G.fast technology what it means low latency, and top speed.

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G.fast technology what it means low latency, and top speed.

Post by embleton » Sat Jan 26, 2019 8:39 am

G.fast is a technology that communicates with a local fibre to a cabinet (FTTC) broadband point using signalling technology down a twisted pair to the premises and then onwards to the internet by fibre. It does not need fibre running all the way to the premises or upheaval for installing it like a full fibre to the premises (FTTP) deployment.

Installation is managed by BT Openreach currently. The telephone socket is replaced with the latest NTE5C with MK4 prefiltered faceplate. The G.fast modem is connected to the line by BT Openreach. It is the Huawei G.fast MT992-10 for no BT broadband G.fast ISPs. Sky will likely have its own G.fast router when they eventually resell ultrafast broadband.

With VDSL2 I achieve 80Mbps/20Mbps synchronisation speed and 74.7Mbps/18.7Mbps throughput which was measured with a SamKnows Whitebox for superfast broadband on Sky Fibre Pro.

The G.fast modem communicates with the fibre cabinet using time division duplexing (TDD) compared to the technology in ADSL2+ & VDSL2 that uses frequency division duplexing (FDD). FDD is full duplex transmitting and receiving concurrently whereas TDD is half-duplex either transmitting or receiving.

With G.fast physical-layer retransmission and vectoring across the twisted cables in the bundle is mandatory keeping the crosstalk, reflections and impulse noise impact minimal. It also uses seamless rate adaptation (SRA) for slow-moving synchronisation speed movements, which takes several seconds, and fast rate adaptation (FRA) to set the synchronisation speed dynamically across a group in <1ms on the fly; the latter primarily for interference reasons on the twisted pair. DLM is functioning on the line and monitors for a day and then takes action based on the previous day. The noise margin is 3dB for G.fast but the line must be performing perfectly to reach that in relation to retransmission perfectness.

It is important to note VDSL2 and G.fast latency with TDD does have differences for roundtrip delay (ping). FDD for VDSL2, the latter should be lower but for the fact, G.fast uses higher frequencies than VDSL2. Those who believe the roundtrip latency on G.fast is worse than VDSL2 because it is a full duplex need to calculate the figures correctly. Roundtrip ADSL2+ for 180m is ~2.9ms peaking to ~15.6ms, roundtrip on VDSL2 is ~1.7ms peaking to ~15ms and ~0.1272ms peaking to ~1.536ms on G.fast broadband without interleaving for the same distance through DSLAM, modem and cable.

VDSL2 roundtrip latency to BBC from Plymouth 80Mbps/20Mbps synchronisation speed on VDSL2 to ECI cabinet about 15% bandwidth utilisation, distance 400km for fibre 4.9 milliseconds a km for 3.92ms delay roundtrip on fibre. 2ms by equipment on my LAN (3 routers and an ethernet bridge). 1ms for equipment on internet WAN. So, the total is 6.92ms from the cabinet to London with equipment on the premises and the internet without the twisted pair and DSLAM.

PING bbc.co.uk (151.101.64.81) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 151.101.64.81 (151.101.64.81): icmp_seq=1 ttl=61 time=12.2 ms
64 bytes from 151.101.64.81 (151.101.64.81): icmp_seq=2 ttl=61 time=13.2 ms
64 bytes from 151.101.64.81 (151.101.64.81): icmp_seq=3 ttl=61 time=14.3 ms
64 bytes from 151.101.64.81 (151.101.64.81): icmp_seq=4 ttl=61 time=13.1 ms

Actual latency on the twisted pair to the cabinet for 180 metres on VDSL2 is approximately 6ms on this telephone line with DSLAM processing to the cabinet fibre point. hopefully, those readings are keeping track of the calculations for real latency roundtrip to the cabinet on a twisted pair for 180 metres long which is 6ms here meaning to the fibre point leaving the cabinet!

So, I should see a drop of 4.544ms minimum on G.fast to the cabinet on the twisted pair even with TDD that doubles the roundtrip for 180 metres.

Even though VDSL2 is a full duplex for achieving low roundtrip delay, G.fast signals will switch between transmit and receive quickly operating at frequencies between 19Mhz and 106Mhz keeping the roundtrip latency very low.

The latency will always achieve lower values than VDSL2 because of this fact for the operating frequency takes time at its lowest frequency and it is a higher symbol rate; hence G.fast is very good for gaming.

G.fast roundtrip latency to BBC from Plymouth.

PING bbc.co.uk (151.101.64.81) 56(84) bytes of data.
64 bytes from 151.101.64.81 (151.101.64.81): icmp_seq=1 ttl=60 time=10.4 ms
64 bytes from 151.101.64.81 (151.101.64.81): icmp_seq=2 ttl=60 time=10.8 ms
64 bytes from 151.101.64.81 (151.101.64.81): icmp_seq=3 ttl=60 time=11.6 ms
64 bytes from 151.101.64.81 (151.101.64.81): icmp_seq=4 ttl=60 time=11.5 ms

With G.fast I achieve 241Mbps/41Mbps synchronisation speed and 212Mbps/40Mbps throughput which was measured with a SamKnows Whitebox for ultrafast broadband on Zen Internet. Clearly, I'm at ~180 metres from the PCP G.fast pod. DLM is still settling the line and has only been running for 18 hours. It will take action tonight for the line has been absolutely stable at 212Mbps throughput downstream and 40Mbps upstream on 30th January which is the first full day of operation.

Once 350 metres is exceeded by G.fast because of the higher frequencies its speed would be lower than VDSL2 which operates at lower frequencies and propagates further along with the twisted pairs.

For ensuring that G.fast does not interfere with the current frequency plan of VDSL2 the operating frequency is between 19Mhz to 106Mhz. Whereas VDSL2 uses frequencies from 0.025Mhz to 17.664Mhz to achieve its high speeds.

VDSL2 is pegged to a bandwidth of 80Mbps downstream and 20Mbps upstream at ranges to 400 metres from the cabinet, and at lower speeds at distances up to about 1.4km. There is no guarantee for speed on VDSL2 and this is especially true for upstream, but estimates are provided for downstream synchronisation speed for distance and line quality.

The symmetry for TDD in G.fast is mandatory 90/10 to 50/50 even though ISPs only offer products for 300Mbps downstream and 50Mbps upstream at ranges to the cabinet of 150 metres, usually, and at lower speeds exceeding 150 metres to 350 metres maximum distance currently (practically <250m for an order); it has a guaranteed 100Mbps downstream threshold and 10Mbps upstream.

An estimate of between 141.7Mbps to 262.2Mbps, typically 231.8Mbps downstream and typically 17.8Mbps upstream was provided for my line on ordering G.fast for the top tier product for the ISP, Zen Internet in this case. A router was provided by Zen Internet the Fritz!Box 7530 but I've chosen to use my own Airport Extreme 6th gen with PPPoE protocol to connect to Zen internet via the G.fast modem.

A status of amber on a G.fast pod BT availability checker means there is active G.fast connection(s) on the pod.

speed wifi.png
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Re: G.fast technology what it means low latency, and top speed.

Post by embleton » Thu Nov 07, 2019 12:08 am

I've seen that when the router is rebooted that the synchronisation speed does change even though it shouldn't. Also, seeing now synchronisation speed changes even without a router or modem reboot and no line disconnections which would likely be down to improvements with fast rate adaptation (FRA) on G.fast as the speed went up by 2Mbps downstream and 1Mbps upstream. The report of a synchronisation improvement is reported on the BT site in observed speed. Currently at 242Mbps downstream and 50Mbps upstream synchronisation. :D

router reboots.png
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The router manual reboots only were done by myself on reported synch rate changes in a screenshot. The two on 22nd August down to firmware upgrade and 9th July 2019 resynch were down to upgrades on symmetry adjustment.


BT site speed.png
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Actual full synchronisation currently.

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Re: G.fast technology what it means low latency, and top speed.

Post by embleton » Wed Nov 13, 2019 2:46 pm

speed increase downstream.png
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Another fast rate adaptation (FRA) adjustment with zero downtime this facility has clearly been improved in a firmware update.

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Re: G.fast technology what it means low latency, and top speed.

Post by zakiul94 » Fri Dec 11, 2020 12:53 pm

Thanks for sharing wonderful post

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Re: G.fast technology what it means low latency, and top speed.

Post by embleton » Wed Mar 24, 2021 11:54 pm

For those interested, these were my VDSL2 router stats before switching to G.fast on an ECI cabinet at 180 metres:-

Connection Speed (Kbps) 79987 20000
Line Attenuation (dB) DS1:7.1 DS2:15.2 DS3:23.8 US0:0.1 US1:11.7 US2:17.2
Noise Margin (dB) DS1:9.6 DS2:9.6 DS3:9.6 US0:13.9 US1:13.3 US2:12.0

G.fast connection is now at 231Mbps throughput downstream and 48Mbps throughput upstream, it does seem to be very seasonal in its performance!
Screenshot 2021-03-24 at 23.59.29.png
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