This may have changed a bit - but we used to use 2000 high speed = 100 meg of capacity. Based on 5000/800 ADSL or 8000/1000 cable modem profiles mainly... Paul -----Original Message----- From: Frank Bulk [mailto:frnkblk@iname.com] Sent: Tuesday, August 11, 2009 11:06 PM To: 'sjk'; nanog@nanog.org Subject: RE: Residential BW Planning We have calculated our customers peak b/w usage between 20 and 60 kbps/user, spread across a wide variety of users and wide range of speeds (128/128 up to 15000/1000 kbps). You only need a few heavy users to skew things. But 400 at 4 Mbps would make me think that 20 to 30 Mbps would be sufficient. Frank -----Original Message----- From: sjk [mailto:sjk@sleepycatz.com] Sent: Tuesday, August 11, 2009 7:11 PM To: nanog@nanog.org Subject: Residential BW Planning I am trying to perform some capacity planning for some of our residential pops, but the old calcs I used to use seem useless -- as they were adapted from the dialup days and relied upon a percentage of users online (~50%) and a percentage of concurrent transmission (~19%). My present scenario involves a micro-pop terminating 250 residences where users are expecting 4 mb/s. So I am looking for some baseline to begin at, so I am wondering what others are doing. Any thoughts are appreciated. Thanks --steve ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- "The information transmitted is intended only for the person or entity to which it is addressed and contains confidential and/or privileged material. If you received this in error, please contact the sender immediately and then destroy this transmission, including all attachments, without copying, distributing or disclosing same. Thank you."