This may be a great options because the network will be going into air ports.

On Thu, Feb 17, 2011 at 10:50 AM, Jared Mauch <[email protected]> wrote:
> What you can do is (if you are important enough) apply for TSP (tsp.ncs.gov) 
> in conjunction with provisioning of a circuit to actually have this type of 
> engineering happen and persist, including emergency restoration.  If your 
> local carrier doesn't offer the redundancy you want, your only other choice 
> is to build it yourself.  Considering the cost of lighting a 10G or 1G strand 
> of fiber for 10km or 20km, working with a BRI isn't that important anymore.
>
> - Jared
> (who has a BRI line for his "POTS" at home to get clean dial tone at his 
> distance from the CO)
>
> On Feb 17, 2011, at 6:46 AM, Justin M. Streiner wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 17 Feb 2011, Santino Codispoti wrote:
>>
>>> Is it possible to order a ISDN BRI line from the LEC and have them
>>> look at the design of a DS1 and have them if possible design the ISDN
>>> BRI lineon a devurse path or at lest different equipment within the
>>> CO?
>>
>> I suspect that, particularly for something as small (in terms of revenue to 
>> the LEC) as a BRI circuit, you won't have much leverage to ask for anything 
>> 'off the menu', like diverse physical routing through the CO.
>>
>> When you get to the point of dealing with the copper in the ground/on the 
>> pole, your options for route diversity are usually extremely limited (read: 
>> nonexistent).  Telco copper plant is usually based on large multipair cables 
>> from the CO on a specific route, so even if you managed to get them to 
>> commit to diverse routeing in the CO, the copper pairs will still be in the 
>> same cable bundle, entering your building and the CO at the same points.
>>
>> jms
>
>

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