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Claybraker

join:2002-04-13
none

Gives me a warm fuzzy

"That made HomePNA a likely choice, but the kicker was the suite of diagnostic tools HomePNA was able to offer. AT&T can pinpoint the exact locations of interference or signal loss within a home, Reed said."

Yep, it's that bridge tap splice in the now finished basement with the sheet rock ceiling. Got it pinpointed.

Good to hear it's been working fine in the lab.

bogey780

join:2004-03-19
Here
kudos:1

Yea, they have a tracetone that can send a signal that the probe will read up to a short then past will no longer read. Works great for pointing out to the customer why you can't fix the problem.


Claybraker

join:2002-04-13
none

I've got mixed emotions about HPNA. It was frustrating standing eyeball to eyeball with a subscriber telling them I couldn't make it work with any kind of reliability, but OTOH, there was tons of overtime involved.

Fact is, there's not going to be one technology that works in all cases. A mixed bag of HPNA, MOCA, Wireless, Powerline and running new wire, depending on the situation is going to be required.


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