Forum Articles
  Welcome back Join CF
You are here You are here: Home | Forum | Deja Vu. But it took years to get here again.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most of the discussions, articles and other free features. By joining our Virgin Media community you will have full access to all discussions, be able to view and post threads, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own images/photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please join our community today.


Welcome to Cable Forum
Go Back   Cable Forum > Virgin Media Services > Virgin Media Internet Service
Register FAQ Community Calendar

HDU installed, problems since.
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 03-12-2012, 23:13   #1
InfiniteBiscuit
cf.member
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Dundee, Scotland.
Age: 38
Services: Full house TV (two V6 boxes), VIVID 200, Talk Weekends.
Posts: 96
InfiniteBiscuit is an unknown quantity at this point
HDU installed, problems since.

Hello forum.

Last week I had an HDU I think it's called, installed. Powered three way splitter. As I was having trouble getting on demand/interactive in the bedroom. Mr Engineer came out, stated that the power levels were far too high in this flat, and that I would need an HDU to resolve the issue.

So he installed one. Then when he couldn't get the box working anyways, he decided to give me a new box. And voila, it works!

However, ever since my internet has been reduced to garbage. Engineer told me I'd need the HDU plugged in all the time, as I wouldn't get internet or the TV service in the bedroom otherwise.

But my internet is now suffering awful latency times, a lot of jitter, and occasional packet loss.

As some who quite enjoys shooting people on Call of Duty, this is becoming irritating. What can be done?
InfiniteBiscuit is offline   Reply With Quote
Advertisement
Old 04-12-2012, 07:42   #2
jb66
cf.mega poster
 
jb66's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 5,386
jb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze array
jb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze array
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

whats your signal levels?
jb66 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-12-2012, 08:51   #3
General Maximus
Ran Away
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Lincoln
Services: phone + 1gbit BB + SkyQ
Posts: 11,021
General Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronze
General Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronzeGeneral Maximus is cast in bronze
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

it is more likely that you didn't need the HDU ti start off with and the box was faulty and installing the HDU has nnow screwed up yur power levels
General Maximus is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-12-2012, 10:45   #4
Sephiroth
Wisdom & truth
 
Sephiroth's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: RG41
Services: RG41: 1Gig VOLT Rutland: Gigaclear 400/400
Posts: 12,320
Sephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny star
Sephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny star
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

As mon General says, if power is too high (downstream, I assume), an HDU is not needed. An HDU would boost a hopefully clean incoming signal and distribute it to multiple points.

The use of the word "box" in the foregoing posts has rather confused me. Presumably it means the HDU and not the modem.

The usual supplied device by VM (AFAIK) can be googled as TRATEC 85-FDU-APPNOTE.
__________________
Seph.

My advice is at your risk.
Sephiroth is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-12-2012, 11:15   #5
InfiniteBiscuit
cf.member
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Dundee, Scotland.
Age: 38
Services: Full house TV (two V6 boxes), VIVID 200, Talk Weekends.
Posts: 96
InfiniteBiscuit is an unknown quantity at this point
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

Thanks for the replies, people.

I'll post some signal levels when home, and I'll likely put the old non powered splitter on, as the engineer left that.

When referring to the 'box', I meant the V+ box. I should have specified.

Basically, the engineer said the HDU would fix the issue, and when it didn't, he replaced the V+ anyways.
InfiniteBiscuit is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-12-2012, 11:33   #6
Sephiroth
Wisdom & truth
 
Sephiroth's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: RG41
Services: RG41: 1Gig VOLT Rutland: Gigaclear 400/400
Posts: 12,320
Sephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny star
Sephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny star
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

Here's a sort of look ahead on this.

1/
If your downstream power levels on your modem are > -3 dBmv, your signal to the V+ box won't need boosting.

2/
If your modem downstream SNR is < 34.5dB, then you're potentially (but nt necessarily) at the edge of a trouble zone that the HDU cannot fix.

3/
If your upstream power (before the HDU was installed) is high - say above 50 dBmv, then the HDU isn't going to help that either, although it might be a necessary level due to your distance from the street cabinet. If your upstream power is 55 dBmv (you need to refresh the power screen a few times to see if it is moving in that direction), then there is an upstream problem that cannot be fixed by the HDU.

The typical application for an HDU is where you live at the end of the cable run from the street cabinet and you have a number of devices split off at the external wall box. The aim of the HDU is to ensure that there is no further powe level drop due to the length of cable around your house to the several devices.

The V+ box will tell you in the Settings menu what the power levels & SNR are. Would be useful to compare against the modem.

HTH
__________________
Seph.

My advice is at your risk.
Sephiroth is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-12-2012, 13:19   #7
InfiniteBiscuit
cf.member
 
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Dundee, Scotland.
Age: 38
Services: Full house TV (two V6 boxes), VIVID 200, Talk Weekends.
Posts: 96
InfiniteBiscuit is an unknown quantity at this point
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

That's all good to know, thanks. I'll have a look either tonight or tomorrow and update the post.

The engineer seemed to think that the HDU was the greatest piece of kit in the world. "This'll solve all your internet problems." I didn't have any problems until it was installed. Latency was always low, rarely dropped out, and I'm lucky enough to have always have a consistent speed at the 100Mbps mark.
InfiniteBiscuit is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-12-2012, 14:06   #8
Stephen
Smeghead
 
Stephen's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Glasgow
Age: 44
Services: Sky Q 2Tb, Sky Q mini, boxsets and Sports & Movies HD, Sky Fibre unlimited
Posts: 14,515
Stephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny star
Stephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny starStephen has a nice shiny star
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

I had a HDU installed when I moved house and nothing ever worked. After a fault tech came out he removed it for a non powered splitter as he said my power levels were spot on but spiking a little high and the HDU couldn't cope.

Tech that originally installed the HDU tried to tell me they have to install them for every install now! nonsense I thought.

Just glad it was removed.
__________________
AMD Ryzen 7 7700 | 32GB DDR5 6000 | RADEON 7900XT | WD 2TB NVME
Stephen is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-12-2012, 15:00   #9
jb66
cf.mega poster
 
jb66's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 5,386
jb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze array
jb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze arrayjb66 has a bronze array
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

When you have a long cable run RG11 is more effective than an HDU as the high frequency signals will be very low.

HDUs are mostly used in sid architecture where there are a set of taps every 20m. If your close to the amp there will be a 26db attenuated tap to lower the downstream, unfortunatly the upstream will also be attenuated by 26db so will be high. Its common for the upstream to be 47db from the pit in those situations. Add a 3 way splitter and a few connectors and the upstream rises above 55db.
jb66 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-12-2012, 15:31   #10
Sephiroth
Wisdom & truth
 
Sephiroth's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: RG41
Services: RG41: 1Gig VOLT Rutland: Gigaclear 400/400
Posts: 12,320
Sephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny star
Sephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny starSephiroth has a nice shiny star
Re: HDU installed, problems since.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jb66 View Post
When you have a long cable run RG11 is more effective than an HDU as the high frequency signals will be very low.

HDUs are mostly used in sid architecture where there are a set of taps every 20m. If your close to the amp there will be a 26db attenuated tap to lower the downstream, unfortunatly the upstream will also be attenuated by 26db so will be high. Its common for the upstream to be 47db from the pit in those situations. Add a 3 way splitter and a few connectors and the upstream rises above 55db.
Just to expand on JB's explanation. If you are close to the amp, the upstream power required to be drawn from your modem will be lower than if you are further away. That's why the 0 dBmv/40 dBmv downstream/upstream sweet point rule of thumb is used. I'm close-ish to the amp and in the days before I had 4 taps at the hope, my modem only needed 29 dBmv to get back to the first active node (optical). Another rule of thumb is that each active node needs to see at least 15 dBmv input power - there are settings to control this and the rule is not fixed because of infrastructure differences from area to area.

Now mine is c. 40 dBmv. But in SID areas, it's as JB explains because of the attenuation at each pit.

But you can do the maths once you've worked out the upstream attenuation to the amp, plus the tap point attenuation etc. So JB is essentially correct.
.
__________________
Seph.

My advice is at your risk.
Sephiroth is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 05-12-2012, 00:34   #11
RB2004
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Services: Services: 200 Mbit Gamer on Hub 3, 3x Arris V6 Boxes, CISCO V HD, VIP Package
Posts: 689
RB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation eraRB2004 has entered a golden reputation era
Quote:
Originally Posted by jb66 View Post
When you have a long cable run RG11 is more effective than an HDU as the high frequency signals will be very low.

HDUs are mostly used in sid architecture where there are a set of taps every 20m. If your close to the amp there will be a 26db attenuated tap to lower the downstream, unfortunatly the upstream will also be attenuated by 26db so will be high. Its common for the upstream to be 47db from the pit in those situations. Add a 3 way splitter and a few connectors and the upstream rises above 55db.
That was the setup here, pit very 20 metres or so, then I had 5 devices in the house.

So my signal levels were borderline -5 to -7 dbmv

With slightly high upstream.

But in my case I had a few engineers out and none would fit a HDU.

In the end had to fit one myself and now signal levels are spot on and no problems since!
RB2004 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:08.


Server: osmium.zmnt.uk
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
All Posts and Content are © Cable Forum