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Re: Do you still need ADSL filters?
Broadband via cable, and broadband via BT type telephone line (ADSL) work entirely differently.
With Cable Broadband you have a coaxial type cable (looks rather like your TV aerial) plugged into the back of a Virgin Media supplied cable modem. If you need a router that then plugs into the modem.
With ADSL based broadband, the connection is via your telephone line. The signal for the phone, and signal for ADSL has to be separated by the ADSL filters or splitters. You can either have a single filter on your master phone socket, with all subsequent phone extensions plugged into the phone side of the filter and the ADSL modem plugged into the broadband side of that same filter. Alternatively, you must have a filter fitted on any of the phone sockets, master and extension, that you connect any phone or modem.
With cable, you cannot have a combined modem and router. With ADSL you can, and often do have a combined modem router. You will still need the ADSL filter arrangement outlined above.
Some people have found a more reliable ADSL broadband if their modem is connected to a filter on the master socket.
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