BLUF - new phone has a buzz where none existed before with old phone on same wiring setup
Full story: So we made the decision to get a new cordless phone system (1 line with a base and several extended handsets) after almost all our old batteries were dying (wouldn't hold a charge). So we bought a new Panasonic phone and got crazy static on the line. We have DSL, but have had no issues with the old phone setup. I tried several things (see below) but static remained. I spent an hour on the phone with Panasonic support and got nowhere. Their conclusion - something was wrong with our internal phone wiring. Dubious as we never had a problem before (house built in 2003). So I call the telephone/DSL provider (Qwest) and they say they will send you a new wall mount DSL filter. It arrives, I put the wall filter in - still static. So we get thinking it might be something about the Panansonic phone - so we exchange for an AT&T phone - static still there.
So let me describe the current wiring set-up:
The set-up that worked for 8 years:
Everything resides in structured wiring box in the basement. The home run (cable from outside) first goes into a box that splits the home run into multiple lines (the home run is an 8-wire cable). Out of this splitter I am able to put in a normal phone splitter (using normal sized jacks). One line off the splitter goes to the DSL modem, the other goes through a DSL filter into the home distribution panel.
This set-up worked for 8 years with our old phone - swap in new phone, crazy static.
So I start the process of different wiring options:
1) Home run straight into distro panel, 1 line out of distro to DSL, 2nd line out to house phone with a filter near the box - static
2) Same as above with:
a) Filter at strutured wiring box and at the phone location (i.e. 2 fliters) - static
b) Filter at just phone location - static
c) No filter - static (duh)
3) Home run into splitter, phone line to DSL modem, filter out of DSL modem to line with phone - static
4) Same as #3 except with filter at phone location
5) Most of the options above usinging a different phone jack in the house.
6) Most of the options above with a new in-line DSL filter
Then I thought maybe there was noise being introduced through the powerline - hooked it up to a filtered surge protector - static
So does anyone have any ideas - I am still sceptical about the internal wiring issues as the old phone worked fine (I even tried it again). It is only when I swapped the phone that things got bad.
Not sure if it matters but went from an 8-year old Uniden to a DECT 6.0 (both the Panasonic and At&T)
Thanks.