The real analog copper lines were kind of limited to approx 28K - more or less the nyquist limit. However, the lines at the time were increasingly replaced with digital 64Kbit lines that sampled the analog tone. So, the 56k standard aligned itself to the actual sample times, and that allowed it to reach a 56k bps rate (some time/error tolerance still eats away at your bandwidth)If you never got more than 24-28k, you likely still had an analog line.
mgiampapa|1 month ago
cestith|1 month ago
The economical way to do that was integrated RAS systems like the Livingston Portmaster, Cisco 5x00 seriers, or Ascend Max. Those would take the aggregated digital line, break out the channels, hold multiple DSPs on multiple boards, and have an Ethernet (or sometimes another DS1 or DS3 for more direct uplink) with all those parts communicating inside the same chassis. In theory, though, you could break out the line in one piece of hardware and then have a bunch of firmware modems.
dspillett|1 month ago
To get 33k6 up (or even just 28k8 - some ISPs had banks of modems that supported one the 56k6 standards but would not support more than 28k8 symmetric) you needed to force your modem to connect using the older symmetric standards.
drzaiusx11|1 month ago
mnw21cam|1 month ago
encom|1 month ago