18 Oct 2022 08:27 AM
Hello all
Currently have Virgin and considering jumping to Sky FTTP.
I really dont want any more exterior wall box fitted. Seen on a post there is an option to fit a smaller box inside the house.
https://helpforum.sky.com/t5/Broadband/SKY-fibre-setup/td-p/3979556
Anyone recently had a internal CSP fitted and able to share couple pictures please.
Picture 2 is a box I found on google search. I wanted the cable to enter the propery rear entry of the box and this would be ideal. Is this setup possible by Sky installer?
Appreciate any feedback
18 Oct 2022 10:12 AM - last edited: 18 Oct 2022 10:14 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Sayek wrote:
Is this setup possible by Sky installer?
Incidentally a 'Sky installer' isn't involved in the process of getting optical cable to the CSP: that's only done by Openreach/Eircom. Sky personnel might do the fusion splicing of the pigtail from the CSP to the ONT (some ISPs are trialing having their staff do second stage installation) but it's much more likely to be Openreach/Eircom too.
18 Oct 2022 09:15 AM - last edited: 18 Oct 2022 09:19 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Sayek wrote:
I really dont want any more exterior wall box fitted. Seen on a post there is an option to fit a smaller box inside the house.
I very much doubt that's an 'option': it's much more likely to be what's happened at a particular new build development due to circumstances specific to that site (such as external cladding). Standard Openreach deployment is external CSP enclosure and then optical pigtail to the internal ONT.
18 Oct 2022 10:12 AM - last edited: 18 Oct 2022 10:14 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Sayek wrote:
Is this setup possible by Sky installer?
Incidentally a 'Sky installer' isn't involved in the process of getting optical cable to the CSP: that's only done by Openreach/Eircom. Sky personnel might do the fusion splicing of the pigtail from the CSP to the ONT (some ISPs are trialing having their staff do second stage installation) but it's much more likely to be Openreach/Eircom too.
18 Oct 2022 10:20 AM
In the same process as Openreach installed the copper cables previoulsy .
In that case next time i see a Openreach engineer fitting to a property have a word with them.
Thank you
18 Oct 2022 10:26 AM - last edited: 18 Oct 2022 10:51 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
Re-reading it, the thread you linked to (and that first image) is specific to a SIRO customer in the Republic of Ireland where their incoming fibre line is following the Electricity Supply Board mains power cable to their address and enters through the back of the external electricity meter enclosure: that's not an FTTP deployment model used in the UK (SIRO is a partnership between ESB and Vodafone), and explains the presence of the internal CSP.
18 Oct 2022 10:44 AM
Maybe..thats all I found when searched internal CSP.
I would have preffered a setup like the old Openreach phone socket where the cable enters the house and box on internal wall. It would be lot easier for the Openreach engineer to do the splice indoors.
18 Oct 2022 10:48 AM
18 Oct 2022 10:48 AM - last edited: 18 Oct 2022 11:09 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Sayek wrote:
It would be lot easier for the Openreach engineer to do the splice indoors.
Quite possibly, but that's simply not the Openreach deployment model in the UK. What EIR/ESB/SIRO are doing in the Republic of Ireland is entirely up to those companies and the national regulator: Sky just happens to be an ISP in both countries and uses whatever wholesale infrastructure is available.
Having watched an Openreach installer working by the light of a headtorch in driving rain to spool individual unsheathed fibre strands using a toothpick held in frozen fingers, I suspect they'd agree with you.
18 Oct 2022 12:03 PM
Appreciate your help.. Now to keep an eye for Openreach van when fitting. Should be plenty about since its new 🙂
19 Oct 2022 11:19 AM
So just an update on this. The FTTP on my street is fitted by "Community Fibre" I can see Openreach van doing the work and passing the cables via the usual Openreach manholes.
So I decided to contact the sales team and here it gets strange. The network will be owned by Community Fibre...not Openreach.
They assured me they do the complete installation and only fit a small CSP inside. They do not fit external CSP like Openreach.
Found couple video and its seems to validate this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkEeuA359oM
19 Oct 2022 11:32 AM - last edited: 19 Oct 2022 11:37 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
I suspect your last post was grabbed by an automated spam filter.
Community Fibre is an altnet provider operating only in London: if they are dropping their fibre into Openreach ducts then that's under a colocation scheme, but they won't be carrying Openreach wholesale services, and ISPs such as Sky cannot use their infrastructure or offer broadband over it. If you signed up with them you would be using Community Fibre as ISP, telco and carrier.
19 Oct 2022 11:42 AM
Appreciate your time for helping out 🙂
So lets talk simple comsumer language as the technical part is above my head LOL.
So old copper wires Openreach owned the network and it it allowed all ISP(but Virgin) to use their network. So when my contarct ended with a ISP.. I could jump to another ISP as a new customer deal and enjoy the new customer sweet offer.
So I am correct to understand with Fibre..Community Fibre will be the exclusive ISP and not sharing with others?
If that is the case thenthere wont be any competion and prices will creep up 😞
19 Oct 2022 11:45 AM - last edited: 19 Oct 2022 11:58 AM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Sayek wrote:
So I am correct to understand with Fibre..Community Fibre will be the exclusive ISP and not sharing with others?
That's correct: they (or rather their financial backers) are investing in creating their own private optical cable distribution network in competition with Openreach, and as such have monopoly rights over it. It's a similar situation to the early days of coaxial 'cable television' (and interesting to note that all those early cable pioneers ultimately failed to be financially viable independently and became Virgin Media).
Note that Openenreach will almost certainly offer wholesale FTTP in the same locations eventually for ISPs such as Sky and BT to use, but this will be on their own timescale.
19 Oct 2022 12:05 PM
This has been educational 🙂
I was hoping it would be Openreach so other ISP can compete with deals ike they do with 40/10 & 80/20 on copper lines
They seem to have some crazy offer for 1GB to bring in customer...for me 150M solid connection is plenty
My only concern is soon they will rasie prices very high as no competition.
19 Oct 2022 12:09 PM - last edited: 19 Oct 2022 12:10 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@Sayek wrote:
My only concern is soon they will rasie prices very high as no competition.
Or just evaporate overnight if they run out of startup capital, which is somewhat less likely with Sky/BT/Virgin ; )
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