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EE FTTP 500 upload SLA of 10 MBPS

GamrieliMymonee
Investigator
Investigator

Hello,

I just signed up for EE FFTP 500. I looked at the contract and it has a stated SLA ( Service Level Agreement ) on upload of 10 MBPS. This SLA metric seems  extremely poor to me, considering I can get 11.54 mbps on my 5G on a bad day.

So my question to the community is, how often folks have found EE SLA being an issue ? As this will prevent one from raising issues with EE if upload performances are poor ??

 

 

5 REPLIES 5
JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@GamrieliMymonee It's part of the terms and conditions posted to you, received the same myself on that exact same package, normal you will find 500/70 ratio, and copy link to picture for you with EE app stupid speed test. And there is no minimum complaint on upload's it is what it is, download's yes / uploads no....

Broadband & Landline - The EE Community

 

@JimM11 

In your experience .. has the ratio of 500/70 held up on your end during peak time ? 

I ask this, as with my current provider I have a 500 mbps download service but with a download SLA of 258 mbps. I often find that the service dips close to the SLA, but I am unable to request remediation as the provider has met the SLA.

Hence my question. Thanks again in advance.

 

 

JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@GamrieliMymonee Yes, no problem what so ever, but i am the only one connected on the 8 port CBT, new service installed 5th Nov, and expect to be good for quite some time, Pole is shared with VM as they have been up 14 Months now, and EE only from Sept, but had failed install because MJ Quinn Contractor was a knob head with no idea what so ever...

EE/OR are not symmetrical on up/down as yet but there is talk it will happen so unless you are a heavy upload user, you may be better to stay with your current provider... 

And from EE on the e-mail below.

Your Speed Guarantee
Your guaranteed download speed is: 425Mbps

Find out more about the Speed Guarantee.

Speed is to the router not to the device, that is why the EE speed test via the app is 2 pronged, Router first then device second, you should see it in the Picture link....

GamrieliMymonee
Investigator
Investigator

@JimM11  Thanks for the details. 

Would you have any specs on the CBT's used by OpenReach to support EE FTTP ? 

On your comment on EE/OR are not symmetrical on up/down :). I find it amazing that in the 21st Century that this is still under consideration 🙂 .

Thanks again for your help.

 

JimM11
Brilliant Contributor
Brilliant Contributor

@GamrieliMymonee Sorry no spec's on OR at all, will post some OR Details below this, and trials under way for the OR side of symmetrical it's just not so easy as you think you may that is why in busy area's contention has to be considered text below is from OR.

1. FTTP is a contended service, up to 32 users can be sharing the 2.5Gb backhaul, so you can never expect the full speed all the time, you may get 900mb when there are fewer people using it. I expect that you are sharing the backhaul with many users. If everyone was using it fully, you may only get 78mbs. Its called statistical multiplexing, which relies on the fact that all users are not utilising their connection fully, all of the time.

BT quote up to 900mb, so you are likely to get much less than that during peak times.

Speed tests pass very little data, so normally give a much higher speed.

2. The max OR connect to a splitter is 30 ( 32 is the splitter maximum but policy is 30 ) not every CBT port provided is likely to have a customer using it , so unless on a ‘new site’ that has no alternatives to OR FTTP the actual number on a splitter is likely to be way less , OR currently have about a 30% take up, so maybe 10 users per splitter , plus the majority don’t take 900Mb but slower profiles , and the chances of those ‘on line ‘ at any one time all and doing something intensive, rather than browsing / Netflix that may be consuming less than 30-100Mb , is slim , that’s why there is a 700Mb minimum speed guarantee on 900Mb …..the 2.4Gb will be plenty ,you would have to be incredibly unlucky to have any consistent congestion.

If you suspect PON congestion, try at a time when there won’t be much activity, late evening or early morning .


Although you have tried somethings to ‘ isolate’ the problem , the most obvious thing to do ( that you haven’t apparently tried ) is use the BT router , without doing that , you haven’t really proved anything , your third party router may great , but even great routers can be mis configured or faulty