Businesses and homes in Northlew in Devon are among the first in the UK to benefit from superfast broadband delivered over a microwave link rather than fibre.
The historic village has been connected to BT’s Openreach network with a 4km link and it is hoped that the method could be used in other rural areas where the laying of fibre is undesirable or unrealistic.
Around half of the properties connected in the village have signed up for superfast broadband services, with speeds of up to 80Mbps on offer, and Hardwicke in Gloucestershire the next settlement earmarked for microwave connectivity.
“The radio link connects to a new broadband cabinet near the centre of the village, which offers all the usual fibre broadband speeds and benefits.”
The rollout is part of the £94 million Connecting Devon and Somerset project, which has received government funding from the Broadband Delivery UK (BDUK) initiative which aims to extend superfast broadband to areas not covered by commercial deployments. It is intended that 95 percent of properties in the two counties will be covered by 2017.
“This is just one example of many of an innovative approach to bringing fibre based broadband to remote communities – and that innovation will continue,” adds Coles. ““We’re more than four years into rolling out fibre broadband across the South West, whether through our commercial programme or with our public sector partners, so the production line is well and truly established and primed to deliver even more over the coming years.”
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Are we going to see the early delivery of decent and better broadband across Devon & Somerset now then? I can answer that question with years to wait 'NO'.
This village in Devon (not Somerset) has had its own fixed wireless broadband service run from a mast by the post office for a number of years, set by the enterprising owner of the village stores. The system had a microwave backhaul from the mast. BT have now come in with public money from Connecting Devon & Somerset and taken over the system, but linking the backhaul link down to a DSLAM cabinet from where copper local loops now feed each property. CDS have not yet explained where they got the money from and don't be surprised if BT keep this off their standard product list meaning that other villages cannot benefit from the system. The hard work of getting this system running was done by BT, but by the local enterprising shopkeeper, who BT are giving no credit to.