- No connection since thunderstorm
- Posted by Cuzman on June 25th, 2005
My brother has a 512kb account with Supanet, and since a violent
thunderstorm on Friday morning his modem refuses to synchronize with the
exchange. He has had no problems with his setup for more than six
months, but now the LED continuously flashes to no avail.
The USB ports all work, as all other peripherals work perfectly with
them. The analogue phone line works perfectly, but that bears little on
the status of ADSL.
The Supanet helpline charges £1.00 per minute, and my brother was kept
on for half an hour while a somewhat incoherent woman in India ran
through her checklist of usual suspects. She eventually said that my
brother's modem was obviously too far from the main extension, to which
he stated that he had tried bypassing all the filters to no avail. This
obviously isn't the problem anyway, as he has been using the same setup
since Christmas with no problems.
He explained about the thunderstorm, but the woman said that it couldn't
possibly have caused a problem(!?). I haven't been able to sit down at
his PC and take a proper look, but I'm guessing the problem is actually
with the exchange.
http://www.samknows.com/broadband/ex...p?ecode=WWEXMO
Can anyone advise on a further cause of action? He doesn't want another
£30 phone call getting nowhere fast.
- Posted by nick on June 25th, 2005
"Cuzman" <cuzNOSPAM@supanet.com> wrote in message news:d9jo3r$8l6$1@news.freedom2surf.net...
your modem is fried. get a new one.
- Posted by Peter M on June 25th, 2005
On Sat, 25 Jun 2005 15:01:26 +0100, Cuzman <cuzNOSPAM@supanet.com> wrote:
I'd take your ADSL kit with you, to be able to check whether it's his kit
As the other poster has suggested, I'd say the modem is likely to have died
in the storm. Next 30 quid should be spent on a spare... and when he can,
make a switch to some other ISP which doesn't use an 09xx number. Much
depends on amount of usage, but firms like Metronet etc have 0870 and/or
geographic numbers. Some people even moan about 0845, but even 0871 (at
10p a minute) would be cheap compared with 100p/min !! Ebuyer and Dabs
do some low cost ADSL modem/router gear, and budget network cards are a
few pounds too, if his PC has none. Just be glad PC didn't go bang :-)
--
UK ADSL <http://tinyurl.com/5jpa4> - Happy to save cash with Plus.Net!!
E-mail + files - 30 day free trial - <http://web.vfm-deals.com/runbox/>
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- Posted by Java Jive on June 25th, 2005
A previous NetGear ADSL modem showed exactly the same symptoms when it died
(AFAIAA nothing to do with a storm though).
Yes, if you can take your kit to his home and try it there, and vice versa.
However, I suspect the exchange is probably in the clear, I think the
problem would be more widely known if the exchange was badly affected,
though it could be a problem local to his house or street. Get him to ask
his neighbours whether they're having any problems.
"Cuzman" <cuzNOSPAM@supanet.com> wrote in message
news:d9jo3r$8l6$1@news.freedom2surf.net...
- Posted by Chip on June 25th, 2005
On Sat, 25 Jun 2005 15:01:26 +0100,it is alleged that Cuzman
<cuzNOSPAM@supanet.com> spake thusly in uk.telecom.broadband:
<snip>
Try another modem, beg, borrow etc, rather than buying, at least to
begin with and possibly new microfilters (You should be able to prove
the line is ok with another modem with no filters, temporarily) and if
the problem ends up being the modem, then severely bitch at the isp
about their incompetent tech support, and demand they refund the 30
pounds. They are unlikely to do so, so start looking for a decent isp
:-)
--
In those days spirits were brave, the stakes were high, men were REAL men,
women were REAL women, and small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri were
REAL small furry creatures from Alpha Centauri.
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
- Posted by Java Jive on June 25th, 2005
True, lightning can do strange things, but the fact that his phone line is
working suggests that the problem lies within the house. However, whenever
I get a problem like that I always think it pays to check whether one's
neighbours are having problems, otherwise you can waste a lot of time trying
to fix something that isn't broken.
"Dave {Reply Address in.sig}" <noone$$@llondel.org> wrote in message
news:3933296.Mj1ildFULn@robinton.llondel.org...
- Posted by Michael Chare on June 25th, 2005
"nick" <no@reply.thx> wrote in message
news:42bd71ac$0$2039$ed2e19e4@ptn-nntp-reader04.plus.net...
If the modem is 6 months old it might still be under warranty....
--
Michael Chare
- Posted by David G. Bell on June 25th, 2005
On Saturday, in article
<42bd71ac$0$2039$ed2e19e4@ptn-nntp-reader04.plus.net>
no@reply.thx "nick" wrote:
[snipped]
Yes, that's my suspicion too. I've had it happen three times in the
last dozen years. A thunderstorm can generate a considerable surge in a
phone line. The modem still works, as far as the computer is concerned,
but there's a safety device to stop dangerous voltages, and when that
fails there's no line visible.
--
David G. Bell -- SF Fan, Filker, and Punslinger.
"I am Number Two," said Penfold. "You are Number Six."
- Posted by richdotward@gmail.com on June 26th, 2005
Hi
Exactly the same problem with my router / modem since the thunderstorms
in the UK. In fact the house 2 doors away was hit by lighting and all
her electronics died. Only my router seems to be affected - the
network side is fine but the modem just refuses to respond.
If its a netgear they come with a 2 year warranty, spoke to some bloke
in Indian yesterday who is now arranging for a new router to be sent to
me free of charge.
Not bad service at all - shame I ordered a new router on friday night
before I knew about the extented warranty :-)
Thanks.
Rich
"David G. Bell" wrote:
- Posted by David G. Bell on June 26th, 2005
On 26 Jun, in article
<1119775418.583493.9610@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.c om>
richdotward@gmail.com wrote:
Do you have a surge protector on the electricity supply?
That might not be giving good protection now. Lightning-induced spikes
can break some internal components.
--
David G. Bell -- SF Fan, Filker, and Punslinger.
"I am Number Two," said Penfold. "You are Number Six."
- Posted by Jock Mackirdy on June 26th, 2005
In article <20050626.1229.104328snz@zhochaka.demon.co.uk>, David G. Bell
wrote:
Lightning would almost certainly fry a surge protector, though the
elctronics might or might not be protected.
--
Jock Mackirdy
Bedford
- Posted by Java Jive on June 27th, 2005
Please keep us posted on how satisfactory the replacement is ...
<richdotward@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1119775418.583493.9610@g14g2000cwa.googlegrou ps.com...
- Posted by Tim Clark on June 27th, 2005
In article <tm0rb11qvpeleej43gh5a6ofph4g4gu9gc@news.virgin.ne t>,
Chip <chipmunk_1000@excite.com> writes:
If they won't refund, at least ask them to apply an extremely high
voltage to the member of staff who claimed that lightning couldn't do
any damage - to see if it changes her mind :-)
--
Tim Clark
- Posted by Java Jive on July 2nd, 2005
Sounds familiar. Hope it turns out satisfactorily. Keep us posted if it
doesn't.
"Rich" <richdotward@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:v7tcc1haqoqrjf94r5f7ml1fofc9qp1v9b@4ax.com...
My turnaround was a lot quicker than that.
Yes, I think that offer is carefully constructed to avoid you choosing it!
For $30 you could go down the store and buy a new router!