on 23-02-2023 22:43
I've been with NTL/Virgin for decades. If I decide to leave, what connection/line would a new provider need?
on 24-02-2023 14:15
@Declanworld wrote:I've been with NTL/Virgin for decades. If I decide to leave, what connection/line would a new provider need?
depends what is available to your house?
Potentially loads of options, if you say roughly the area, the people might be able to suggest whether ALTNETS are there, who they are and where to go to check by post code.
on 25-02-2023 00:19
I'm not au fait with your scenario - I'm concerned that I'd have to pay for a phone line installation like you'd have to have had at one time if anyone other than VM wanted to supply. Sorry about my explanation - hope it makes some sense.
on 25-02-2023 00:31
@Declanworld wrote:I'm not au fait with your scenario - I'm concerned that I'd have to pay for a phone line installation like you'd have to have had at one time if anyone other than VM wanted to supply. Sorry about my explanation - hope it makes some sense.
again, it depends on what you already have installed at your house or what services are available?
If you have a BT dropwire from telegraph pole to your house and a master socket for BT inside, then you might be able to just reactivate the line by taking FTTC broadband from a supplier. If you can't get FTTC it might be ADSL only.
If your house can get FTTP - then an install would have to be done of fibre cable whether its BT or an ALTNET.
For what services delivered BT Openreach use this:
https://www.openreach.com/fibre-broadband/ultrafast-full-fibre-broadband
It will say what you can get from them.
on 25-02-2023 00:33
Excellent - may thanks.
on 27-02-2023 12:20
If you're after broadband (and maybe phone) then check out smaller suppliers like Aquiss, uno, IDNet, CIX, AAISP, Zen Internet - several have had free connection offers, so in my case I got a brand new FTTP connection installed for no charge, when leaving VM after over 25 years.
Even if you've got an Openreach copper line, it seems there comes a point where they deem it no longer active, and (apart from free connection offers) you'll pay a standard new connection charge even if it's using the old line.