Our ADSL Loop Extender works exceptionally well for reaching distant customers with ADSL / ADSL2+ service. The ADSL Loop Extender will allow you to double the number of subscribers that you can reach while offering more consistent high bandwidth services to your existing customers. The ADSL Loop Extender is an active element installed in the outside loop plant. It operates as an amplifier that amplifies and equalizes the ADSL signal. This product works well for improving the bandwidth and stability of existing ADSL subscribers as well. Customers that you can barely reach now can get 1-5 Mbit ADSL service reliably. To expand the speed of ADSL2+ services above 10 Mbits/sec, we recommend the AER800 Series B IPTV booster.
The USA has many areas where people simply cannot get decent broadband internet service. This has a dramatic impact on property values and economic activity in the affected areas. Rural customers are beginning to react to being left in the broadband ghetto and are creating wireless internet service COOPs and becoming politically active about getting laws passed to require broadband service delivery.
ADSL is a growing consumer service, but technology limits have made it impossible for some customers to get the service. Until now, ADSL has been limited to 3-6 miles from the Central Office depending on the wire gauge used. Many rural telephone companies are installing the Widearea ADSL loop extender to expand the distance and improve the speed of their ADSL services. The ADSL Loop extender or IPTV Booster is installed by the telephone company half way between the house and the central office. It is essentially an amplifier, boosting the signal level which allows the signal to travel much farther. In some cases, you can now get service as far as 10 miles from the Central Office. We provide a free 30 day evaluation to any Telephone Company in the USA or Canada. The product cost is only $159 per line. Go here to purchase an ADSL loop extender.
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AER800-1P single line unit is designed for outdoor line mounting. Its small size (4¾” x 2¾” x 2”) also makes it easy to mount on the line, in a cabinet or even a pedestal. |
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AER800-2P 2 line unit is designed for outdoor mounting. Requires one pair for express power. Also fits in most pedestals. (5 7/8 x 3 ¾” x 1 5/8” ) |
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AER800-8P is designed for 8 ports with outdoor mounting. Accepts 1 or 2 four port modules. Requires 2 pair for express power.
AER800-104P is designed for 104 ports with outdoor mounting.
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To expand the speed of services above 10 Mbits/sec, we recommend the AER800 Series B IPTV booster Go here to purchase an ADSL Loop Extender. |
US104 - ipTV enabled ADSL2+ Router The US100 series of ADSL2+ modems is based on the Broadcom chipset and reference design firmware. Broadcom provides complete modem functionality in their reference design, which makes this product very low cost to produce. Because the Broadcom reference designs are so robust, all Broadcom based ADSL modems are essentially identical. The menus and capabilities of this product are exactly the same as you will find on modems from Comtrend and others that cost much more. We cut out the brand name hype to bring you this product direct from the same factories at a huge savings in costShow us a quote for a "brand name" Broadcom product advertised anywhere else and we will quote you at least 20% off that price. |
BENEFITS:
Double the customers you can reach.
Increase reach by 30-50%
Deliver 2-10 times the bandwidth
Cost effective way to prove broadband demand in marginal markets.
Defer costly remote DSLAM
Improve service quality & reliability
Comprehensive over-voltage protection.
Easy to install, deploy and maintain.
Fully compatible with all ADSL / ADSL2+ systems.
Fully compatible with analog voice.
Go here to purchase an adsl loop extender.
Here is a little
experiment to see if web searches are case
sensitive, so we will sell Adsl loop extenders too if you insist.
Almon Strowger was an undertaker in Kansas City in the late 1800's.
The
wife of his competitor worked the cord board at the local telephone
exchange. Whenever a caller asked to be put through to Strowger, calls
were deliberately put through to his competitor. After spending years
complaining to his local telephone company, Strowger found a way to
solve the problem!
Strowger developed
the first automated telephone switch out of
electromagnets and hat pins. Strowger filed his patent application on
March 12, 1889, and it was issued on March 10,1891 as patent No. 447,918.
Together with Joseph B. Harris and Moses A. Meyer, Strowger formed his
company 'Strowger Automatic Telephone Exchange' in October 1891. On
November 3, 1892, the first Strowger exchange was opened for public
service LaPorte, IN with about seventy-five subscribers.
This
was the first automatic telephone exchange to be installed anywhere,
and a considerable amount of ceremony was attached to the affair, with
a special train run from Chicago and a brass band on hand to greet the
guests. When his system made its debut, Almon Strowger bragged that his
exchanges were "girl-less, cuss-less, out-of-order-less, and
wait-less." It required users to tap out the number they wanted on
three keys to call other users directly. The system worked with
reasonable accuracy when the subscribers operated their push buttons
correctly and remembered to press the release button after a
conversation was finished, but there was no provision against a
subscriber being connected to a busy line. In 1896 the 'tapper' keys
were replaced by a dial similar to the ones that would be used on
telephones for the next 80 years. 
The
engineers of the Automatic Electric Company continued to make
improvements in the Strowger system (now called step-by-step), while
the Bell System engineers developed the panel type of machine switching
system. After World War I step-by-step equipment was generally deployed
for small and medium size cities while panel was deployed in the
largest ones. Strowger's company was eventually consumed by the giants
of the telecommunications industry; having been owned at one time or
another by AT&T, Verizon, GTE & Lucent. The engineering
involved in the development of the original mechanical switches is
truely amazing, but is quickly becoming a lost art. The oldest still
operating Strowger mechanical switch is at a traditional summer boys camp in the mountains of
northeastern Pennsylvania. Debates about Strowger technology still rage
on on Yahoo groups.