How To Speed
Up Your DSL Internet Connection
Excellent
article from computemagazine.com, "doubled my DSL speed by bypassing poor in
house phone wiring".
Twenty-eight million homes in the United States subscribe
to
broadband DSL. Most DSL subscribers should expect to receive about ninety
percent of the speed offered under their DSL service plan. A substantial
number of households, however, pay for much higher DSL speeds than they
actually experience. Using an inexpensive pots-splitter at the location the
telephone line enters the house, many people have doubled, tripled, and even
quadrupled their broadband DSL speed without paying more in service fees.
Although the telephone company has many tools to
troubleshoot problems with their lines and equipment, they cannot help you
much with the phone wiring in your home. A weak DSL signal inside your home
can be caused by long wire lengths, poor connections, multiple wires,
multiple connectors, improper grounding and other variables. Your DSL speed
will be better if you eliminate these issues. DSL modems are good at working
around noise on the line, but do so at the expense of top download speed and
latency (delay). DSL technicians tell us that many line problems originate
from bad inside wiring, so splitting the DSL signal from the telephone line
as early as possible would certainly eliminate this problem.
To do that, you can install an inexpensive
Outdoor POTS Splitter
where the telephone line enters your home or garage at the box called the
Network Interface Device (NID). By installing a pots-splitter at the NID,
the DSL signal from the telephone company to your modem is as short and
uncluttered as possible. No longer does the DSL signal wind through your
home over internal phone wiring — even though most telephone company
installation instructions tell you to do that. Why do they recommend that?
Because installing pots-splitters yourself inside the home saves the
telephone company the expense of making a trip to do the installation right.
Those “pigtail” pots-splitters you self-install don’t offer the optimum DSL
signal path. The excess in-house line length, the phone jacks and the
additional phone equipment in your home all contribute to noise and
attenuation of the DSL signal — and therefore slower speeds.
Instead, to achieve the shortest, cleanest connection, you
should buy a pots-splitter and put your DSL modem next to the pots-splitter
at the NID. By installing the pots-splitter at your NID, you keep your home
telephone wiring out of the DSL signal path, and consequently your line
condition is now the responsibility of the telephone company. The telephone
company can then easily use their central equipment to monitor and
troubleshoot the condition of the
DSL line to your home. They otherwise
cannot do the best job troubleshooting the line if the DSL signal also runs
through your house. With the DSL signal terminating at the NID, they have no
excuse to deliver speeds less than the one offered under your service plan.
If the speed is much less than promised, ask your
local telephone company to fix
their line until it comes close to the DSL rate offered under your service
plan.
Once you’ve installed your pots-splitter and modem next to
the NID, you also need to install your Ethernet router there too. You might
wonder how to use your computer when the
Ethernet router is in the garage.
There are a couple of solutions. You can use a wireless extender or use HomePlug devices. Although these add a little cost, your improved DSL speed
should be worth it. If your wireless Ethernet connection is blocked by the
walls, HomePlug devices offered by many vendors provide a fast, reliable
Ethernet connection to any room in your home.
Link to the original article...
Link to the free report from computemagazine.com...
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