Lynmore first to benefit from fast broadband
Lynmore first to benefit from fast broadband upgrade
Chorus, Telecom's network access business, has completed the first stage of its work to enhance the broadband network in Rotorua.
Lynmore is the first Rotorua suburb to have new roadside cabinets and fibre optic cable deployed in local streets to bring fast broadband equipment closer to customers. Chorus upgraded 9 roadside cabinets and laid 5.5 kms of new fibre optic cable, to extend fast broadband to 1770 customers in the area.
Chorus Fibre-to-the-Node Programme Manager Ed Beattie said each cabinet is the equivalent of a mini telephone exchange.
"The cabinets contain the electronic equipment needed to deliver broadband to homes via Chorus' local telecommunications access network.
"Previously, this equipment would have been housed in the local telephone exchange and the whole reason we're bringing it closer to people is because the closer you are to the equipment the faster your broadband speed is," he said.
Customers within 2km of a new cabinet should be able to connect at faster ADSL2+ broadband speeds subject to other factors including their broadband plan, modem, computer, and the wiring in their home or business. Customers near the local telephone exchange will have their broadband service delivered from equipment based there.
Pleasant Heights is the next area to benefit from the broadband upgrade, with work to continue around the Rotorua urban area through to mid-2011. In all, Chorus plans to upgrade 76 cabinets and deploy about 28kms of fibre optic cable in the Rotorua district, building on the 440kms already in the local network.
Chorus is installing about 3,600 Whisper cabinets and adding 2,500kms of fibre optic cable to Telecom's existing 23,500kms fibre network to deliver faster broadband to towns with 500 lines or more by the end of 2011.
More than 900,000 homes and businesses around New Zealand are already within reach of fast broadband access via either telephone exchange or cabinet-based ADSL2+ equipment. This represents about 50% of the approximately 1.8 million New Zealand homes and businesses connected by Chorus.
Mr Beattie said Chorus’ new cabinets are the result of some world-leading design breakthroughs right here in New Zealand.
"These cabinets contain sophisticated electronic equipment, so a lot of work has gone into making them much quieter and more power efficient than anything before them."
Whisper
cabinet facts
Each cabinet costs about
$150,000 and will generally service up to 300 customers
Cabinet body is made of 240kg of marine
grade aluminium
Cabinets are coated in a
special paint to facilitate graffiti removal
They contain battery back-up power supply as well as a
generator connection in case of power-cuts
At full load a cabinet uses 1200 watts, the same power as a
one-bar heater
They are designed to limit
noise to about 30 decibels, just above the level of a
whisper
650 key parts in each cabinet (1,150
including fastenings)
2 tonnes of concrete
per cabinet base
The Telecom Group's fibre optic network
can be viewed online at www.broadbandmap.govt.nz
Information on Telecom’s faster broadband project can be viewed online at: http://wwwchorus.co.nz/enhancing-the-broadband-network
ENDS