DSL won't go through phone systems because the systems convert the analog signal to a digital one.You say you have two lines on the system. You also say you have a fax line. The fax line is an analog signal, usually separate from the phone system. Check which # they put the DSL on... It should be on your fax #.. If they put it on one of your main phone lines, then yes you are going to have to go to the source....i.e the 110 or bix ,or 66 block and split the signal from there. Also you will have to place a filter after you split the DSL from the phone line ,otherwise your phone line will sound like $hit. The same goes for the fax line. You will have to place a filter after the DSL, otherwise your fax will not work correctly.... the interferance from the DSL will cause you to lose fax's. I you don't have a modem on a line that has DSL installed, it doesn't affect the prformance of the line... UNTIL you plug in the modem.
DSL is easy to install.... IF Bell or whoever has allready hooked it up to your line.
O.K., let me simplify this... You need a phone line that runs from the office straight to the 110 block with nothing on it . It has to be cross connected to whatever # you are usin for DSL. The modem is then plugged into this line, then into whatever network hub or switch you have. Anything else added to this line by way of splitters or other jacks Have to be filtered.
Make sense???
