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[Closed] I like this. Issue that killed the net for Welsh village solved after 18 mths.😆

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Ok, ok, it didn't "kill the 'net" but from 7am every day a village had issues with speed and reliability of connection. Particularly "these days" I bet it was bloody infuriating.

It's now been solved. I can see why the perp doesn't want to be identified. I bet every Netflix viewer/ WFHer in the village is lining up to hammer sausages in their lawn.😂

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-54239180


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 1:52 am
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That seams mad that a TV can interfere in that way. I hope they all got the person a new TV


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 8:09 am
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We used to have a TV repeater for the Sky box so you could watch it in the other room. That would wipe out the Wi-Fi.

That seams mad that a TV can interfere in that way.

CRT displays opperate at tens of thousands of volts to generate the electron beam, remember from physics electrons are both a wave and a particle, so if the shield is knackered then it'll be spewing out all sorts of frequencies.


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 9:19 am
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Pretty well any electrical device can cause interference if not designed correctly (very rare these days - such tests are part of the CE certification) or it has a fault. The most likely part of any consumer device to do so is the power supply, if a capacitor or similar fails then an RF spike is typical.


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 9:21 am
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Tig welders have also caused issues in some industrial environments due to the hf start. This why there is such testing on any device that emits rf.


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 9:26 am
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Was expecting a story about someone WFH and spending all day surfing websites dedicated to large collections of images and videos. Either that or some fool uploading 100 000 movies on bit torrent sites.


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 9:36 am
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What's the odds they just put it on in the morning to keep the dog company whilst they were at work?


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 9:51 am
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Thats great! Last one I found was a car alarm in the Directors Aston Martin that knocked out two Wireless AP's whenever it was enabled. Took ages to find that one as he only came in infrequently.


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 11:09 am
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When Ionica (anyone remember them) started rolling out broadband (64 kb/s) they had to replace a lot of old Satellite dish LNBs which were faulty and interfering with the Ionica band (3.5 GHz spectrum).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ionica_(company)


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 11:11 am
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It's just a more extreme version of when I was little we couldn't watch TV if I had the train set or the Scalextric running, the little sparks would knacker up the weak TV signal!


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 11:17 am
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*inserts anecdote about a vibrator*


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 11:43 am
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*inserts anecdote about a vibrator*

You know the "anecdote about" is surplus to requirements don't you?


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 11:46 am
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*inserts anecdote about a vibrator*

Maybe it was the local knocking shop. Then again having been to Aberhosen I don't think they'd get much custom 😆


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 11:50 am
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I'm trying to make sense of how a TV can interfere with a fibre line or even a shielded TP?
How close would it need to be?


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 11:59 am
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I’m trying to make sense of how a TV can interfere with a fibre line or even a shielded TP?

Fibre: it can't.
STP: probably won't exist anywhere.

DSL typically comes in over the regular phone lines, remember. Totally susceptible to interference. Besides, "the Internet" in that report could just mean Wi-Fi.

I Am Not A Network Engineer.


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 12:05 pm
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Fibre: it can’t.

We used to have some old switches (around y2k) where the GB fibre optical converter (used on the backbone) was really fragile. Can't imagine that being the case 20yrs on but ??

DSL typically comes in over the regular phone lines, remember. Totally susceptible to interference.

So assuming it is this ... I'm wondering just how close you'd need to be.

Besides, “the Internet” in that report could just mean Wi-Fi.

I suspect that ... which makes me wonder about the competence of their Head of Engineering.

Prompted by some Aussie kids program my kid watches 😉 where the kids track down a faulty 2.4Ghz doorbell interfering with the ice cream shop's Wifi ...which disturbingly (at least at first glance) seems more accurate than that "report"


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 12:53 pm
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Evil Edna strikes. You youngsters ask your parents!


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 1:47 pm
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I reckon he bought that knackered TV on a whim. Saw it advertised cheap due to a broken volume control. He just couldn't turn it down.


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 4:42 pm
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Microwaves are known to interfere with 2.4ghz wireless signals. And given how a thunderstorm can knock out my broadband, which is running on copper and fibre cables, I can quite believe it!


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 4:47 pm
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He just couldn’t turn it down.

<ripple of applause>


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 4:58 pm
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And given how a thunderstorm can knock out my broadband, which is running on copper and fibre cables, I can quite believe it!

Doesn't take out the fibre but can fry the electrical equipment connected to it if you get a ground strike near to a junction box etc.

Friends of ours live in France and get broadband over DSL via Orange. Their region is susceptible to lightning strikes which regularly blow up the DSL boxes in people houses, so every time there are storms forming, Orange txts all their customers to say unplug your DSL box now!


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 5:12 pm
 xora
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I’m trying to make sense of how a TV can interfere with a fibre line or even a shielded TP?
How close would it need to be?

My guess is the cab for the village happens to be outside their window!


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 5:17 pm
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I can see why the perp doesn’t want to be identified

My money's on Cathy and Ray at number 36


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 5:20 pm
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Is that Mr & Mrs Tube Perchy?


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 6:02 pm
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Is that Mr & Mrs Tube Perchy?

Oh, you know them?

Lovely couple but terribly old fashioned. 😉


 
Posted : 22/09/2020 6:36 pm