On 1/12/22 09:35, Scott T Anderson via NANOG wrote:
Hi NANOG mailing list,
I am a graduate student, currently conducting research on how power
outages affect home Internet users. I know that the FCC has a regulation
since 2015 (47 CFR Section 9.20) requiring ISPs to provide an option to
voice customers to purchase a battery backup for emergency voice
services during power outages. As this is only an option and only
applies to customers who subscribe to voice services, I was wondering if
anyone had any insights on the prevalence of battery backup for home
modem/routers? I.e., what percentage of home users actually install a
battery backup in their home modem/router or use an external UPS?
From what I've seen on the market, home router or "residential gateway"
devices with built-in battery backup typically only provide backup for
FXS style analog POTS services, not for data, wireless, etc.
So, if you both pay for your ISP's analog phone service and still own an
analog phone, it will work for a while. Nothing else will. This assumes
that your local cable company both has battery-backed trunk amplifiers
and that they service the batteries regularly. Many don't.
It's an FCC requirement to provide the ability to make emergency voice
calls during a local power outage. This is an attempt to emulate the
"good old days" when twisted-pair phone service with central office
battery was the norm.
Speaking for myself, my networking gear is UPS-backed and my house has a
Generac auto-start generator and ATS.
Most of our customers don't back up their home network gear. If they do
it's most often an under-desk style UPS with 15-minute runtime that
hasn't been serviced in a decade. Its battery is very much dead and so
swollen that it can't be replaced without the use of some serious prying
tools.
--
Jay Hennigan - j...@west.net
Network Engineering - CCIE #7880
503 897-8550 - WB6RDV