mole12345
2 years agoJoining in
Area checker
Hello all, I'm looking to buy a house but retaining VM is important so I checked on the postcode checker and the service is available to the new address. My question is, how accurate is this or is i...
Wait for a staff person to pick this up. I believe they can organise it.
Have you checked with the Openreach site when they will be bringing FTTP to your postcode?
Thanks for that, just checked, superfast is available ultrafast not available yet. I do want to stick with VM though as performance is great and need to keep a very old ntlworld mail address as well. Here's what it looks like from the road, house is behind wall obscured by trees. Neighbour has CATV point on pavement to left of gates.
Unless that is a VM chamber in front of your wall by the smaller road sign, I think the contractor will want to connect to the neighbour's point. That would likely mean digging up the pavement in front of the gates, or crossing the neighbour's garden which would need a wayleave. They always use the quickest, easiest route that the operative chooses on the day, and since there is little or no communication between VM and the contractor you shouldn't accept any prior promises from VM. You'd really need to be there on the day to ensure it's done the way you want. Some people have come home from work to find an unpleasant surprise.
It's a drain cover, I think. If they go along the pavement (most obvious route, I think) how do they cover the disruption to the neighbours gate access? Is that covered by the wayleave process? Many years ago they let me run my own cable through the loft. Not sure if that's still allowed but I do intend to be there.
If its a public pavement they will need permission from the Council, that's a simple process. The job to dig, put in a conduit and fill in will happen in one day. They will have a board to cover it if the neighbour needs access.
If they decide a route through the neighbour's garden is preferred, they will send you a wayleave form for you to get the neighbour to sign it. He's not obliged to of course.