Bell Canada still uses a lot of VDSL2 last-miles in Quebec and Ontario. Max speed is 100/10 over bonded pairs and 50/10 over a single pair over short distances. Generally served from a fiber-fed DSLAM and less than 500 meters. On Oct 15 2019, at 1:48 pm, Rod Beck <rod.beck@unitedcablecompany.com> wrote:
I understand. My recollection is that the distance is like 100 meters. VDSL is what the engineers deploying on the street told me. I think there is a node right outside.
Regards,
Roderick.
From: Matt Harris <matt@netfire.net> Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2019 7:37 PM To: Rod Beck <rod.beck@unitedcablecompany.com> Cc: Nanog@nanog.org <Nanog@nanog.org> Subject: Re: VDSL
On Tue, Oct 15, 2019 at 12:25 PM Rod Beck <rod.beck@unitedcablecompany.com (mailto:rod.beck@unitedcablecompany.com)> wrote:
Hi,
I discovered that the Budapest cable company was using VDLS to provide services up to 500 megs into the buildings where my flats are located. VDSL is a pretty old standard. I recollect people talking about it back in 1998.
Is it being heavily deployed in Last Mile networks state side?
Hey Rod, Are you sure they're using VDSL (I'm assuming you mean VDSL2 which is still in fairly wide use around the world)? 500mbit VDSL2 would have a very short run limitation afaik. It wouldn't be last mile, more like last meter. :)
It's not super-widely used in the US today since Verizon and others have built out increasing FTTH networks and always had to compete with DOCSIS based services which are very widespread here, though I wouldn't be surprised if it was still frequently the "better than satellite!" service available in some rural areas that aren't too hard to reach with cabling. A decade ago, you would've seen a lot more VDSL2 deployments here in the US, though usually no more than 25 or 50 mbit capacity for the end-user.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_VDSL_and_VDSL2_deployments has a bunch of interesting details though I can attest to some of them being fairly out of date.