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Eircom eFibre VDSL/FTTC rollout – plans to reach 1.6m premises by mid 2016

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  • Registered Users Posts: 389 ✭✭yomamasflavour


    It's not the worst though. Given that your estate is being serviced you might be able to order a new line and thus be connected to a fttc enabled cab instead.

    I'd try asking each of the neighbours / check their numbers, to see if any are connected to the cabs.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,343 ✭✭✭red_bairn


    Just got news on the Greystones eFibre forum from a local that they are sorting out direct fed lines. He spoke to the engineers.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭MBSnr


    Colour and date change.....!!

    http://www.eircom.net/efibreinfo/map/


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,099 ✭✭✭babybuilder


    Hi live in Linsfort a country area just outside Buncrana. It has a local exchange and is due for efibre upgrade in June 2015. I spoke to an eircom employee recently and he said that it will be fibre to the exchange and that's it.

    I live about 2-2.5 km from the exchange. At the moment I'm paying for 3 Mbit/sec package (and getting 2.4 MBit/s most of the time). Our family are light to moderate internet surfers - one iphone, one ipad, one desktop. It is impossible to stream anything when more than one device is in use.
    I would like to know should i be getting my hopes up with an improvement in speeds and what increased speeds are likely.

    Thanks


  • Registered Users Posts: 594 ✭✭✭The_Pretender


    Hi live in Linsfort a country area just outside Buncrana. It has a local exchange and is due for efibre upgrade in June 2015. I spoke to an eircom employee recently and he said that it will be fibre to the exchange and that's it.

    I live about 2-2.5 km from the exchange. At the moment I'm paying for 3 Mbit/sec package (and getting 2.4 MBit/s most of the time). Our family are light to moderate internet surfers - one iphone, one ipad, one desktop. It is impossible to stream anything when more than one device is in use.
    I would like to know should i be getting my hopes up with an improvement in speeds and what increased speeds are likely.

    Thanks

    At that distance from the exchange I'd have thought you'd be lucky to get fibre at all. We're about 1.2km away from the exchange and we get about 20Mb, and people 600/700 meters closer can get 60-100Mb speeds.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 585 ✭✭✭Portlawslim


    Saw a KN engineer at my local cab today and my colour has changed on the map to a nearer date. saw to lads pulling cable to the cab on Tuesday.
    what I'm wondering is do they pull cable to the location of the cab before the put the new fibre cab in place?
    I'm thinking it could be a new line for the newly built fire station around the corner from me but the cable looked fairly hefty....here's hoping


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 8,585 ✭✭✭jca


    Saw a KN engineer at my local cab today and my colour has changed on the map to a nearer date. saw to lads pulling cable to the cab on Tuesday.
    what I'm wondering is do they pull cable to the location of the cab before the put the new fibre cab in place?
    I'm thinking it could be a new line for the newly built fire station around the corner from me but the cable looked fairly hefty....here's hoping

    When mine was put in last year (lucky me) the fibre was pulled to the cabinet sites before the fibre cabs were placed.


  • Registered Users Posts: 196 ✭✭eyebrows63


    I,m in Limerick and according to the map e fibre is available in my area but when I enter my phone number it says it's not available. I rang eircom yesterday and was told that I,d have it shortly


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 20,779 ✭✭✭✭jayo26


    eyebrows63 wrote: »
    I,m in Limerick and according to the map e fibre is available in my area but when I enter my phone number it says it's not available. I rang eircom yesterday and was told that I,d have it shortly

    Yhh its same in my area in in wexford and its available in all of the town apart from my estate which is connected to the last remaining silver cabinet in the are they been telling me for Las year and half I would have it soon.


  • Registered Users Posts: 36,167 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    Saw a KN engineer at my local cab today and my colour has changed on the map to a nearer date. saw to lads pulling cable to the cab on Tuesday.
    what I'm wondering is do they pull cable to the location of the cab before the put the new fibre cab in place?
    I'm thinking it could be a new line for the newly built fire station around the corner from me but the cable looked fairly hefty....here's hoping

    If its a big thick loom that could be the cross connect bundle that joins the VDSL onto the POTS lines in the existing cab.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 2,024 ✭✭✭ItHurtsWhenIP


    MBSnr wrote: »
    Colour and date change.....!!

    http://www.eircom.net/efibreinfo/map/

    Wow - my village is down for an earlier live date. It used to be 2016, but is now Oct-Dec 2015.

    Now if only I lived closed to the village (I'm 2KM out). :(


  • Registered Users Posts: 370 ✭✭Zith


    MMFITWGDV wrote: »
    Wow - my village is down for an earlier live date. It used to be 2016, but is now Oct-Dec 2015.

    Now if only I lived closed to the village (I'm 2KM out). :(

    At least it might sort out the contention once the exchange backhaul is upgraded to support efibre. I'm 5.5KM from my exchange and lucky to have a 3Meg connection but peak time congestion has now evolved into every week day from 4pm to midnight and weekends practically all day 9am to 1am. Pretty much any time you want to use the thing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 63 ✭✭Barry5714


    Zith wrote: »
    At least it might sort out the contention once the exchange backhaul is upgraded to support efibre. I'm 5.5KM from my exchange and lucky to have a 3Meg connection but peak time congestion has now evolved into every week day from 4pm to midnight and weekends practically all day 9am to 1am. Pretty much any time you want to use the thing.

    Ya these peak time slow downs are driving me crazy not quiet as bad as you, weekdays 6pm-12am and weekends about 3pm-12am like clockwork, my exchange is scheduled for e-fibre late Summer early Autumn being 2km from the exchange i'm not expecting a speed increase but at this point i'd be happy with a steady 6mb connection 24/7 instead of it slowing to a crawl [1mb] at the most important time of the day.....


  • Registered Users Posts: 171 ✭✭noc1980


    My exchange (Farranfore) is getting fibre late this year. I live 3km from Farranfore in a village of 500 people. Anyone know if it's likely they'll put a few cabs down in a village like this, given it's close proximity. When they enable exchanges do they spread cabs out a bit or are you looking at getting whatever speed's available at your distance from the exchange?


  • Registered Users Posts: 36,167 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    Check fibrerollout.ie, any cabs that are planned get listed there.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 22,721 Mod ✭✭✭✭bk


    noc1980 wrote: »
    My exchange (Farranfore) is getting fibre late this year. I live 3km from Farranfore in a village of 500 people. Anyone know if it's likely they'll put a few cabs down in a village like this, given it's close proximity. When they enable exchanges do they spread cabs out a bit or are you looking at getting whatever speed's available at your distance from the exchange?

    Do you mean 500 people or 500 premises?

    If it is 500 people, then probably less then 200 houses, which would mean they only need one cab to service the area and it is likely to be in the center of the village or near the exchange. It may also mean exchange launched VDSL. So no cab at all.


  • Registered Users Posts: 36,167 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    I think noc means his village is remote from the village homing the exchange, so it'd need a vdsl node centrally in his village to get any service at all.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,893 ✭✭✭Nolars


    As in my area and lots of areas, there will be 2 or 3 villages 5 minutes from a vdsl exchange with no cabs. Surely it cant be that expensive to put 1 cab in the middle of all these villages?


  • Registered Users Posts: 36,167 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    Nolars wrote: »
    As in my area and lots of areas, there will be 2 or 3 villages 5 minutes from a vdsl exchange with no cabs. Surely it cant be that expensive to put 1 cab in the middle of all these villages?

    Depends on the existing wiring. It also means running the fibre feed which will usually involve a lot of digging.

    Additionally eircom are forking out for something like 9000 cabs(from memory, bk?) each costing a pretty penny, they'll have to recoup some of that outlay before they go buying more.


  • Registered Users Posts: 171 ✭✭noc1980


    bk wrote: »
    Do you mean 500 people or 500 premises?

    If it is 500 people, then probably less then 200 houses, which would mean they only need one cab to service the area and it is likely to be in the center of the village or near the exchange. It may also mean exchange launched VDSL. So no cab at all.

    Yes, 500 people bk.
    It's a dead straight road from the exchange to the village, if that makes any difference...
    Farranfore is itself a small village of around 1000, I'm hoping they're planning on connecting the surrounding areas as surely it wouldn't be worth bringing fibre to the exchange just to serve Farranfore? If I was 3km or so outside of Killarney or Tralee I'd hold little hope as those towns are big enough to not require any 'branching out'.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 72 ✭✭Hackery


    http://www.siliconrepublic.com/comms/item/40667-the-interview-geoff/

    Interesting interview with some guy from eircom. Talks a lot about G.Fast which surprised me. He mentions that they are running a G.Fast pilot but i'm not sure where it's happening.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,040 ✭✭✭yuloni


    This post has been deleted.


  • Registered Users Posts: 36,167 ✭✭✭✭ED E


    yuloni wrote: »
    This post has been deleted.

    There arent always existing cabs though. And even where there are they dont have infinite cashflow. Not saying they shouldnt or wont do them, just not yet. When they've got to 1.6Mil they'll have significant monthly income and will be able to re-evaluate where next to expand to. Cant do the whole country at once.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭MBSnr


    yuloni wrote: »
    This post has been deleted.

    I was thinking the exact same. Village near me is one of those 'supposed' to get fibre by the Gov. scheme but who knows... All of the phone lines for that village come in on one set of poles from a fibre enabled exchange 3.5Km away following the road. Surely Eircom could put a VDSL cab and a phone cab on the road side, approx just outside of the village and everyone there and within a 2Km radius would get VDSL.... It could happen very quickly and for a lot less money than FTTH and save the Gov. a bit.

    I recall from the video of the trial village in Mayo (Belcarra) they are stringing fibre up on the poles. Makes perfect sense to me.


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 22,721 Mod ✭✭✭✭bk


    MBSnr wrote: »
    I recall from the video of the trial village in Mayo (Belcarra) they are stringing fibre up on the poles. Makes perfect sense to me.

    Sure, it makes sense, but it is extremely expensive to do. The biggest cost is getting the guy to go out and up the ladder. You are talking 70 to 80% of the expensive of laying fiber.

    To give you an idea, BT in the UK charge about €10,000 for just one 2km fiber run, plus €110 per month!


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,022 ✭✭✭✭murphaph


    I am very confident that they reset those poles in Belcarra. They looked suspiciously vertical to me. Stringing fibre along the average rural Eircom line would be a fools errand IMO.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,191 ✭✭✭MBSnr


    bk wrote: »
    Sure, it makes sense, but it is extremely expensive to do. The biggest cost is getting the guy to go out and up the ladder. You are talking 70 to 80% of the expensive of laying fiber.

    To give you an idea, BT in the UK charge about €10,000 for just one 2km fiber run, plus €110 per month!

    Seriously I'm amazed - How can fibre cost that much more to string up compared to copper pairs? It's just the splicing and termination that costs. (Ok and straighten a pole...) I've paid to have fibre cores drawn though a number of building risers over the years. Cost to do that was minimal (as in the work required was the same regardless if it was copper or glass). I realise that shielded fibre must cost a good bit but I don't recall it being much diff as copper costs these days. Getting the specialist splicing man or your local electrician to punch the pairs was the cost factor difference at the time.... I'd hazard a guess the price has reduced since I last got it done 5 yrs ago as more have the termination kit now.

    BT charge that for ducted or on poles?


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators, Technology & Internet Moderators Posts: 22,721 Mod ✭✭✭✭bk


    Fiber isn't more expensive then copper, the cost is pretty much the same.

    The point is most of the copper network is already in place and has been for many years. The copper network was built up over many decades, as people got phone lines installed (remember it use to take 2 years or more to order a phone line back in the Telecom Eireann days).

    We are now asking them to replace the entire, extensive copper network with fiber in just 3 years! That is why it would be so expensive. A lot of work to do in a short period of time.


  • Registered Users Posts: 2,040 ✭✭✭yuloni


    This post has been deleted.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 7,476 ✭✭✭ardmacha


    bk wrote: »
    The point is most of the copper network is already in place and has been for many years. The copper network was built up over many decades, as people got phone lines installed (remember it use to take 2 years or more to order a phone line back in the Telecom Eireann days).

    Or P&T days, Telecom Eireann was already an improvement.
    bk wrote: »
    We are now asking them to replace the entire, extensive copper network with fiber in just 3 years! That is why it would be so expensive. A lot of work to do in a short period of time.

    Some plan is needed to bring fibre to all areas, fibre to any businesses, schools etc and some sort of lightweight mini cabinets to connect to this network to augment the service for other users still using copper in the meantime, pending further rollout.

    There is no point in having the ESB and Eircom having separate physical networks in outlying areas.


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