BT’s trial of G.Fast technology in the Gosforth area of Newcastle has gone live, with the first customers connected to speeds of up to 330Mbps last week.
The G.Fast standard uses existing copper cables to maintain speeds of up to 1Gbps as far as 400 metres from the cabinet, making it a far more cost effective technology to boost speeds than Fibre to the Premises (FTTP).
The trial is one of three pencilled in for the UK, alongside Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire and Swansea and will help BT determine the performance of the technology and usage demands from customers over the next nine months.
“We are determined to continue to improve the UK’s leading position on broadband,” said Joe Garner, Openreach CEO. “That’s why we are very excited to have begun the second G.Fast trial which is another step in building Britain’s connected future.”
The timing of the announcement coincides with the publication of BT’s response to Ofcom’s once-in-a-decade review of the UK communications market. BT’s competitors have called for Openreach to be made a fully independent company, claiming the current structure favours BT, stifles investment and results in a poorer service for customers.
BT has said there is no reason for split and claims the current model is working, pointing to recent coverage and speed upgrades as evidence. It believes the calls for separation are motivated by “self-interest” from rivals and wants the Pay-TV sector to be investigated instead.
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Money would be better spent in connecting up premises in major cities that still don't have proper broadband, we get 500k in a major city - and Openreach/BT just refuses to do anything save to try and sell us leased lines - or maybe that just deliberate nastiness of BT!