Post by Jason HI've long held that Hell would freeze over before FTTP came to our
little bit of old Trafford. Today, a bit of paper pops through the
letterbox from Grain, telling us they are digging up the street to
provide fibre broadband service. Two hours later, the only way to
leave the house is out back...
Now, I'm with BT. Does this mean a full fibre upgrade (currency FTTC)
is on the cards, or are Grain a completely separate thing that does
not partner with BT/OpenReach in any way?
Over a year on and Grain made me an offer I couldn't refuse. £1 per
month until my BT contract ends in November. Last months BT bill was
£145... I had it installed yesterday and other than a snafu with them
sending me the wrong WiFi password, it's mostly positive so far.
The only disappointment so far is the router configuration. It's an all
in one fiber modem and WiFi router. I guess I can get that addressed
later. A static IP address is £5 per month, as is a very basic landline
telephone package (the modem/router comes with two POTS ports).
Speaking of the fixed IP address, which I may well need later in the
year, no trace of any instruction comes with the router in terms of
management. Grain say their tech support will provide this on request.
So, after a week with Grain, a follow-up:
Fixed IP addresses are dependent on availability, which is
understandable given they are IPv4. I decided to move early on that
though it will be a couple of months before I have bandwidth to start
playing* with this. Like the other alt-nets, IPv6 is work in progress.
I expect this will be a game changer.
Router admin is not provided by default. I asked for it and they sent me
a username and password within twenty minutes of me emailing them.
Once you have access to the router admin, port forwarding privileges
aren't provided by default (at least on the Icotera router). Likewise,
this was granted to me within twenty minutes of requesting it by email.
If you want to use your own router, they say can simply put the box on
the wall into bridging mode for you.
So, I don't think anything too controversial from the perspective of the
typical member of this group. Most of their customers just want to
stream, do online gaming, surf the internet and work from home, so
support don't seem to be too busy and answer technical questions quickly.
The only complaint (and a common one among the providers, I'm told) is
that it is clearly installation on the cheap. There's a bit of ducting
on the street facing side of the garden wall and that's about it. I
doubt the trench in the garden is particularly deep. I'm not too
concerned about that - anything on the other side our front facing wall
is an SEP and I will expect it fixing when things go wrong.
* An early project is going to be setting up a Home Assistant Server I
can VPN into from the outside. My current smart lights and sockets are
not so smart if they lose there connection to a server in China...