Quote:
Originally Posted by General Maximus
There isnt anything he can do to fix it, it is an area issue which needs fixing by networks and he needs to escalate it.
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Not necessarily. High upstream can be caused by 1001 different things. When I was a service tech, the network I worked on was predominantly below ground. The biggest issue of high upstream was a corroded F connector in the pit. Then you get stuff like drop cable damaged years before, the splice pack isn’t quite sealed properly, so the F within is corroded. Of course it could be a network issue. But of the jobs I went to for high upstream, 90% were drop cable or anything connected to it towards the house. The other 10% were network issues.