
The speed and stability of DSL on any given line in the access network is a function of the signal to noise ratio at the end of that line, which in turn depends on –
Geographic coverage achieved at a given headline speed also depends on -
These factors are based on physical science and are identical for anyone operating DSL on an access network. The speed delivered to the end user also can depend on retail and wholesale product definitions, the makes of DSLAM and modem (as standard specifications can be implemented by different designs) and other decisions on how the network operates the chosen DSL technology. In addition, the end user throughput depends on operational decisions on backhaul and contention ratios. The line data available to end users from modems is highly variable in extent and quality and is not a reliable guide to ADSL performance.