Thanks for the info, Andy.

That answered it all.
Now I have to talk myself into swallowing about $110 per month in fees.
Plus a lot in up front costs.

Paul


andy at theasis.com wrote:

> > While looking for a new ISP, I discovered that cost of ISDN is quite a
> > bit lower.
>
> Lower than what?
>
> > I live far from town.  There is no DSL, no cable.  This is my cheapest
> > alternative to 56K.
>
> I have a similar problem. I'm in Ham Lake. Even tho DSL and cable are
> nearby, there are infrastructure problems. I've been using ISDN for about
> 4 years. This year I got a second line, and so actually am
> multihomed. This allows for some fun with the firewall/router.
>
> > A couple of questions if anyone else has an ISDN hookup.
> >
> > 1) What exactly do I have to get from Qworst?
>
> Think of all Internet service as comprised of 2 pieces:  the circuit and
> the IP bandwidth.
>
> You must get the ISDN circuit from Qwest (probably no
> alternatives). That's the part that costs $69/month, plus fees, which
> comes to about $82. They also charge you $110 for installation.
>
> Once you have that, you could connect through any ISP who has ISDN
> service. The bad news is that this is more expensive for the ISP than DSL,
> since they pretty much have to dedicate a line to each customer.
>
> Qwest is about the cheapest option, but it's worth looking around in your
> area. They charge about $30/month for unlimited usage at 128k. If you want
> static IP, they make you pay $14.95/month for a /29. Maybe also a $25
> hookup fee.
>
> > Do they string a new line?
>
> Yes
>
> > Can I use my current phone line?
>
> No
>
> But ISDN is 2 64k channels, so if you get a router with a POTS port, you
> can plug a regular phone into that, maybe making it possible to get rid of
> your current phone line. Just about any modern router will allow incoming
> phone calls to bring down a data channel automatically.
>
> > Do I have to pay them a monthly fee in addition to the ISP?
>
> See above.
>
> > 2)  Is it really faster.
>
> Yeah, I really do get 128k/s on many things on the qwest link. Other
> advantages are 24/7 uptime without getting an extra phone line.
>
> > I don't mind paynig extra if I get 128K, but
> > I don't see any mention of that on the
> > Qworst site.  Just 64K.   Can only certain locations get 128K and the
> > rest get 64K?
>
> That sounds odd to me. There's no reason to limit it based on the circuit,
> since it is inherently 2-channel. Many ISPs charge you per channel for
> bandwidth, though, because it uses more of their resources. I haven't
> found qwest to do this.
>
> > The ISP web pages quote 64/128K prices but is it as simple as paying
> > more to get the 128K?
>
> Now which ISP are you talking about? If qwest is doing that, then it
> is a different policy than they use elsewhere.
>
> > Or does my phone line need to checked?
>
> There are distance and line quality considerations. Relevance depends on
> where you live.
>
> > 3) Is any old ISDN modem adeqaute for dial-up service?
>
> Get an ISDN Router, an external box, and make sure it has POTS ports.
>
> > Some are $200, some are $300.  What is $300 buying me?
>
> Something brand new and shiny, I guess.
>
> > There is a $195 USR ISDN modem at mwave.com.  Says its the replacement
> > for the
> > 3COM Impact IQ modem, which seemed to be quite populare on google.
> > That would seem to be enough, no?
>
> That would probably be enough, tho I'm not familiar with that model.
>
> If you go to Ebay, you can find
>         Lucent (Ascend) Pipeline P75 or P80
>         Cisco 804
>         NetGear RT328/348
>         Zyxel P100
>
> All of which will go for ~$100, perhaps well under, except the Cisco. They
> are easy to configure. The cisco is more involved, but has the benefit of
> using IOS, in case you want to talk to real routers.
>
> > 4) Any other costs I'm overlooking?a
>
>         Hardware
>         Circuit (installation & monthly)
>         Bandwith (monthly)
>         Your Time
>
> That's pretty much it.
> Good luck
>
> Andy
>
>
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