DSL & Tel filters

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george t. everett

Senior Member
Location
New York
I have a customer that has just installed DSL for Internet. I have a dedicated line to the modem. The modem came with individual filters for the telephones. My question is can I install one filter a the demark point for the telephones instead of the individual filters?
 

Dennis Alwon

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
I believe you need the filter at every jack where you want a phone. Edit: Well I guess I was wrong. Had a customer tell me you needed one at every jack. The internet provider gave them the the filters.
 
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brantmacga

Señor Member
Location
Georgia
Occupation
Former Child
I have a customer that has just installed DSL for Internet. I have a dedicated line to the modem. The modem came with individual filters for the telephones. My question is can I install one filter a the demark point for the telephones instead of the individual filters?

yes .................. one at the demark is okay. i've used leviton & suttle; they work fine.
 

hbiss

EC, Westchester, New York NEC: 2014
Location
Hawthorne, New York NEC: 2014
Occupation
EC
Actually that is the better way to do it because it removes the unnecessary taps and house wiring from the DSL line. It's also good because the customer doesn't have to remember to have filters on all the phones.

If you can't find a "splitter" (what a filter made to be located at the demarc is called which is only a DSL filter in a housing with binding posts), you can make your own. Take one of the phone filters, a couple of surface jacks and a telephone line cord. Connect the filter between the jacks (observe the in and out) and wire the jacks in the line going to the phones. The DSL modem line comes directly off the demarc before the filter.

-Hal
 

mdshunk

Senior Member
Location
Right here.
The Suttle 649A1 is a real handy gadget for splitting out the analog and the DSL right at the entrance or in the phone room, saving the need for a filter on every phone and fax machine.
 

mdshunk

Senior Member
Location
Right here.
The Suttle 649A1 is a real handy gadget for splitting out the analog and the DSL right at the entrance or in the phone room, saving the need for a filter on every phone and fax machine.

649a1.jpg
 

Billy_Bob

Senior Member
Location
Oregon
FYI - Telephone lines can carry frequencies which we can hear and also frequencies which we can't hear. DSL takes advantage of this and sends its signals using a higher frequency than we can hear.

In the graphic below, you can see that voice uses a lower frequency and DSL uses higher frequencies.

Sometimes cheap home phone equipment is not well designed and might emit frequencies which "stray" into the DSL area. The "filter" only allows the home phone equipment to use the frequency range it is allowed to use. Thus keeping these from interfering with the DSL.

So does not matter if there are filters on each phone/FAX/Caller ID, etc., or one filter at the demark. Either way they will block unwanted signals and keep the DSL frequency range clear. But easier to just install one filter at a main point.

dsl.jpg
 

LarryFine

Master Electrician Electric Contractor Richmond VA
Location
Henrico County, VA
Occupation
Electrical Contractor
When we got DSL, I ran a separate home run to the demarc (sorry, Marc), attched it to the incoming pair, and ran the rest of the home-runs through the type of filter-in-a-box (a FIB?) Hal described.

The phone-company installer hadn't seen this done before, and was impressed with the whole idea.
 

brantmacga

Señor Member
Location
Georgia
Occupation
Former Child
the telco in my area will actually give you and install one filter at the demarc if you request it; maybe you should call the phone co. george and ask.
 

hbiss

EC, Westchester, New York NEC: 2014
Location
Hawthorne, New York NEC: 2014
Occupation
EC
Sometimes cheap home phone equipment is not well designed and might emit frequencies which "stray" into the DSL area. The "filter" only allows the home phone equipment to use the frequency range it is allowed to use. Thus keeping these from interfering with the DSL.

Well, that's not exactly true. It's not an interference issue but rather the phones loading down the DSL signal because they exhibit a low impedance at the DSL frequencies which looks like a short. The DSL filter is a low pass filter that blocks the DSL signal from the phone so that it won't be attenuated.

-Hal
 

Rampage_Rick

Senior Member
the telco in my area will actually give you and install one filter at the demarc if you request it; maybe you should call the phone co. george and ask.
Ditto up here, though I usually do it myself. :D

The standard NID protector here is the Siecor PTD-1U1S. Swap it out with a PTD-3L1H-PSSR1 and you're laughing. I have a dozen left over from when I was subbed to install DSL CPE in a chain of supermarkets. My other favorite DSL splitter is the Wilcom PS-15, which works great for backboard and inside wire applications.

IMAGE_080e.jpg
IMAGE_081e.jpg
 
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