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antoniosk
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  #2112055 21-Oct-2018 21:01
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Gordy7:

 

wellygary:

 

What's the state of the footpath if any?, or is your concrete apron hard up on the street curb?

 

 

Concrete apron is from the street boundary to the garage door... more than 10m....

 

Any new underground feed would would have to pass under power, water and automatic gate feed...

 

Here is a street view of the front of my property... click to enlarge view:

 

Click to see full size

 

 

Aaargh I feel for you on this, how frustrating - and to be fair, you were reasonable in your work with the ducting based on where the copper comes in. You weren't to know fibre would be in the other corner until the street work was actually done.

 

I can't seem them going under the driveway at Chorus cost to get to your ducting though... there's a reasonable amount of faffing to go left to right :-)





________

 

Antoniosk




Gordy7

gordy7
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  #2112657 23-Oct-2018 12:14
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Very quick response from Chorus today about the location of the street duct in relation to my underground duct feed to my house.

 

From their Consents & Acquisition Specialist:

 

When the technicians come out to scope and connect your property, you will have a say on how the installation takes place.

 

If there are existing ducts to your property, you will be able to advise the tech’s of this, and they will use them if possible.

 

Looks like Fibre will be available at your property in December or January at the latest.

 

----------------------

 

Now just waiting for advice that I can connect to Fibre :-)





Gordy

 

My first ever AM radio network connection was with a 1MHz AM crystal(OA91) radio receiver.


DarthKermit
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  #2112663 23-Oct-2018 12:25
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When fibre was installed in my street, the contractors installed those green rectangular pillars they formerly used.

 

I installed my own conduit, buried 500 mm down, across our front lawn to the front of our house (about 11 metres). The scoping guy was more than happy to utalise the conduit I installed to make his job a lot easier.




Gordy7

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  #2112668 23-Oct-2018 12:48
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DarthKermit:

 

When fibre was installed in my street, the contractors installed those green rectangular pillars they formerly used.

 

I installed my own conduit, buried 500 mm down, across our front lawn to the front of our house (about 11 metres). The scoping guy was more than happy to utalise the conduit I installed to make his job a lot easier.

 

 

Have a 10m concrete apron across most of the front of my property.

 

The underground duct to my house starts at my boundary 20m from where the street fibre duct has been made available.

 

Even if I put in a new duct (myself) it would have to start 20m away from the fibre where there is a narrow garden that would take a trench.

 

I will have to wait and see what options the scoping tech can suggest and what tools are available to complete the fibre connection.





Gordy

 

My first ever AM radio network connection was with a 1MHz AM crystal(OA91) radio receiver.


Suckerpunch
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  #2112670 23-Oct-2018 12:52
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My attempts to get the fibre drop point changed for my property failed miserably.

 

I even got in earlier than you, by having my change request sent to the network designer at the time the network was being designed for my street.

 

 


Gordy7

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  #2112671 23-Oct-2018 12:59
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Suckerpunch:

 

My attempts to get the fibre drop point changed for my property failed miserably.

 

I even got in earlier than you, by having my change request sent to the network designer at the time the network was being designed for my street.

 

 

 

 

Have you had fibre connected? Did you have a duct entry point at your boundary? How did the scope tech get from the fibre drop point to your duct?

 

 





Gordy

 

My first ever AM radio network connection was with a 1MHz AM crystal(OA91) radio receiver.


 
 
 

Move to New Zealand's best fibre broadband service (affiliate link). Free setup code: R587125ERQ6VE. Note that to use Quic Broadband you must be comfortable with configuring your own router.
dantheperson
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  #2136901 29-Nov-2018 22:55
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Suckerpunch:

 

My attempts to get the fibre drop point changed for my property failed miserably.

 

I even got in earlier than you, by having my change request sent to the network designer at the time the network was being designed for my street.

 

 

 

 

How does one find out what the network design is for ones street?  We are getting Fibre in May and we are doing building work now so i want to put some conduit in the ground while it's currently ripped up.  But what side of the property?

 

As my the neighbours on either side have undergrounded their utilities in the last decade, is it safe to assume the fibre will come in the same location as the copper currently does?  Our copper is overhead but hoping that if we lay our own ducting, and they are doing the neighbours from the same spot anyway, they will be ok to do ours underground.  Perhaps if we don't put the copper overhead back up after the building work completes...


Jase2985
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  #2137088 30-Nov-2018 10:27
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@dantheperson good luck with that.

 

 

 

I tried to get them to change my connected from overhead to underground before the network was installed so I didn't have to pay for it as we are building in a year or so, but they wouldn't have a bar of it. now ill have to pay for it.

 

 

 

they might be able to tell you which side of the property it will be on.


jlittle
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  #2139273 4-Dec-2018 14:50
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In another thread,

 

tehgerbil: For every good installation story about Chorus contractors, I hear about 10 other awful incompetent and poorly performed installs.

 

I didn't think responding to that was on-topic for the thread, but seems so on this one.

 

 

When Chorus put fibre down my street, they noticed the existing, ~ 30 year old, under-grounding to my house from the power pole and they put something by the pole 1½ m away from the main duct on the other side of the footpath. When we got around to arranging an install some months later, using a long stiff wire the installers pushed the fibre through and were done in less than two hours. It was a combined scoping, install fibre, install ONT and router, all on the same day.

 

 





Regards, John Little


Gordy7

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  #2139599 5-Dec-2018 09:35
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jlittle: When Chorus put fibre down my street, they noticed the existing, ~ 30 year old, under-grounding to my house from the power pole and they put something by the pole 1½ m away from the main duct on the other side of the footpath. When we got around to arranging an install some months later, using a long stiff wire the installers pushed the fibre through and were done in less than two hours. It was a combined scoping, install fibre, install ONT and router, all on the same day.

 

A good pro-active situation by Chorus!

 

In my case the street fibre installers were sub-contractors to Chorus. They were just following a Chorus plan.

 

When I spoke to the sub-contractors they could see where my copper entry was - some 20m from the fibre duct they had just laid.

 

Hopefully, when it comes time for scoping, the 200m installation allowance will allow the street fibre duct to be extended by 20m to my underground duct entry point.





Gordy

 

My first ever AM radio network connection was with a 1MHz AM crystal(OA91) radio receiver.


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