Weird setup. Splitting happens right at the site itself? Perhaps the houses aren't so distant to this office. Usually you'd directly just route the output from the OLT and then split it in the neighborhood as you go
I bet the network is true fiber to the home ,when you split at your core it makes things easier and some people like it this way,no splitting happening in the field ,if they wanted to do ptp connections for there customers they can ,or they can do how they are now and using pon ,a little more expensive but can be desired by some
You can do it that way too. For management, we're splitting it in a closet and going directly to the home. Technicians go to one place for maintenance and management. The locations aren't far from this closet.
Hi. I am using a GEPON network and I'm having a problem using VLANs on them. My router manufacturer says I need to make the fibre port as well as the LAN out port (on the GEPON ONU) as trunk ports. For some reason I'm not able to figure out how to do this. Any idea how I can go about it? The GEPON devices are manufactured by Syrotech.
Just curious could i use a Ethernet to fiber converter to replace my on box put the apc connector in the converter that is using a sc module or would i need to have a gpon module specifically for apc because i want a more direct fiber connection to my router as ive come to the thought my ont box may be adding some sorta stack delay in my gaming sessions i have 11ms ping but it feels more like 100 ms
@@RowellDionicio as that's how they do it with mine unless I have the router I'm using a different Mac address can't connect to the internet any device copying the original routers Mac can connect to the internet if they connect to it directly
I want to scrap the ISP's ONT router combo. What's the best route to take? Their Ethernet ports on their ONT router only support up to 1 Gigabit I would like more as they offer 1.2 gigabit plan speeds. My personal router has 10 Gigabit and 2.5 Gigabit ports
Hard to say not knowing the full capabilities of your ISP. You’ll only go as fast as whatever they can give you. If 1.2 Gbps is the max, then you’ll need a router that can handle that at the port level and process it at line speed.
@RowellDionicio That's facts. TDMA meaning ONU that is sharing the line will take each and every bit of their turn to communicate. Multiple devices, actually does not connect at the same exact time. GPON unit governs when your modem gets its turn to communicate.