09 Jun 2024 08:54 PM
I ordered Sky broadband on 29th May and have been given a connection date of 12th July. Why do long? I need broadband sooner than that so will have to cancel my order and go with another provider who can connect me much sooner.
09 Jun 2024 08:58 PM - last edited: 09 Jun 2024 09:02 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
Unfortunately any other Openreach ISP is likely to offer a similar timeslot because they have to commission the same work to be done and only Openreach can carry it out.
Putting the address into the BT Wholesale Availability Checker should indicate which provisioning type is applicable.
https://www.broadbandchecker.btwholesale.com/#/ADSL/AddressHome
It's the table and the two text lines below it which are most useful.
Remove any personal information (such as the address itself) if you post an image.
09 Jun 2024 08:59 PM - last edited: 09 Jun 2024 09:00 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more@BazG66 Unless there is an Altnet such as Virgin Media, Cityfibre etc then any other ISP will also have the same timescales on the Openreach network, going elsewhere may not get an earlier appointment and will likely be 6 weeks again from the date of placing the order with them.
09 Jun 2024 09:02 PM
I believe that unless it's virgin all other broadband providers use open reach lines for they broadband, I ordered my fftp at the beginning of December of last year and open reach installed it in mid January this year
09 Jun 2024 09:13 PM
09 Jun 2024 09:15 PM
@TimmyBGood Thanks for your help. I got this back from BT but it doesn't mean a great deal to me. Says available.
09 Jun 2024 09:22 PM
Would 3 broadband be different as it's not fibre. I know it's nowhere near as fast.
09 Jun 2024 09:23 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
Says theres an active service already
Have you just moved in?
Are you upgrading within sky or moving from another isp
09 Jun 2024 09:24 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
'ONT exists with active service' means they think there's already FTTP in place and in use.
09 Jun 2024 09:25 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
'Network is at capacity' is interesting though...
09 Jun 2024 09:26 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
Thats the second one today
09 Jun 2024 09:28 PM - last edited: 09 Jun 2024 09:37 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
Would seem rather unusual for a single dwelling unit to already have four ONTs (assuming there's a standard four core optical drop cable in place)
Is this property subdivided into multiple units which would be likely to have their own internet connections?
09 Jun 2024 09:44 PM
Thanks everyone. I've just moved back to the UK and am in a rental where obviously the previous occupants had broadband. They left around 12th May. The house has an Openreach box but no broadband.
09 Jun 2024 09:46 PM
There are several rented houses, converted farm buildings. They will all have broadband. Does this mean that they all come from the same point?
09 Jun 2024 10:00 PM - last edited: 09 Jun 2024 10:03 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
The note about there being no spare capacity would suggest all the cores in the optical cable serving the development are in use: each individual core serves one ONT and its associated ISP router.
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