In case anyone here knows about such things;
I have had intermittant faults with my broadband and every time I have phoned them they have ended up telling me the fault is with the wiring.
Soooo, if I have a BT engineer come out and the fault is found to be the inside wiring I'll get charged.
This is where my question comes in;
In the room next to mine is where the phone wire snakes along the wall to a jack where it connects to the outside wire via two binding posts. My question is, is it illegal for me to connect a new phone line to those binding posts? (the box is inside the house but I read somewhere that it is illegal to connect anything to some types of jacks to the network - it does not have a phone jack on this box it is only for the wire to 'permanently' connect to the outside).
Obviously I just want to eliminate the inside wire as a potential fault point before having a BT engineer come out. I suppose if I had the right equipment I could test the existing wire. My many years of working with audio wiring in studios tells me that cables can and will work intermittantly for reasons unknown to mere mortals so one of the first things I think of is replacing a cable.
I have had intermittant faults with my broadband and every time I have phoned them they have ended up telling me the fault is with the wiring.
Soooo, if I have a BT engineer come out and the fault is found to be the inside wiring I'll get charged.
This is where my question comes in;
In the room next to mine is where the phone wire snakes along the wall to a jack where it connects to the outside wire via two binding posts. My question is, is it illegal for me to connect a new phone line to those binding posts? (the box is inside the house but I read somewhere that it is illegal to connect anything to some types of jacks to the network - it does not have a phone jack on this box it is only for the wire to 'permanently' connect to the outside).
Obviously I just want to eliminate the inside wire as a potential fault point before having a BT engineer come out. I suppose if I had the right equipment I could test the existing wire. My many years of working with audio wiring in studios tells me that cables can and will work intermittantly for reasons unknown to mere mortals so one of the first things I think of is replacing a cable.
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