Hello everyone,
Six years ago, I thought the technician from the telecom company installed two DSL sockets. Now I wanted to relocate the Fritz!Box and wondered why there was no internet connection.
I even thought I had broken the internet.
I opened the cover and found that nothing was connected. Can I do something like this myself? Or do I need a technician? Who should I contact?

Six years ago, I thought the technician from the telecom company installed two DSL sockets. Now I wanted to relocate the Fritz!Box and wondered why there was no internet connection.
I even thought I had broken the internet.
I opened the cover and found that nothing was connected. Can I do something like this myself? Or do I need a technician? Who should I contact?
HilfeHilfe schrieb:
Six years ago, I thought the technician from the telecom company had installed two DSL sockets. Now I wanted to move the Fritz box and wondered why there was no internet connection.Let me try to interpret your very fragmented description: six years ago, you got DSL; before that, you probably had an analog telephone line. This was configured as a socket system (with TAE sockets—if you use the second socket, the first one is disabled). This setup is regularly disrupted when ISDN, DSL, or both are installed, because this does not work with a socket system. By the way, in nearly thirty years of telecommunications experience, I have never seen a "DSL socket."rick2018 schrieb:
You can connect that yourself. You only need a small flathead screwdriver. Instructions are available online.I will skip the tangent about LSA connecting tools here. As a customer, you are not allowed to connect anything yourself—neither by yourself nor by instructing an electrician. After the main distribution frame, the last mile continues up to the "first TAE socket." Your control over the network only begins at its socket.https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
H
HilfeHilfe9 Sep 2019 17:0511ant schrieb:
I’ll try to interpret your very fragmented description: six years ago, you got DSL; before that, you probably had an analog telephone line. This was installed as a socket system (using TAE sockets; if you use the second socket, the first one is disabled). This setup was regularly disrupted whenever ISDN, DSL, or both were installed, because it doesn’t work with a socket system. By the way, I have never seen a "DSL socket" in almost thirty years of telecommunications experience.
I’ll skip the digression about the LSA tool here. As a customer, you are absolutely not allowed to do any connections yourself—not even by instructing an electrician. After the main distribution frame, the last mile extends up to the “first TAE socket.” Only at that socket does your control over the network actually begin. Complex ...
HilfeHilfe schrieb:
Complex ...... but with more pictures it can be clarified, then solutions can be developed. Was my interpretation of your words correct?https://www.instagram.com/11antgmxde/
https://www.linkedin.com/company/bauen-jetzt/
H
HilfeHilfe9 Sep 2019 20:4111ant schrieb:
... but with more pictures, it can be clarified, and then solutions can be developed. Was my interpretation of your words correct?I believe Holle Electrician ,,,