Fibre to the property

The Homebrew Forum

Help Support The Homebrew Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Sorry mate i don't think i explained properly i have a twin socket in the location i would like the ONT but is it ok to have the ONT, Router and something else plugged in at the same time using
an adapter like the one below?

View attachment 105936View attachment 105937
From an electrical point of view, all of the devices are low power, so they will all operate perfectly well plugged into that multi-plug dooh-dad on the right.

However, the size and orientation of the plugs may physically block you from plugging anything into the second socket, or the plugs might get in the way of eachother.
 
I’m out in the middle of nowhere and struggled with a 10/1 connection at best, while the villagers next door all had FTTP installed via different providers.

One day, a government scheme came along that allowed me to claim a voucher and redeem it with a little fiber company called InternetTY.

I now have a 1GB/1GB connection to my house that is super quick for downloading large files but not really that much different on a day to day basis. So much so I’ve dropped the speed down twice. Currently on 300/300 and may even drop it again

So basically, yes it may be worth it as a 100/100 connection will cost me £20 a month which is cheaper that my old copper copper connection

But with WiFi speeds will be all over the place unless you invest in a mesh system for many rooms. I have a Synology mesh and it’s not cheap.
 
I have a tp link mesh which has been great but I fear mesh systems won’t work with a lot of these fibre companies as they want you to pay a monthly fee for their mesh system . I’ll see when mine gets installed next week. But a mate of mine can’t use his so either has to pay a monthly fee for their mesh system or a monthly fee for a static IP address so he can use box current kit. Hate this kind of cynical ‘service provision’. Tempt you in with headline cheap rates but impose restrictions meaning you need to purchase additional ‘services’.
 
I managed to get Openreach FTTP installed last month after waiting nearly 2 months from the initial upgrade request.

My ping has gone down from around 12ms to 7ms and speed has gone from 72Mbps/18Mbps to 500Mbps/70Mbps, for £1 more per month with Vodafone.

I am using the Vodafone router as I need to use it for the landline, but have the WiFi disabled and am using Ubiquiti access points instead.

I have found that it’s now less likely for a single device to use the entire 500Mbps speed, so a single device won’t slow down everything else and I can now stream higher quality videos without buffering or transcoding.

Only issue with my network is that I’m using Powerline for any wired devices not in the lounge, meaning that they only get 150Mbps due to the amount of adapters and generations.
 
I moved to BeFibre about 18 months ago. Previously had FTTC with Vodafone but we were in a bit of a black spot for that so got about 25Mbps at best. I'm on a 720Mbps package with BeFibre and it's so much faster. Unfortunately the router they supply isn't great so I swapped that out for my own which is a TP-Link WiFi 6E mesh system.

On WiFi I usually see at least 200Mbps on that but the thing to remember with WiFi is that it's unlikely to match your providers speed, it all depends on the maximum speed the routers WiFi can do (WiFi 7 is the best), the device your using to access it, how close to the router you are, what the interference is like, and other factors. Usually if you want to see anything near the quoted speed you need to be on a device plugged into the router with an Ethernet cable.
 
Ok....maybe time to reveal my slightly geeky side...

We have Fibre in through the wall to the fibre connection under the stairs through to a separate hardware VPN Gigabit router, switch(non managed), and eero wifi 6 routers on mesh, with Cat6 cabling to several rooms including my office. There's a 16TB qnap server in a RAID 10 configuration as well which keeps backups of all our computers and runs a media server.

Screenshot 2024-11-20 at 09.03.42.jpeg
IMG_1018.jpeg


My cabling isn't very neat which I do appreciate could be better.
IMG_1019.jpeg


The original question was the speed of the wifi, which is dependent primarily on your wifi set up rather than the fibre speed in most cases. Generally using the wifi built into the router will not be sufficient in a stone built building, in part because for many people the fibre is just brought through the wall so the wifi is at the edge of the house. Wifi extenders will eat into your bandwidth and speed unless part of an overall mesh system or using more than one channel to connect to your router. If you can run a cat 6 cable from the fibre modem to the router further into the house that will help, but generally a mesh system with triband will be necessary to get the better speeds from fibre in a stone built building. My preference is to use the mesh in bridge mode and use the DNS on the router, that does mean you don't get some of the clever software some mesh systems have but it does make it fast and reliable.

I had been using the linksys mesh but the software and reliability was patchy so I switched to the eero pro's earlier this year. I am under utilising the new VPN router and plan to add a back up mobile internet connection which can switch over or act as a merged connection for the WAN.
 
Back
Top