Hi Folks,
So there is the list: https://www.swisscom.ch/dam/swisscom/en/ws/documents/E_BBCS-Documents/e_bbcs...
Anybody got a recommendation out of that for a bridge-only G.Fast modem?
Apparently FRITZ!Box 7582 does not do Bridge mode, but Zyxel XMG3927 does.
Cisco C1113-8P ISR is a bit much for my purposes (and at 800+ bit much too)
Anybody has any positive/negative experiences and/or other recommendations?
Greets, Jeroen
On Thu, Apr 01, 2021 at 11:45:55AM +0200, Jeroen Massar wrote:
Apparently FRITZ!Box 7582 does not do Bridge mode, but Zyxel XMG3927 does.
I am running a FRITZ!Box 7582 in G.fast mode on a FTTS init7 (probably with Swisscom behind it) in bridge mode, terminating the PPP on an apu2.
I particularly like the amount of detail you have through the web GUI on the link itself.
Anybody has any positive/negative experiences and/or other recommendations?
As the FRITZ!Box is a bit overkill, some people mentionned instead the use of SFP/GBIC converters, but I did not try yet.
On Thu, 1 Apr 2021 12:05:30 Marc SCHAEFER schaefer@alphanet.ch wrote:
I am running a FRITZ!Box 7582 in G.fast mode on a FTTS init7 (probably with Swisscom behind it) in bridge mode, terminating the PPP on an apu2.
I particularly like the amount of detail you have through the web GUI on the link itself.
The amount of detail on the Fritz!Box is definitely better than on the Zyxel XMG-3927, I operate both of them (although not as a bridge). In terms of speed, I can't tell, I only used them for a short time on the same line, and the Fritz!Box was a bit faster (But the line was so bad that g.fast didn't provide more total throughput than VDSL2).
Anybody has any positive/negative experiences and/or other recommendations?
As the FRITZ!Box is a bit overkill, some people mentionned instead the use of SFP/GBIC converters, but I did not try yet.
As far as I know, some or all of them (at least the one which Swisscom delivered as an upgrade to their Internet-Box plus) need special support by the device/router they are plugged in. Therefore you can't just plug them into your switch and connect your router to the switch through ethernet.
As a side note, g.fast is very picky about your line quality, optimize _everything_ on the cable connection inside your building which is not part of swisscoms infrastructure. One direct, short, high quality cable from the HüP to an RJ45 plug (no bridged tap), and a short, high quality cable from there to your modem. I you don't get the speed you should by a large margin, complain to Swisscom through your provider. I did so, and in the end Swisscom replaced an old, out of spec landline cable (the outdoor type, where birds can sit on :-) ). Of course, we would all like to have real fiber connections.
Kind Regards
Peter
Hi Jeroen,
Cheap and Working : https://www.draytek.de/vigor166.html
You can order it by Brack: https://www.brack.ch/draytek-g-fast-router-vigor166-gen2-1159137?query=drayt...
Best regards
Alisha Manuela
Am 2021-04-01 11:45, schrieb Jeroen Massar:
Hi Folks,
So there is the list: https://www.swisscom.ch/dam/swisscom/en/ws/documents/E_BBCS-Documents/e_bbcs...
Anybody got a recommendation out of that for a bridge-only G.Fast modem?
Apparently FRITZ!Box 7582 does not do Bridge mode, but Zyxel XMG3927 does.
Cisco C1113-8P ISR is a bit much for my purposes (and at 800+ bit much too)
Anybody has any positive/negative experiences and/or other recommendations?
Greets, Jeroen
swinog mailing list swinog@lists.swinog.ch http://lists.swinog.ch/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/swinog
Hi Jeroen
Interesting topic!
Swisscom deployed 'FTTS' at my home last year, promising 'at least 500 mbit/s with g.fast' for every household, causing the municipal administration to reject plans for proper FTTH from competitors, this as a sidenote.
Actual situation: I live about 250m away form the DSLAM in the street. After several cases opened @ Swisscom, they found out it is just about a little too far away for g.fast to work properly.
In this 'at the limit' situation I tested two ZyXEL XMG3927-B50A (to make sure I had not a broken one) in bridge mode (PPPoE on Mikrotik). Tested directly at the HÜP.
Results: * g.fast is slower than VDSL2 at this distance in both up and down speed (way slower than what Swisscom announced). * XMG3927 shows very strange packet delays. There is no packetloss, but latency sometimes jumps to about 500ms or more, for single packets (usually small packets like tcp syn) causing re-transmits, without apparent reason. This happens in g.fast AND VDSL2 mode. Also happening if ethernet interface is set to 100Mbit/Fduples. Opened Case @Studerus, They never heard of that issue. * Older VDSL2 only Modem: VMG1312-B10A odes not show this lately issue (so I kept that modem)
I know, that the XMG3927 has wider filters (up to 500Mhz or so) to allow g.fast. I know there are a couple of low power 430MHz transmitters in my neighbourhood. Could they be the cause of that issue?
Looking forward of other's experiences with g.fast bridges.
If you have line of sight between the DSLAM location and your home? Slam a microwave on to it and you get 10Gbps over such distances easily. And if you can't afford that, 1Gbps at 60Ghz you can get for a couple of 100 bucks and can go as far as 10km (LOS only).
Since I moved away from VDSL2 area to Fiber to the home place, I can not really understand these issues anymore. Why go and abuse copper wires to the absolute limit when its not a solution long term any way. Its dead technology.
It's always an edge case and full of problems like this one. Fiber in contrary is so darn simple and straightforward. Router (of choice) + SFP or SFP+. Done! Simple. Easy. Always works! (if not, try another fiber patch cable or the right port maybe. That's about it).
So my recommendation: talk to your fiber provider of choice (real FTTH not that shitty GPON stuff) instead of wasting time on copper with all kinds of "lets squeeze the last bit out of a noisy copper wire" options. It really pays off to go the extra mile there.
But if you don't have the choice, consider move to another place if having good internet is your daily bread and butter (which is probably the case for most of us on this list). Seriously, it helps a lot in peace of mind.
Another option these days is switch to 5G wireless and set up a IPSec tunnel to your preferred router in the Datacenter. I get like 150 - 450Mbit on 5G depending on where I am at. Still faster than VDSL2.
Benoît Panizzon wrote on 01.04.21 12:26:
Hi Jeroen
Interesting topic!
Swisscom deployed 'FTTS' at my home last year, promising 'at least 500 mbit/s with g.fast' for every household, causing the municipal administration to reject plans for proper FTTH from competitors, this as a sidenote.
Actual situation: I live about 250m away form the DSLAM in the street. After several cases opened @ Swisscom, they found out it is just about a little too far away for g.fast to work properly.
In this 'at the limit' situation I tested two ZyXEL XMG3927-B50A (to make sure I had not a broken one) in bridge mode (PPPoE on Mikrotik). Tested directly at the HÜP.
Results:
- g.fast is slower than VDSL2 at this distance in both up and down speed (way slower than what Swisscom announced).
- XMG3927 shows very strange packet delays. There is no packetloss, but latency sometimes jumps to about 500ms or more, for single packets (usually small packets like tcp syn) causing re-transmits, without apparent reason. This happens in g.fast AND VDSL2 mode. Also happening if ethernet interface is set to 100Mbit/Fduples. Opened Case @Studerus, They never heard of that issue.
- Older VDSL2 only Modem: VMG1312-B10A odes not show this lately issue (so I kept that modem)
I know, that the XMG3927 has wider filters (up to 500Mhz or so) to allow g.fast. I know there are a couple of low power 430MHz transmitters in my neighbourhood. Could they be the cause of that issue?
Looking forward of other's experiences with g.fast bridges.
Since I moved away from VDSL2 area to Fiber to the home place, I can not really understand these issues anymore. Why go and abuse copper wires to the absolute limit when its not a solution long term any way. Its dead technology.
Simple: Because those making the decisions who does and doesn't get FTTH are those who will have to pay for a big part of the installation costs.
Although, I suppose you could always try to finance the cabling yourself if you have deep pockets...
I'm not sure how helpful the BAKOM would be in this, but perhaps you can at least file a complaint against the provider for not providing the advertised bandwidth? It wouldn't help against the decision-maker's refusal to invest into the future, though...
On Thu, Apr 01, 2021 at 12:26:19PM +0200, Benoît Panizzon wrote:
Actual situation: I live about 250m away form the DSLAM in the street. After several cases opened @ Swisscom, they found out it is just about a little too far away for g.fast to work properly.
About 190 m, see images: