broadband is plugged in then does the extension plug into the phone side of the filter?

Do you have a filter for the phone? As you will need one for every phone socket being used in the house.
 
Microfilter on every device. They tell you this when you sign up.

If your adsl connection disconnects often (more than once a week) Then your connection speed will be severely affected.

Adsl should be on 24/7
 
I have a microfilter connected to the master socket from which the phone extension is connected. Should I connect a second microfilter on the extension cable and plug the phone into that. Is that what you're saying ?

Plugged both lines into the test socket. Didn't make any difference on one line but on the other line it went from 0.5 MB to about 1 MB. Does that mean I should get a new faceplate for this line ? I'm sure BT changed it a while back it was one which has really long screws...
 
Line attenuation 63 dB is pretty damn long/noisey.

How far are you from the exchange?

Id guess you could get 2mbit max all things perfect.

Get a router that syncs lower at 2db or variable but expect disconnects frequently.
 
We're on a rubbish line here, on a Draytek 2860 we were getting line sync of about 1400 to 1600kbps downstream, connection was around 1.4Mbps.

Only by chance did I try another router (the BT HH we were sent) when I was doing some testing and noticed it was syncing higher, at about 1600 to 1700kbps downstream all the time.

Doing some reading seems that the Draytek whilst being very solid routers are rather cautious with the line and go for stability rather than out and out speed.


Draytek normally offer several different ADSL modem codes (i.e. firmwares), one for "everyday" use, one for line stability and normally a higher performance - trying them out can make a big difference depending on your line.

Draytek 2830 Release Notes said:
For general purpose usage on UK lines, modem code 232201 is recommended
For ADSL2+ Annex M lines, the latest modem code 2471201 is suggested
For line speeds of less than 4Mbps, on lower quality lines a modem code
with more conservative paramaters, 211801 is suggested

Had a look for the 2860, but doesn't look like they offer the alternative firmwares just a ADSL one or a VDSL optimised one.
 
I have a microfilter connected to the master socket from which the phone extension is connected. Should I connect a second microfilter on the extension cable and plug the phone into that. Is that what you're saying ?

NO do not double filter an extension. Place one filter on the extension either near the Master socket or near the phone/extension socket.

Plugged both lines into the test socket. Didn't make any difference on one line but on the other line it went from 0.5 MB to about 1 MB. Does that mean I should get a new faceplate for this line ? I'm sure BT changed it a while back it was one which has really long screws...

What do you mean both lines? connect only the modem to the Test socket. Do NOT connect the modem to extension and then test socket, that will unlikely make any difference.
 
Get your wiring sorted out and any junction boxes fixed. If you are with BT they can do this for you. An 834 is a really old box now in tech terms.
 
NO do not double filter an extension. Place one filter on the extension either near the Master socket or near the phone/extension socket.

OK



What do you mean both lines? connect only the modem to the Test socket. Do NOT connect the modem to extension and then test socket, that will unlikely make any difference.

I have two broadband lines in the house that's what I meant....
 
If your internet drops when using the phone, either your filter is faulty (this is quite common) or you're not using a filter at all on that phone.

Before you go changing anything. Check everything is filtered up correctly, and that everything works.

If you've got loads of items plugged into the phone line(s)- (phones, fax machine [lol], sky box etc) . Unplug them all so it's as simple as possible.

ie, just have your router connected (through a filter). Now add one device back at a time, testing them out to see if it drops.
 
I had less than 1 meg when we moved in and 63db attenuation, now have 3meg.

In these situations wiring is critical, get an Openreach faceplate (where the filters are built in).

The Billion (7800) routers are leagues ahead (the 834 and others are sat in the cupboard)
 
I have two broadband lines in the house that's what I meant....

This i suspect is more wiring issues and possibly a faulty filter or filters than anything else. A 63db as mentioned http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showpost.php?p=27597773&postcount=10
Will typically at best (no extensions or using twisted pairs for the extensions) give you around 2Mb pushing it for anymore would mean SNR adjustments which ultimately while giving a higher reported sync can end up running worse.
Id suggest sorting/checking the wiring out as a first step before you go and spend what may be a waste of money on a new modem.

Ultimately everything even being as near perfect as it can be i doubt you will get more than 2.5Mb stable. For the cost involved (especially as you have 2 lines) i personally would not bother. Check to see if you can get FTTC or if your area has a date for FTTC and see if you can get Virgins services also. Setting a hundred quid which is around what you are likely to spend on any new modem to one side for a better service is probably the best thing you can do to give any significant improvement.

Me personally for what may turn out to be even be less than 1Mb improvement i would not bother spending silly money on a new modem/router.

PS the line which showed improvement at the test socket (0.5-1Mb)...... Check that line to see if the ring wire is connected anywhere and get rid of/disconnect it, that will/should improve things on that line at least with no cost, though obviously only another 500(ish)kbps.
 
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