Silicon ChipHow resilient is your lifeline? - March 2022 SILICON CHIP
  1. Outer Front Cover
  2. Contents
  3. Subscriptions: PE Subscription
  4. Subscriptions: PicoLog Cloud
  5. Back Issues: PICOLOG
  6. Publisher's Letter
  7. Feature: How resilient is your lifeline? by Mark Nelson
  8. Feature: Net Work by Alan Winstanley
  9. Project: Mini Isolated Serial Link by Tim Blythman
  10. Feature: I’m busy. Go away! by John Chappell
  11. Project: Battery Monitor Logger by TIM BLYTHMAN
  12. Project: ELECTRONIC Wind Chimes by John Clarke
  13. Project: Geekcreit LCR-T4 Mini Digital Multi-Tester by Jim Rowe
  14. Feature: Max’s Cool Beans by Max the Magnificent
  15. Feature: AUDIO OUT by Jake Rothman
  16. Feature: Circuit Surgery by Ian Bell
  17. Feature: Make it with Micromite by Phil Boyce
  18. Feature: Electronic Building Blocks
  19. PCB Order Form
  20. Advertising Index

This is only a preview of the March 2022 issue of Practical Electronics.

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Articles in this series:
  • (November 2020)
  • Techno Talk (December 2020)
  • Techno Talk (January 2021)
  • Techno Talk (February 2021)
  • Techno Talk (March 2021)
  • Techno Talk (April 2021)
  • Techno Talk (May 2021)
  • Techno Talk (June 2021)
  • Techno Talk (July 2021)
  • Techno Talk (August 2021)
  • Techno Talk (September 2021)
  • Techno Talk (October 2021)
  • Techno Talk (November 2021)
  • Techno Talk (December 2021)
  • Communing with nature (January 2022)
  • Should we be worried? (February 2022)
  • How resilient is your lifeline? (March 2022)
  • Go eco, get ethical! (April 2022)
  • From nano to bio (May 2022)
  • Positivity follows the gloom (June 2022)
  • Mixed menu (July 2022)
  • Time for a total rethink? (August 2022)
  • What’s in a name? (September 2022)
  • Forget leaves on the line! (October 2022)
  • Giant Boost for Batteries (December 2022)
  • Raudive Voices Revisited (January 2023)
  • A thousand words (February 2023)
  • It’s handover time (March 2023)
  • AI, Robots, Horticulture and Agriculture (April 2023)
  • Prophecy can be perplexing (May 2023)
  • Technology comes in different shapes and sizes (June 2023)
  • AI and robots – what could possibly go wrong? (July 2023)
  • How long until we’re all out of work? (August 2023)
  • We both have truths, are mine the same as yours? (September 2023)
  • Holy Spheres, Batman! (October 2023)
  • Where’s my pneumatic car? (November 2023)
  • Good grief! (December 2023)
  • Cheeky chiplets (January 2024)
  • Cheeky chiplets (February 2024)
  • The Wibbly-Wobbly World of Quantum (March 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Wait! What? Really? (April 2024)
  • Techno Talk - One step closer to a dystopian abyss? (May 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Program that! (June 2024)
  • Techno Talk (July 2024)
  • Techno Talk - That makes so much sense! (August 2024)
  • Techno Talk - I don’t want to be a Norbert... (September 2024)
  • Techno Talk - Sticking the landing (October 2024)
  • Techno Talk (November 2024)
  • Techno Talk (December 2024)
  • Techno Talk (January 2025)
  • Techno Talk (February 2025)
  • Techno Talk (March 2025)
  • Techno Talk (April 2025)
  • Techno Talk (May 2025)
  • Techno Talk (June 2025)
How resilient is your lifeline? Techno Talk Mark Nelson You would expect the upgrade of a vital public utility to improve the dependability of the one it supersedes. But if you had in mind your telephone and broadband services, forget it. Unless current policy is changed, you’ll be horribly disappointed. B y the time you read this article, the appalling weather and lengthy power cuts affecting northern Britain in late November and early December last year should be no more than a memory. Troops had to be called out after hundreds of thousands of homes were without electricity, some for over a week, after Storm Arwen brought down power lines in what was called a ‘once in 30 years’ event. Many homes, schools and other organisations were without telephone, mobile or broadband communication too. Nationwide isolation This mayhem was the result of extreme weather conditions and fortunately, they affected only some parts of the country. However, under the planned replacement of the existing analogue network, telephone and broadband users across the whole country are likely to suffer the same kind of isolation whenever a power cut lasting more than an hour or two takes place, possibly even sooner. OFCOM, the UK telecomms regulator appears to be unconcerned, with its website blandly advising: ‘Over the next few years, it will become more common for phone calls to be carried over broadband, and this will eventually replace traditional landline call services. Whether you have a corded or cordless landline telephone, broadband-based call services need mains power to operate.’ ‘Eventually,’ means in 2025 (only three years away) and already many customers have had their telephone service transferred onto broadband. Necessary measures The website (https://bit.ly/pe-mar22-ofc) continues: ‘Providers must take all necessary measures to ensure their customers can call the emergency services during a power cut’. So, these companies will need to put additional protections in place as they move to new broadband-based call technology. Sounds reassuring? Hardly, because OFCOM’s obligation on service providers (https://bit.ly/pe-mar22-ofc2) 8 mandates merely that providers should have at least one solution available that enables access to emergency services for a minimum of one hour in the event of a power outage in the premises. Yes, you read that correctly: one hour. But take-up of the ‘solution’ is optional from the subscriber’s point of view. Also, there has been no announcement on whether the street cabinets, where the optical signals are demultiplexed into individual fibres into premises, will have back-up batteries, and if so, for how long these will last. Is this taking ‘all necessary measures’?. Not in my book. When your phoneline is converted to run over broadband (known as VoIP, Voice over Internet Protocol), it includes the supply of a new modem from your telephone service provider, and this is what requires back-up power. BT calls this new system ‘Digital Voice’. You may well have a mobile phone and yes, you may be able to use this instead of your landline phone in a power cut situation. But only as long as the mobile’s battery lasts out; then it’s as dead as a dodo until the juice is restored. Moreover, the power cut may well affect the cellular base station that your mobile ‘talks to’, so you cannot rely for certain on the mobile as your lifeline. It goes without saying that the Internet won’t work at your premises in a power cut either, as it runs over the same broadband fibre as the new telephone service. Lies, damned lies and statistics Of course, the harm done by a power cut depends on how long it lasts. Anecdotal and personal experience indicate an outage is usually either less than 15 minutes or else six hours or more. Statistically, the average cut in the UK varied between 30 and 51 minutes in 2021 (it varied according to where you lived). But this is both meaningless and misleading. We need to know whether this ‘average’ is in fact the figure occurring most frequently, the central value in the list from shortest to longest or the total of all the values divided by the number of values; each of these figures will differ. Nor does the number of outages reported tell us how large a proportion of consumers would be affected, nor the likelihood that you might be affected. No doubt the apparent short duration of the ‘average’ power outage is what led OFCOM to allow telecomms providers to avoid having to provide back-up power supplies. Fortunately, other people are better informed. On 14 November last, David Mitchell opined in The Guardian that BT’s Digital Voice kills access to 999 in a power cut and ‘That’s not what I call progress’. Lives will inevitably be lost So, will every VoIP phone subscriber get a free battery back-up box? I cannot speak for every service provider but apparently BT users will not. The company did at least list home battery packs for subscribers they had transferred to Digital Voice, but they were chargeable and cost around £90. But look for the ‘Cyberpower Back-up for Digital Voice’ on the BT website now and you will read: ‘We’re really sorry but we’ve sold out of this product and are unable to obtain more stock.’ Unbelievable – there is no other word. The current ill-considered policy will undoubtedly cost lives. Few people will realise that their digital landlines will go down in a power cut, even fewer than those know that their fully charged mobile may not work either. Pressure must now be put on OFCOM to mandate that all landline phone subscribers should receive a free battery back-up unit that plugs into and supports all their existing main and extension telephones, with a standby time of at least 48 hours. Users should also be warned that mobiles and cordless phones cannot be relied upon to work in a power cut, explaining precisely why their mobile may not work because their local base station may be knocked out by the same power failure and there’s not much that landline and broadband users can do about that. Complain to your MP! Practical Electronics | March | 2022