The best thing you can do is check your internal wiring is in tip top condition
Just over four hours worth of data != twenty four hours worth of data. I have five panes defined -- SNRM, CRCs per minute, FECs per minute, QLN and Hlog.There is the usual micro-jitter visible on the SNRM plot but the brevity of data capture currently does not allow any observation of possible macro-variations per 24 hour cycle.The CRCs per minute is a flat-line at zero. The FECs per minute shows peaks for the DS, with one topping out at 28,300.QLN is a little "spiky".Hlog is fine.Currently there is nothing of any concern.
hlog is fine so no bridge taps in the copper loop etc re qln I think B*cat has put it in the nicest possible way "QLN is a little spiky".Your SNR per tone is a direct reflection of your QLN... basically the line is 'noisy', but I dont want you to get paranoid about it and think that its something that BT can fix. Theres a few spots which could be crosstalk centered around tones at appx 1450 and 1700. You cant do anything about that.You also appear to have a fair bit of what may be background mush. ie noise from EMI/radio/electronics/atmosphere.The best thing you can do is check your internal wiring is in tip top condition. TBH its not really bothering you atm as you are only on the 40Mb product and not pushing the line to its limits. QuoteHow do you mean "makes a quick exit qln/snr pertone"?Chasing the cause of noise is like falling down the rabbit hole. Its not affecting you atm so aside from there's no harm in checking your internal wiring - leave it alone and forget it.
How do you mean "makes a quick exit qln/snr pertone"?
Quote from: kitz on February 14, 2016, 11:53:39 PMThe best thing you can do is check your internal wiring is in tip top conditionADSL Nation / Tandy RJ11 cable http://www.tandyonline.co.uk/high-speed-rj11-dsl-cable-0-5m.htmlThe best there is. All known lengths available. See also: http://forum.kitz.co.uk/index.php/topic,15910.msg295971.html#msg295971
@kitz, I was going to ask. If my line has now been up for just over 2 days, how long do you think it will be until the next deintervention from DLM? A few days?
Quote from: William Grimsley on February 15, 2016, 04:48:30 PM@kitz, I was going to ask. If my line has now been up for just over 2 days, how long do you think it will be until the next deintervention from DLM? A few days?What will you do differently if you either knew or didn't know when the next intervention will take place?
Quote from: licquorice on February 15, 2016, 05:42:04 PMQuote from: William Grimsley on February 15, 2016, 04:48:30 PM@kitz, I was going to ask. If my line has now been up for just over 2 days, how long do you think it will be until the next deintervention from DLM? A few days?What will you do differently if you either knew or didn't know when the next intervention will take place?Nothing. I don't want to take your post the wrong way, but it seemed totally pointless.
As did yours, hence my reply to it.
If you wait until it happens you will know how long it will be. Speculating when it will it happen is a pointless exercise.
The reversal process is the one area for which we know very little.Theres been some observations, but that is all we have to go off and there are no hard factshttp://www.kitz.co.uk/adsl/DLM.htm#DLM_removal