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Broadband network resilience to rota disconnection

With a real risk of rota disconnection this winter, I have been looking into UPS and home battery backup solutions (which would also enable me to utilise off-peak tariffs). However, I have been unable to find out whether the broadband distribution cabinets in the road have a priority mains supply which would not be affected by rota cuts. There is no point in providing backup power for computers and routers if the broadband network shuts down. I asked an openreach technician and he didn't know. Can anyone give an authoritative answer?
Since FTP services remove the old analogue phone lines - and hence the ability to make emergency phone calls - I'm assuming a high level of resilience. But FTP subscribers would need mains power to their handsets in such a case, so maybe it's assumed that we will use mobile phones in any emergency during a blackout.
Parents
  • Rather oddly, 3G will almost certainly go before 2G in many areas - mainly as there are a lot of devices with a built in GSM phone that cannot easily be changed - such mundane items as automated bus stop signs, vending machines and a number of earlier portable payment devices.  The much larger cell ranges and resistance to jamming make 2G very attractive as a last ditch comms compared to the higher data rates but lest robust nature of the more recent offerings.

    There is an OFCOM  plan to turn off 2G at some point after 2033 - while 3G is going to be knocked off, at least in Plymouth and Basingstoke, early next year and I suspect other places will follow in short order.
    www.ofcom.org.uk/.../3g-switch-off

    Mike.

Reply
  • Rather oddly, 3G will almost certainly go before 2G in many areas - mainly as there are a lot of devices with a built in GSM phone that cannot easily be changed - such mundane items as automated bus stop signs, vending machines and a number of earlier portable payment devices.  The much larger cell ranges and resistance to jamming make 2G very attractive as a last ditch comms compared to the higher data rates but lest robust nature of the more recent offerings.

    There is an OFCOM  plan to turn off 2G at some point after 2033 - while 3G is going to be knocked off, at least in Plymouth and Basingstoke, early next year and I suspect other places will follow in short order.
    www.ofcom.org.uk/.../3g-switch-off

    Mike.

Children
  • According to Vodafone, they are beginning in Plymouth and Basingstoke in Feb and will have finished switching off 3G by Dec.

    I don't need data and seldom send texts so it will not bother me, but I might have to get a new phone at some stage.