[AusNOG] ADSL2 DSLAM Connectivity on premise

paul+ausnog at oxygennetworks.com.au paul+ausnog at oxygennetworks.com.au
Tue Oct 27 10:48:33 EST 2015


Hi Guy, the DSLAM has built in filters and an IN side and an OUT side but yeh I'm not sure if it complies with regulations or not, or what they might be....
 
If need be I think we can run on a separate pair but thought it was worth asking the question J
 
Regards
Paul
 
From: AusNOG [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of Guy Ellis
Sent: Tuesday, 27 October 2015 10:43 AM
To: ausnog at lists.ausnog.net
Subject: Re: [AusNOG] ADSL2 DSLAM Connectivity on premise
 
Hi Paul,

If you feed ADSL backwards into the network you will be in breach of the band plan and create cross talk havoc.
It would be possible to filter the lines, but this would need technical approval, SO41 and SO43 would apply.

Most decent DSLAMs have CO filters and seperate connections for the CO side.
However I doubt  these are designed to meet the band plan, but more likely provide impedance stabilisation at ADSL frequencies.

Cheers,
 - Guy.






On 27/10/2015 10:22 AM, paul+ausnog at oxygennetworks.com.au wrote:
Hi All, I'm hoping somebody can offer some advice regarding a scenario we are looking at for a client.
 
We have this client which runs a retirement park/village and also has some caravan/cabins/camping options for the public as they are right on a beach.
Currently we provide a Wifi hotspot solution for them but we are looking at expanding that offering to be able to provide ADSL2 to residents and VDSL2 to the cabins for Internet, VOIP, and movie streaming.
 
Currently the phone lines from Telstra come into their MDF, then get patched through to the residents premises further into the park.
With the VDSL solution it will be a totally disconnected system from Telstra cables, we will utilise twisted pair from the MDF to the cabins, but no connection to the MDF or lines so no issues there, but I was wondering what regulations might be affected and whether we are able to install an ADSL2 DSLAM at the site and bring a line in from Telstra to the DSLAM port and then back out and to the residents, I suppose just like at the Exchange but in their MDF instead.
 
Are the any issues with this considering that ADSL2 is an approved technology and we are simply injecting it into an existing line at the site instead of at the exchange ?
 
Any advice would be appreciated.
 
Thanks
Paul



_______________________________________________AusNOG mailing listAusNOG at lists.ausnog.nethttp://lists.ausnog.net/mailman/listinfo/ausnog


-- Guy Ellisguy at traverse.com.auwww.traverse.com.auT: +61 3 9386 4435 M: +61 419 398 234
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.ausnog.net/pipermail/ausnog/attachments/20151027/294102dd/attachment.html>


More information about the AusNOG mailing list