On 2006-11-05,
(E-Mail Removed) <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>>From the answer of a previous post I learned that there is Annex A and
> Annex B. A modem for Annex B (in my case one from the US) will not work
> on Annex A. The setup I currently have looks like this: ISDN connection
> goes to an ADSL splitter. One part goes out to a ADSL modem for ISDN
> which then is connected to a PC via USB. The other output goes to the
> ISDN box that has two S-Bus and 2 a/b outputs.
>
> What comes out from the splitter to the modem must be connected to an
> Annex B modem (ADSL over ISDN). The question now is, could I connect an
> Annex A modem (ADSL over POTS) to one of the a/b ports on the ISDN box
> and connect to the internet?
You might be better off calling these "ADSL and ISDN", or "ADSL and POTS".
There is one ADSL signal and one ISDN (or POTS) signal on the line.
They share the copper wire pair but are otherwise entirely separate. The
difference between Annex A & B is only that, since ISDN takes up more
"space" on the pair than POTS, the ADSL signal that shares with ISDN
needs to be adjusted to take up less space on the pair.
When you insert the splitter the ADSL signal (without the ISDN) comes
out one port of the splitter while the ISDN signal (without the ADSL) comes
out the other. There is hence no ADSL on the ISDN side of the splitter,
so plugging an ADSL modem into anything on the ISDN side of the splitter
won't do any good at all.
Dennis Ferguson