The downstream target noise margin has been significantly increased, probably in an attempt to confer greater connection stability, and the upstream noise margin has dropped, probably as a result of ongoing interference. As a result, downstream sync has gone from 4576 -> 2752 -> 480 kbps and upstream sync from 448 -> 384 kbps. The answer is no.Bit of an update. It seems the line is being re-profiled at the connection speed in the router has dropped a lot and the line stats have changed (are they looking better?).
What we've covered:
- Interference / connection instability effect changes to the noise margins.
- Target and modem-reported noise margins affect the sync rate.
- Sync rate affects the IP profile.
- IP Profile limits the 'speed' you see, e.g. downloads, speed tests.
- 4576 kbps sync with 15-20 kB/s download speed with some periods of "up to about 1 mbit" connected to the test socket on 29-Apr-10.
- 2752 kbps sync and <20 kB/s download speed connected to the master socket on 23-Jun-10, 09:16.
- 480 kbps sync with 135 kbps IP Profile on 23-Jun-10, 17:26.
Migrate to Plusnet, remove the modem from the test socket and the sync rate dropped significantly. You need to identify the reason for this, e.g. ring wire, unfiltered telephones on extensions, sky box, cordless telephones...
Most recently the connection appears to be subject to a lot of noise and the modem is sync'ing at a terribly low rate. This could just be a continuation of a problem relating to a suggestion in my previous paragraph or, given that you've tried a different device and microfilter, a line fault external to the household or something attributable to random electrical noise.
In addition to troubleshooting the test socket / master socket issue you should consider monitoring the connection throughout the day rather than just noting the sync rates each morning. Use RouterStats to follow the noise margins and maybe DMT v.8.07 for a look at SNR as a function of frequency.