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Serpo
16th August 2015, 04:30 PM
The farmer so sick of poor internet signal he built DIY mast...And now it's giving him superfast broadband

Farmer Richard Guy, 60, battled for years with slow internet signal at home
He noticed his mobile's 4G was faster than broadband provided by BT
So he built his a wooden telephone mast, on which he set up a 4G adaptor
Father-of-two is now enjoying 'perfect' internet access at super-fast speeds

By Alisha Rouse For The Daily Mail (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=&authornamef=Alisha+Rouse+For+The+Daily+Mail)
Published: 07:34 EST, 17 August 2015 | Updated: 08:35 EST, 17 August 2015


http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/08/16/22/2B6B71AB00000578-0-image-m-5_1439759515133.jpg


Richard Guy, 60, built his own makeshift wooden telephone mast and is now enjoying 'perfect' internet access at super-fast speeds

Living on a farm nestled in a remote area of Salisbury Plain, Richard Guy had battled for years with an unbearably slow internet signal.
But the 60-year-old farmer decided enough was enough and resolved to take on telecoms giant BT and find an alternative source.
Mr Guy noticed that his mobile phone's 4G signal – a wireless internet connection – was significantly faster than the broadband link provided by BT to his home, but he needed to find a way to route the signal to his farmhouse.
So the savvy father-of-two built his own makeshift wooden telephone mast, on which he set up a 4G adaptor inside a toolbox.
He then connected this to his home via a system of wires – and he was soon enjoying 'perfect' internet access at super-fast speeds.
The father of two said: 'It's a big problem for people in rural areas. The Government told us that the Olympics would bring fast broadband to everyone in Britain.
'Well, the Olympics were some time ago now. The world assumes that everyone is online, but the 5 per cent who can't connect are just dismissed.
'So I decided to take matters into my own hands. We only had a 1 Mbps [megabits per second] speed, which means everything is far too slow. Now I run at 69 Mbps, it runs everything perfectly.'
The average speed households across the country enjoy is around 25 Mbps.
Mr Guy added: 'When I spoke to the fibre-optic people [who provide wires to transmit an internet connection], they were very intrigued.
'They said 'you're going to do what? Put it in a box up a pole, are you crazy?' They normally deal with people like Google and IBM.'
Mr Guy, who has worked in IT since the 1980s, had found that the strongest 4G signal was on farmland miles away from his house.
He fitted a 4G dongle, which is a type of adaptor, inside a waterproof toolbox two thirds of the way up a pair of wooden poles.
The adaptor, which is powered by a 12V battery topped up by two small solar panels, then converts the internet signal into a form that allows it to run along relatively cheap fibre-optic cables, costing £1 per metre, to his home.
Mr Guy and his wife Gilly, who is also 60, have now started a company called Agri-Broadband, which aims to get super-fast internet connections to Britain's most rural homes.
'I think at the start Gilly didn't think it would work,' Mr Guy said. 'But she's very supportive and helps with all sides of the business.
'I just love seeing the expression on someone's face when you show them it's possible that they, having been left out in the middle of nowhere, can get serious broadband.



'But I turn up in a dirty Range Rover and this old geezer gets out and people think 'he's not going to solve this'. I think they're expecting some young techie, but then it works and they're amazed.'
The farmer uses Ofcom's mobile network website to determine where the best signals can be found in rural areas, usually within small valleys and hills.
Mr Guy said his next customer, who will have a specialist trench dug on his farm in the Cotswolds in September, has a connection of just 0.4 Mbps, adding: 'He's trying to run a business on that, so he's delighted.'




The farmer, who lives on a farm nestled in a remote area of Salisbury Plain, had battled for years with an unbearably slow internet signal

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/08/16/22/2B4E5BFF00000578-0-image-a-7_1439760443614.jpg


He connected the 4G adaptor in the mast to his home via a system of wires – and he was soon enjoying 'perfect' internet access at super-fast speeds

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/08/16/22/2B4E612200000578-0-image-a-8_1439760450423.jpg


A waterproof box at the top of the mast holds a 12V battery and this is powered by two solar panels (below)

http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2015/08/16/22/2B4E605400000578-0-image-a-9_1439760544992.jpg


He installed a 4G adaptor inside a toolbox so he could route the superfast signal to his remote farmhouse



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3200291/Farmer-sick-poor-internet-signal-built-DIY-mast.html#ixzz3j1XA9O2R

Dogman
16th August 2015, 05:00 PM
Humm,

The guy is inventive, I always get a hoot out of watching people in fringe cell areas do amazing things to get a good signal. Get on house roofs, climb trees, wander in circles, etc, etc !

In the day dial up speeds of 300 baud was good that could/would drop way lower, then 56k was blazing.

Still have those dam modems here somewhere, external and internal.

Someday who ever cleans my house out when I am gone ,will probably be scratching their heads.

Glass
16th August 2015, 08:02 PM
I used to run an isp back in the 33.6 days. Then we went 56K. woo ooo!. We had a couple multi port boards that took about 24 serial connections. 2 of those and we had an ISP. was a mass of modems and cables. Constantly beeping and handshaking fax machine style. Every now and then everything would go quiet so we would go around and poke each of the modems. Literally poke them. Everything would start beeping again. The internet is back. feet up job done. We still have boxes full of all that old kit. Ran the whole thing off a couple 486 computers running some BSD.

gunDriller
17th August 2015, 05:56 AM
Does this mean you can put up "any old 4G dongle" - and get a signal to attach a laptop to - if there's a signal ?

http://shop.proxicast.com/shopping/proxicast-pocketport-2-pocket-sized-3g-4g-lte-usb-cellular-modem-bridge-mini-router.html?gclid=CJqz1byNsMcCFQyoaQodKTsPMw
"cellular modem bridge"

side-stepping the distance part of the problem.

once you have a known good signal ... USB extender/ amplifier ?


original search
https://www.google.com/search?q=4G+dongle%2C&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:unofficial&client=seamonkey-a

Hitch
17th August 2015, 06:22 AM
In the day dial up speeds of 300 baud was good that could/would drop way lower, then 56k was blazing.

I remember the old modem days, trying to connect. The sounds they made. Eeeeeooooeeeeeooooo......wait for it, wait....yeah, connected!

Horn
17th August 2015, 08:07 AM
He did all that so he could watch this string of Luke and Laura videos on the Youtube.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRqhlddG0DE&list=PL12B83A9D7F48DF26

Santa
17th August 2015, 08:19 AM
I still only have DSL through the phone line and into a modem. Don't have access to broadband. I'm getting 8.10 mbps download and .79 upload. Tolerable, but not really very fast.
Does this guy's set-up mean he bypasses the Server (such as CenturyLink) and their monthly service charge altogether?

Serpo
17th August 2015, 09:23 AM
I remember the old modem days, trying to connect. The sounds they made. Eeeeeooooeeeeeooooo......wait for it, wait....yeah, connected!


Still know people that use that , love that sound


My speed is only about 1.5mps , but Im lucky to get that, where I live.....