I am thinking of buying a house in a small rural village, but will probably
pass it up if no broadband available. The online broadband checker has
given me the usual "...Good News! your exchange has ADSL broadband" but
also "...If you decide to place an order, a further test will be performed
to confirm if your line is suitable..."
The house appears to be 4-5 km's away from the exchange.
I have been burned by BT before who turned around 2 days after activation
date telling me broadband is not going to work afterall in a previous
property. Is there any way to have the line physically checked before I
place an order. (Current owner would be happy as long as I arrange)
Thank you
Chris S
There is no way of definately checking a line without placing an order.
However, given the sums of money involved when purchasing a property - you
may just want to order it and actually see if ADSL can be enabled on the
line now.
For instance, Virgin offer free activation with a one month minimum
contract - so your total outlay would be in the region of £25 for a month
One word of warning though, when you do finally move in and change the phone
line into your name etc/transfer your BT account etc - BT will disconnect
the ADSL if its still working/active then (as it will be associated with the
current owners account) and you will have to order it again.. - still at
least you will know 100% that it will then support the speed you want (which
I assume is 512K)
Regards
Sunil
Hi Chris,
Without placing an order for ADSL on the phoneline you can never be 100%
certain that you can get ADSL as the tests are only done when an order is
placed. When you check on www.bt.com/broadband what speed does it say you
should be able to receive? If it says up to 2Mbps then there shouldn't be
a problem getting 512kbps is this has a different line length/loss limit
to 1 and 2Mbps.
Another good indication of availability (although again it doesn't
guarantee it) is if any of your potential neighbours already have ADSL.
--
Regards,
| Dave Tomlinson Broadband Solutions For
| Technical Support for Home & Business
| PlusNet Technologies Ltd. @ http://www.plus.net
+ ----- My Referrals - It pays to recommend PlusNet -----
Before I moved, I got PlusNet to check the line beforehand. All they
needed was the phone number to perform a woosh test.
I also would not have moved without the possibility of BB.
Cheers,
Guy
** I may not be perfect, but I'm
** English, and that's the next best thing!
thanx for advice.
I have thought of ordering but the legal implications are worrying. It
could be seen as fraud ordering a service on a line in a house that is not
mine. I'm not even supposed to know the properties telephone number !
I'll try and speak to the owner through the agents - what a nuisance
chris
"Sunil Sood" <ne...@soods.freeserve.co.uk> wrote in message
news:2kns1jF...@uni-berlin.de...
Would you be best just waiting till you move in?
The online "test" result suggested "up to 2Mbps download speed". You have
confirmed what others have suggested - that this does give an indication of
line quality. In this case good news. One person in town has BB but the
last bit to the house seems ancient - I am just very weary of BT. Can you
confirm Dr Teeth's next post regarding the pre install woosh test.
Thanx
chris
"PlusNet Support Team" <dtoml...@plus.net> wrote in message
news:opsakltr...@usenet.plus.net...
> Dear Dave
>
> The online "test" result suggested "up to 2Mbps download speed". You
> have
> confirmed what others have suggested - that this does give an indication
> of
> line quality. In this case good news. One person in town has BB but the
> last bit to the house seems ancient - I am just very weary of BT. Can
> you
> confirm Dr Teeth's next post regarding the pre install woosh test.
>
> Thanx
>
> chris
>
Hi Chris,
We can only do a woosh test on active ADSL line unfortunately (and only
for one of our customers and not another ISP's). We can do a different
test via our electronic ordering system eCo, this pulls data from the same
place as www.bt.com/broadband so I would expect a green result from this
too. If you want to email me the phone number (dtoml...@plus.net) I'll
check it for you and let you know what it says.
Finally - see BT's official response - helpful as always:
... "Thank you for your e-mail.
I'm afraid that extra testing only takes place once we receive a valid order
against a telephone number, we do not send out our engineers to test lines
for broadband outside the ordering process. This is because broadband is
currently not considered an essential service, unlike telephone, and we
cannot commit to providing it to a certain address. The situation for an
individual line may change, for example as a result of work done in the
network or because of a number change, and a line that qualifies today, may
not do so at a later stage. While these changes do not happen very often, it
does mean that we cannot provide any solid guarantees that we can provide
broadband to new properties before we receive the actual order.
I am sorry I cannot help you any further in this case,
Kind regards, " ...
Regards
chris
finally - have a look a
"Chris Schwindack" <chri...@freeuk.com> wrote in message
news:LjyFc.213$8_3...@newsfe2-win.ntli.net...
That day has come!! I've seen a few adverts that have "Double Glazing,
Central Heating, Broadband enabled" I for one wouldn't entertain a house /
area if it couldn't have broadband.
Steven.
>difficult if you do not own the property and do not know the telnumber.
192.com
--
spamcop.net address commissioned 18/06/04
Come on down !
>Dear All - thanx for suggestions
>difficult if you do not own the property and do not know the telnumber.
>As Ian suggests - maybe oneday a broadband enabled line will be seen as a
>bonus when buying a home !
It is not "someday" I know many ppl who already see it as "ESSENTIAL"
>
>finally - have a look a
>"Chris Schwindack" <chri...@freeuk.com> wrote in message
>news:LjyFc.213$8_3...@newsfe2-win.ntli.net...
>> Dear NG
>>
>> I am thinking of buying a house in a small rural village, but will
>probably
>> pass it up if no broadband available. The online broadband checker has
>> given me the usual "...Good News! your exchange has ADSL broadband" but
>> also "...If you decide to place an order, a further test will be performed
>> to confirm if your line is suitable..."
>> The house appears to be 4-5 km's away from the exchange.
>>
>> I have been burned by BT before who turned around 2 days after activation
>> date telling me broadband is not going to work afterall in a previous
>> property. Is there any way to have the line physically checked before I
>> place an order. (Current owner would be happy as long as I arrange)
>>
>> Thank you
>>
>> Chris S
>>
>>
>
>
----------------------------------------------------
reverse my email address, and remove the obvious
spam traps to reach me by email.
http://www.callthrough.tk/ = site not updated.
>>difficult if you do not own the property and do not know the telnumber.
>
>192.com
You could ask the people selling it for the phone number. Worked for
me <g>.
Doubtfull, I for one would see a broadband enableable line as essential,
n already connectable line would just be a bonus - Possibly saving that
7-10 days delay that can happen..
--
Nigel J Carron
- f
But when you "take over" the line, BT will stop the ADSL service... hence
its probably better to know it can get ADSL before you buy it and then apply
for it yourself as soon as possible...
Regards
Sunil