There's quite a big debate over what is considered as an acceptable speed
for IP Stream adsl.
IP Stream adsl is provisioned as a contended service. Traditionally this
was 50:1 for Home Products and 20:1 for Office Products. To find more
about contention and what it is read my Contention
Page.
However, BTw have never
actually provisioned adsl on the VP's at this ratio - to do so would
mean that speeds would be pretty abysmal and since October 2005
BTw have now started declaring what speeds they find acceptable on
their part of the IP Stream Network.
Connection |
Home |
Office |
2 Mbps |
400 kbps |
800 kbps |
1 Mbps |
200 kbps |
400 kbps |
512 kbps |
100 kbps |
200 kbps |
Maxdsl BTw STIN 441 states
Max services where the line operates at 2Mb or above may provide End Users,
at peak times, with the same data throughput as they would have experienced
on an equivalent 2Mb fixed rate Broadband service.
Max services where the line operates below 2Mb may provide End Users, at
peak times, with the same data throughput as they would have experienced
on an equivalent fixed rate Broadband service (ie BT IPStream Home
Max service which operated at 500kbps would have an equivalent service
at peak times of that of a BT IPStream Home 500kbps service).
The BT Handbook also gives a further guide
For BT IPstream Max users synchronising at 2272kbit/s or above the BT network through the
BRAS will provide a minimum of 2Mbit/s throughput for 90% of the time.
For BT IPstream Max Premium users synchronising at 3424kbit/s or above the BT network
through the BRAS will provide a minimum of 3Mbit/s throughput for 90% of the time.
/.. snip .. / We do operate capacity
management processes to upgrade capacity in the BT network where performance consistently
does not meet these performance levels.
BT Wholesale Speed Test.
To check what speeds you are achieving on the BT side of the Network then
you will need to log off from your ISP's network and conduct a BTw
SpeedTest. Details on how to do this can be found here.
The BTw speedtest involves you logging off from your ISP, to perform a speedtest
which completely eliminates any of your ISPs network. If you are getting
slow speeds on the BTw speedtest, then the problem doesn't lie with
your ISP, instead it means that the problem is either with your own
equipment or congestion on the VP at the exchange.
So what can you do about this?
Hopefully BTw will have already realised that there are problems at your
exchange and will have arranged a "fix date". You can check if
there is a fix date due by using the checker at either Plusnet
UserTools Exchange Checker.
If your exchange is marked as red and has a fix date set, I'm afraid that
you may simply have to "grin and bear it" until that date :/
If no fix date has been set it could mean that BTw aren't aware of a problem
yet, or the exchange checker hasn't been updated with recent information.
If you are seeing slow speeds, and no fix date has been set then you should
complete several BTw speedtests and report the results of these with
your ISP.
Reporting to your ISP.
Hopefully your ISP will take this up with BT. ISPs have guidelines set
before they can report problems to BT.
On May 11th 2005, BT set the following guidelines to ISPs in a briefing
to help set customer expectations.
- Speeds of between 400Kbps and 2000Kbps are perfectly
acceptable for a connection based on the 50:1 Home 2000 product.
For other speeds and products see the table below.
- Even if an exchange is Red and the speeds are consistently below the
threshold of 400-2000Kbps, then a fault may be reported.
"The throughput benchmarks for BT IP Stream Home are
listed in the table below. These would be regarded as normal service."
Connection |
Home |
Office |
2 Mbps |
400 - 2000 kbps |
800 - 2000 kbps |
1 Mbps |
200 - 1000 kbps |
400 - 1000 kbps |
512 kbps |
100 - 500 kbps |
200 - 500 kbps |
256 kbps |
50 - 250 kbps |
- |
BT state that "speeds outside of these ranges will
only be investigated once the customer has discounted any elements
which they control" these are listed as:-
- The number of End Users that are active across the service
provider's BT Centrals
- The volume of IP traffic generated compared with the
size of BT Central or number of BT Centrals that the service provider
has chosen to deploy.
- The amount of Internet peering bandwidth employed by
the service provider.
- The status of the traffic congestion on the Internet.
Conducting a BTw SpeedTest completely eliminates any of
the above 4 factors.
"Due to variations
within IP networks, especially the Internet, testing
should be replicated at suitable time intervals to determine if external
influences are affecting performance. A suggested minimum is a test off
peak and another at peak times both using the same test facility"
One point to note is that nowhere does it state that the
poor speeds must be experienced during an off-peak time before
it can be reported to BT. Normal speeds during off peak (ie early
hours) simply help clarify that it is congestion on the VP during
peak times and that the user is still capable of achieving good
speeds if it wasn't for peak time congestion.
Another moot point regarding off peak testing is that the
above statement implies that tests can be taken at an external test
facility (that could be affected by peak Internet traffic in general).
Therefore although the BTw Speedtest would be the best way of testing
off peak speeds, it doesn't exclusively mean that
the BT speed test should be used off peak to verify speed problems
if the user can get good off peak speeds on other speedtests during
this period. *
Contact with BT Wholesale
As adsl customers, we are classed as "End Users" and your ISP is actually
BTw's "Customer" because it is your ISP that is buying services
from BTw.
As such BTw wont speak to us end users without having gone through
the correct channels which is through your ISP, so there is no way
that we can contact BTw direct to report any problems.
One final note to bear in mind, if BTw do contact you regarding any speed
problems that you have, be aware that they will try and fob you off
with various excuses. So make sure your own equipment is not faulty
and that you have conducted the necessary BTw speed tests.
One excuse that I've heard them try several times now
(and actually had it tried on me) was that "its a problem with
your own ISP". Be firm on this - If you have conducted the BTw
Speedtests and they are also giving you low speeds then there is
no way that they should be able to blame your ISP as the BTw speedtest
completely takes any part of your ISP's network out of the loop.
* A conversation I had with Ben Verwaayen's
office in July 2005 implied that it was the first they had heard
of the "00.00 to 07:00 BTw speedtest rule". I was told that as
long as you could prove that you were getting consistently low results
then your ISP should be able to raise this with BT as a fault....
the 400 kbps is not set in stone either.
Special thanks to Phil Long
from Zen for clarification
on the BT Wholesale acceptable guidelines.
Update:- a copy of the benchmark statement can be found here
|