All general questions and discussion related to AGL Internet
Our internet has been dropping out quite a lot lately and then yesterday it dropped out and hasn't come back on.
I have spoken to the help desk today and they cannot see my modem but conducted a "line test" and believe that it passes.
I have completed a continuity check from the connection point on my house through to the modem and my cabling is good.
However I am not confident with the connection point on the pole out the front of my house (see below). If my connection has 'open circuited' in this mess would the line test still show it passes up to this point?
1st: of all I am having considerable trouble believing in how that picture even exists in 2023!
2nd: PMG "Post Masters General" that is that little grey box on the pole with all the cut wires hanging out was basically finished/ended/abolished/retired in 1975 long before I started working in the Industry.
3rd: That cabling "if you could call it that" is in no way compliant.
4th: Looking at the picture it appears that you "may have coax cable running to the house" but that is not a given.
5th: That is a 100% NBN CO problem, AGL can not do anything about that.
As an ex telco network/field technician and if I were to see something like that should I have gone to a job I would have instantly registered it and called it in as a defect.
I am not surprised you are having "issues" I am inclined to lean towards poor cabling not Modem but that is not definitive as I have no idea what other factors are at play apart from the picture supplied.
Yes a line test is more than likely to pass in most cases in that situation as long as there is some form of conductivity. It all depends on "what parameters are set / in use by the telco performing a line test."
Honest to goodness Strike me Pink NBN CO need to address this as it is a problem as far as I am concerned.
I do apologise but I am having great difficulty accepting what I see above in your post as current.
Out of curiosity what jurisdiction are you in ?
I would be heavily pushing for NBN CO to have that rectified. So contact AGL again and somehow get that picture to them so they can raise this with NBN CO.
Please note I have never worked for NBN CO, I have only worked for a telco and have retired from that field a few years ago.
Regards
John
Okay let me know how you go.
So you are FTTN "fibre to the node" which means the quality of work between the node right up to the connection point of your house plays a massive role in just how reliable your internet is. I never agreed with FTTN in the beginning and could see the inherent problems associated with it. "If the work is not up to scratch" then it is a migraine till it is sorted.
Unfortunately NBN CO contracts out work to I feel "some not all" people who are not fully qualified in the field. I would like to say more but am unable to.
In a nutshell you will either get a good contractor or a contractor that does not really care.
Hopefully the fibre upgrade to your area will roll around in the next 24 months. And hopefully you will realise a better
internet experience. Nothing is planned for Wodonga at the moment, though a good portion of West Wodonga has FTTP "fibre to the premises" my house in West Wodonga has it. Though I am based in NSW.
I will keep my fingers crossed for you and hope you get a decent contractor. Then all you need is to ride it out till the fibre upgrade rolls around.
Let me know how you go please.
Regards
John