Gigaclear broadband

Author
Discussion

Dr Doofenshmirtz

Original Poster:

15,690 posts

207 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
quotequote all
Anyone here using Gigaclear broadband?

I live in a rural village, and can currently only get traditional 'up to' 8mbps broadband. Gigaclear are currently installing their pure fiber service into the village, and I'm tempted. But it's quite expensive at nearly £40 per month for 50/50 mbps.
I'm worried that if I sign up, BT will enable the village for fast broadband (albeit using the traditional copper to the premises), but costing much less than Gigaclear.

Any experience?

TonyRPH

13,142 posts

175 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
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£40 isn't a lot of 50/50 mb broadband?

Sounds like good value to me.


Aphex

2,160 posts

207 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
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£60 for 1gig up and down? Yes please

LotusMartin

1,116 posts

159 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
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Bite their arm off...

deckster

9,631 posts

262 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
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If that means that you can get rid of the BT line altogether (don't forget that anything they quote is always 'plus line rental') then as said it sounds like an excellent deal. If you need to retain the BT line for other purposes, then perhaps it's less compelling.

GuyW

1,081 posts

210 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
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That's not expensive!

I'd be signing up in a heartbeat.

BertB

1,101 posts

232 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
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That's what I pay for Satellite broadband and it's sooo much slower than that.

As someone else said, bite their hand off and send them to my village next please!

HairyMaclary

3,710 posts

202 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
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Fftp. More chance of them enabling your line to 300mbs than bt putting in fftc which could be as low as 38mbs. For 76mbs bt expect you to get 54. Anything lower is deemed a fault.

Btw infinity 2 is £30pm so its not that much more. I'd go for it with the expectation it gets quicker quicker than bt fibre will.


Dr Doofenshmirtz

Original Poster:

15,690 posts

207 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
quotequote all
deckster said:
If that means that you can get rid of the BT line altogether (don't forget that anything they quote is always 'plus line rental') then as said it sounds like an excellent deal. If you need to retain the BT line for other purposes, then perhaps it's less compelling.
hmm - good point. I hadn't thought of that.
Mobile phone reception is pretty bad - I guess we could get an IP phone maybe?

deckster

9,631 posts

262 months

Tuesday 26th January 2016
quotequote all
Dr Doofenshmirtz said:
deckster said:
If that means that you can get rid of the BT line altogether (don't forget that anything they quote is always 'plus line rental') then as said it sounds like an excellent deal. If you need to retain the BT line for other purposes, then perhaps it's less compelling.
hmm - good point. I hadn't thought of that.
Mobile phone reception is pretty bad - I guess we could get an IP phone maybe?
Looks like they even recommend you do just that: http://www.gigaclear.com/what-we-offer/for-home/ho...

theboss

7,120 posts

226 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
quotequote all
Please bite their fking hands off.

Openreach has just surveyed my house for a leased line... half a mile of fibre and they want £112k to proceed.

Digitalize

2,850 posts

142 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
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Looks surprisingly good value, quite like the fact they offer the ability to boost your internet to full speed for 24 hours, as realistically no household needs more than true 50/50 unless unusually large/high usage (2 or more 4k streams at once etc), but for big downloads, it could be worth the £5.

Murph7355

38,903 posts

263 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
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Bite their hand off as noted.

Have registered interest with them as a result of this post, but BT are in theory around here soon....only problem is I am possibly in a dead spot for their coverage with the maps they provide ending 200m away...

All that jazz

7,632 posts

153 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
quotequote all
deckster said:
If that means that you can get rid of the BT line altogether (don't forget that anything they quote is always 'plus line rental') then as said it sounds like an excellent deal. If you need to retain the BT line for other purposes, then perhaps it's less compelling.
£40 is including line rental. Hmm, I'd be very wary of the "up to 50Mbps" claims as that could quite easily mean dial-up speeds and the wording of the deal means if that turns out to be the case you can't do fk all about it. Remember this is going to be delivered over the same wet string belonging to BT (if I'm understanding it correctly) that BT themselves have told you is no good for broadband at any kind of usable speed so I think expecting anywhere near 50Mbps is going to be very much pie in the sky.

Edited by All that jazz on Wednesday 27th January 18:23

megaphone

10,934 posts

258 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
quotequote all
All that jazz said:
deckster said:
If that means that you can get rid of the BT line altogether (don't forget that anything they quote is always 'plus line rental') then as said it sounds like an excellent deal. If you need to retain the BT line for other purposes, then perhaps it's less compelling.
£40 is including line rental. Hmm, I'd be very wary of the "up to 50Mbps" claims as that could quite easily mean dial-up speeds and the wording of the deal means if that turns out to be the case you can't do fk all about it. Remember this is going to be delivered over the same wet string belonging to BT (if I'm understanding it correctly) that BT themselves have told you is no good for broadband at any kind of usable speed so I think expecting anywhere near 50Mbps is going to be very much pie in the sky.

Edited by All that jazz on Wednesday 27th January 18:23
As understand, its FTTP, you get a fibre cable to you your house.

All that jazz

7,632 posts

153 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
quotequote all
megaphone said:
All that jazz said:
deckster said:
If that means that you can get rid of the BT line altogether (don't forget that anything they quote is always 'plus line rental') then as said it sounds like an excellent deal. If you need to retain the BT line for other purposes, then perhaps it's less compelling.
£40 is including line rental. Hmm, I'd be very wary of the "up to 50Mbps" claims as that could quite easily mean dial-up speeds and the wording of the deal means if that turns out to be the case you can't do fk all about it. Remember this is going to be delivered over the same wet string belonging to BT (if I'm understanding it correctly) that BT themselves have told you is no good for broadband at any kind of usable speed so I think expecting anywhere near 50Mbps is going to be very much pie in the sky.

Edited by All that jazz on Wednesday 27th January 18:23
As understand, its FTTP, you get a fibre cable to you your house.
Really? Dunno how they're making any money at all then at £40/month if it's FTTP. Seems a bit too good to be true imho. scratchchin

TonyRPH

13,142 posts

175 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
quotequote all
All that jazz said:
£40 is including line rental. Hmm, I'd be very wary of the "up to 50Mbps" claims as that could quite easily mean dial-up speeds and the wording of the deal means if that turns out to be the case you can't do fk all about it. Remember this is going to be delivered over the same wet string belonging to BT (if I'm understanding it correctly) that BT themselves have told you is no good for broadband at any kind of usable speed so I think expecting anywhere near 50Mbps is going to be very much pie in the sky.

Edited by All that jazz on Wednesday 27th January 18:23
If I'm not mistaken, Gigaclear run their own fibre.

A colleague lives out in the sticks, and he's also getting this, and it would appear that Gigaclear have been granted permission to dig through farmer's land to lay their fibre.

So I suspect their claims of 50/50 are quite achievable, given that my colleague says (and the Gigclear website states) that 1gbs is available on the fibre.


All that jazz

7,632 posts

153 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
quotequote all
TonyRPH said:
All that jazz said:
£40 is including line rental. Hmm, I'd be very wary of the "up to 50Mbps" claims as that could quite easily mean dial-up speeds and the wording of the deal means if that turns out to be the case you can't do fk all about it. Remember this is going to be delivered over the same wet string belonging to BT (if I'm understanding it correctly) that BT themselves have told you is no good for broadband at any kind of usable speed so I think expecting anywhere near 50Mbps is going to be very much pie in the sky.

Edited by All that jazz on Wednesday 27th January 18:23
If I'm not mistaken, Gigaclear run their own fibre.

A colleague lives out in the sticks, and he's also getting this, and it would appear that Gigaclear have been granted permission to dig through farmer's land to lay their fibre.

So I suspect their claims of 50/50 are quite achievable, given that my colleague says (and the Gigclear website states) that 1gbs is available on the fibre.
Yeah, sounds great if it's their own fibre but the installation costs would (imho) far exceed the income stream at "only" £40/month.

Digitalize

2,850 posts

142 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
quotequote all
I think they're being subsidised by the government, to help get everyone access to the Internet. The reason they only offer access to rural villages.

maffski

1,886 posts

166 months

Wednesday 27th January 2016
quotequote all
Digitalize said:
I think they're being subsidised by the government, to help get everyone access to the Internet. The reason they only offer access to rural villages.
Which makes it worth being careful. If it's anything like the South Yorkshire Digital Region was (gov funded FTTC), they will do an absolutely useless job of advertising and building a customer base. The public funding will eventually disappear and they'll fall flat on their face with too few customers to pay the bills. I was lucky, I was only without internet access for six weeks or so.

Worth going for, but keep an eye on places like ISP Review so you know if trouble is coming.