On Mon, Sep 1, 2008 at 12:15 PM, Art Clemons <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Inside wiring issues belong to the subscriber.
>
> I note that many folks have Verzion "inside wiring maintenance plans"
> meaning they actually belong to Verizon. I also repeat, that the direct
> run to the modem with th
> Inside wiring issues belong to the subscriber.
I note that many folks have Verzion "inside wiring maintenance plans"
meaning they actually belong to Verizon. I also repeat, that the direct
run to the modem with the splitter filter is incredibly easier to
troubleshoot.
> I didn't make this rule
At 12:08 AM 8/30/2008, Eric S. Sande wrote:
>The phone wiring in your house is a common loop, which is
>phone company jargon for the same electrical connection to
>all the outlets (phone jacks).
>
>If that loop is compromised then none of it works.
That compromise may be in the loop wiring, or it
But could he fix it?
Inside wiring issues belong to the subscriber.
I didn't make this rule, the courts and the FCC did.
I'll fix it if you pay me to.
I have to go now, Tom has just advised me that he's
running for President and he wants me for his chief of
wires and tubes.
Call my secretary
Eric S. Sande:
> The DSL signal rides on top of the normal analog voice bandwidth
> signalling on a norrmal T0 telephone line. It is sufficent to use a
> filter to attenuate that signalling noise at individual phone sets to
> allow normal analog voice (or modem) communication without noise.
>
> T
Is there a box that splits the RJ-11 to RJ-45 for data? I've done
ethernet networks but don't know about the hardware for telephone data
lines.
Thanks,
Betty
Your last question makes me think that you don't exactly understand the
virutes of DSL.
>The phone wiring in your house is a common loop, which is
>phone company jargon for the same electrical connection to
>all the outlets (phone jacks).
>If that loop is compromised then none of it works.
Finding the short should not be all that hard.
1) Make a diagram of your house showing the phon
You might use it for that reason, but not everyone does. It's just the
shorthand that develops in the course of learning specific jobs.
Mike
On Sat, Aug 30, 2008 at 8:37 AM, Tom Piwowar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >Each profession has its own private language.
>
> That's right and we use it to
>What I need to do is split the phone line as it comes into the house.
>One cable will be filtered and go to main telephones, the other cable
>will be for data--this is before it gets to the modem/router. Is the box
>I need called a DSL splitter? DSL junction box? It will be located in a
>crawl
>Each profession has its own private language.
That's right and we use it to keep people like you in your place. Asking
for the part designation is like asking a Mason about their secret signs.
*
** List info, subscriptio
What I need to do is split the phone line as it comes into the house.
One cable will be filtered and go to main telephones, the other cable will
be for data--this is before it gets to the modem/router. Is the box I need
called a DSL splitter? DSL junction box? It will be located in a crawl
sp
Is there a basic device like this that I can buy locally in Delaware or
Maryland? Who carries these? Or should I ask the guy in the Verizon van
next time I see it?
No, you don't need to do that.
You mentioned that you have an intermittent short. That's usually
house wiring. Maybe the builder
Is there a box that splits the RJ-11 to RJ-45 for data? I've done
ethernet networks but don't know about the hardware for telephone data
lines.
Your last question makes me think that you don't exactly understand the virutes of DSL...
Actually,
The DSL modem will have an RJ-11 jack for the pots line and
a RJ-45 jack for the lan side.
Typically tyhe RJ-11 jack will say WAN or DSL and the ethernet
jack that you use through the house will say 'LAN' for
local area network. Might even have a four port switch
or something similar built in.
I would have to agree with Eric's first approach.
That approach served my family well prior to the fios install.
Phone line ---filter--house phones
|
|--DSL Modemethernet
Is there a box inside to split phone and data?
*
Two approaches here. One is put a filter at the metwork interface
(where the phone line comes into the house) and rig dedicated DSL
loops off the unfiltered side.
What kind of box do I need here? Any photos/illustrations for this?
Second approach is to just plug in a filter at each phone out
Good point. Thanks, Rev.!
Dan :-)
>>> "Rev. Stewart Marshall" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 8/27/2008 10:15 AM >>>
Yeah security. Turn on security when you add wireless mode.
Stewart
*
** List info, subscription management, list
Yeah security. Turn on security when you add wireless mode.
Stewart
At 09:05 AM 8/27/2008, you wrote:
I'd like to ramp up the technical question a bit. We already have
DSL coming into the house (firewall, antivirus, etc., are already
installed) with 2 Windows XP desktops plugged into the mod
I'd like to ramp up the technical question a bit. We already have DSL coming
into the house (firewall, antivirus, etc., are already installed) with 2
Windows XP desktops plugged into the modem. Are there any technical
considerations in taking the existing system wireless beyond slapping a
wirel
>Phone line ---filter--house phones
> |
> |--DSL Modemethernet
Definitely easiest in the long run. I just used one of the supplied
filters, cutting the wires apart so they could be used in a punch down
block.
*
From: Computer Guys Discussion List
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Eric S. Sande
Sent: Wednesday, August 27, 2008 12:07 AM
To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM
Subject: Re: [CGUYS] DSL Home Wiring
>What parts do we need? What's the best method for wiring that doesn't
>require
What parts do we need? What's the best method for wiring that doesn't
require spending all day in a black widow spider infested crawl space?
Two approaches here. One is put a filter at the metwork interface
(where the phone line comes into the house) and rig dedicated DSL
loops off the unfilter
Our house has old phone wiring that has a short circuit somewhere
between the box and the outlet for the DSL modem. We've decided to
replace the wire with new, and have dedicated lines for the computers.
Is it better to attach phone and data lines together at the outside box
and run each to ph
23 matches
Mail list logo