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Copper Internet in the USA

Written by
Oct 11, 2023

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Provider Types

Providers Offering Copper Service

We've found 208 providers offering Copper service in the US. Below are stats on their coverage and speeds.

Hawaii Dialogix Telecom 0 1 400 mbps
Wisper ISP 0 1 0 mbps
Data@ccess Communication 0 1 0 mbps
PogoZone 0 1 1000 mbps
Optivon 0 1 0 mbps
Alaska Communications 0 1 0 mbps
NP Information Systems 0 1 0 mbps
IP Global 0 1 50 mbps
Delta Telecom 0 1 10 mbps
T1 Company 0 1 12 mbps
FastTrack Communications 0 1 1.5 mbps
12Global 0 1 500 mbps
Summit Broadband 0 1 2000 mbps
Nextera Communications 0 1 50 mbps
Communication Services 0 1 100 mbps
Metro Communications 0 1 100 mbps
South Valley Internet 0 1 15 mbps
Datavo - Business Data & Voice Solutions 0 1 20 mbps
Advantage Telecom 0 1 1.5 mbps
T3 Communications 0 1 0 mbps
MTCC 0 1 50 mbps
Adcomm MDU 0 1 100 mbps
Dais Communications 0 1 0 mbps
Alternative Choice Wireless 0 1 0 mbps
Helio Broadband 0 1 1000 mbps
AMA TechTel 0 1 5 mbps
BendTel 0 1 0 mbps
Unwired Ltd 0 1 10000 mbps
IdeaTek 0 1 0 mbps
Bestline Communications 0 1 0 mbps
ENCO Electronic Systems 0 1 200 mbps
Global Telecom Brokers 0 1 0 mbps
Fidelity Communications 0 1 100 mbps
SmartCom Telephone 0 1 3 mbps
Grayson Collin Communications 0 1 100 mbps
1stel 0 1 2 mbps
Big River Telephone 0 1 3 mbps
DFT Communications 0 1 0 mbps
Aeneas Communications 0 1 1.5 mbps
Twin Lakes Telephone 0 1 0 mbps
LocalTel Communications 0 1 1000 mbps
Cruzio Internet 0 1 0.56 mbps
Roller Network 0 1 0 mbps
Green Mountain Access 0 1 1.5 mbps
Fourway.net 0 1 200 mbps
Hargray Communications 0 1 1.5 mbps
Foremost Telecommunications 0 1 0 mbps
Bluebird Broadband Services 0 1 0 mbps
California Telecom 0 1 0 mbps
CloudWyze 0 1 0 mbps
GeoLinks 0 1 100 mbps
Servpac 0 1 0 mbps
Urban Communications 0 1 10 mbps
Dialog Telecommunications 0 1 5 mbps
Willits Online 0 1 3 mbps
Usfon 0 1 300 mbps
Fibre Alaska 0 1 500 mbps
CGI-Communication 0 1 1.5 mbps
Wilson Communications 0 1 4 mbps
GWI 0 1 20 mbps
Midwest Telecom of America 0 1 30 mbps
Wilson Creek Communications 0 1 100 mbps
Connecticut Education Network 0 1 1.5 mbps
Kinetix 0 1 20 mbps
Velocity Telephone 0 1 2 mbps
TV Association of Republic 0 1 250 mbps
Intermax Networks 0 1 150 mbps
Dalko 0 1 50 mbps
Cyber Mesa Telecom 0 1 1.5 mbps
Michigan Broadband 0 1 30 mbps
Huntleigh Technology Group 0 1 0 mbps
TriParish 0 1 1.5 mbps
Bays-ET High Speed 0 1 1000 mbps
BalsamWest FiberNET 0 1 0 mbps
Clearwave Communications 0 1 1.5 mbps
Trintel 0 1 400 mbps
702 Communications 0 1 50 mbps
UniFi North 0 1 100 mbps
WOW 0 1 0 mbps
Senawave Communications 0 1 1000 mbps
Montana Internet Corporation 0 1 100 mbps
North Olympic Peninsula Data Centers 0 1 100 mbps
Network Tool and Die Company 0 1 940 mbps
SyncGlobal Telecom 0 1 0 mbps
Digital Technology Solutions 0 1 0 mbps
High Desert Air 0 1 1.5 mbps
Enqwest 0 1 0 mbps
Florida Phone Systems 0 1 0 mbps
NATCO 0 1 10 mbps
Chisholm Broadband 0 1 50 mbps
Real Internet 0 1 100 mbps
Echo Broadband 0 1 505 mbps
Intellipop 0 1 100 mbps
Virginia Broadband 0 1 1000 mbps
Trinicom Communications 0 1 0 mbps
Maxwire 0 1 0 mbps
Communications Unlimited Inc 0 1 500 mbps
Hayneville Telephone Company 0 1 500 mbps
Universal Connectivity 0 1 0 mbps
OrangeFiber 0 1 50 mbps

Copper Internet In the United States

While DSL and Cable are technically transmitted over cables made from copper, our definition of copper broadband is limited to the other technologies that use copper cables. This includes traditional T-carrier lines like T1 and T3, as well as new technologies like Ethernet over copper (EoC). T1’s are usually used for multi-channel voice lines, but they can also be used for dedicated symmetrical broadband. They don’t necessarily have to connect to the internet; they can also be used as a private point-to-point network connection over any distance.

These copper connections are typically not a ready-connect type of service. They can take weeks or months to setup depending on the infrastructure already in place. The upside is that they can be used in cases where other broadband options are not available. However the cost is usually quite high. That’s why it’s rare that any of these technologies are used for a home broadband connection. It’s usually larger businesses that can justify the cost of these services.

If you are in the market for an alternative copper based internet connection for your business or home, we’ve compiled a full list of providers offering copper based technologies in the United States to help make finding the right one easier.

Should You Get T1/T3 Internet Service?

If typical internet service via fiber, DSL, and copper are not available to you, or you need a more robust business-class service, then you should look into the availability of T1 and T3 lines.

Benefits

Business Class Service

T-carriers and EoC are dedicated connections to your desired endpoint or back to the service provider’s internet backbone connection. Cable, DSL, and even fiber broadband is distributed through shared networks. While a shared network may still provide full speeds at all times, this is usually not guaranteed. Whereas a business class service like T1 is guaranteed making more suitable for mission critical applications.

Alternative to Fiber

Since EoC can achieve speeds reaching 200 Mbps or more, Ethernet can be an alternative to fiber when existing telephone cables can be used to transmit EoC. Compared to the cost of installing fiber optic cables (from the provider all the way to your premises), EoC or T3 may be a cost-effective alternative.

Limitations

Speeds Can be Slow

Newer services like Ethernet can provide really good bandwidth per dollar, but traditional T1’s are slow by their very definition. T1 is defined as a 1.544 Mbps service, which was fast back in the day, but not anymore. T3 is much faster at 45 Mbps, but cost per month can be in the $1,000s.

Cost is High

Even the low bandwidth T1’s can cost 10x as much as a home DSL connection. Costs are based on the type of service needed and the distance from the provider to the service location (the local loop).

How it Works

Coaxial Copper Cable

T-carrier was developed to carry multiple voice channels over a single twisted copper pair (telephone cable) to increase the capacity of existing infrastructure. It is a digital transmission technology that can also be used for data. A T1 line can carry 24-channels of voice simultaneously or 1.544 Mbps of data or any combination of. Since signals can degrade quickly over copper wires, repeaters must be placed every 5,000 feet or so.

Ethernet over copper uses the same ethernet protocol as we use to connect computers and local area networks, but instead of Cat5 ethernet cables, it uses multiple pairs of existing phone wires for transmission. This is an example of squeezing more out of older existing infrastructure.

Largest Copper Providers

  1. > 2.87
  2. Verizon Business
    2.24% Coverage
    > 2.24
  3. Claro Internet
    0.90% Coverage
    > 0.90
  4. TPx Communications
    0.61% Coverage
    > 0.61
  5. US Signal Company
    0.56% Coverage
    > 0.56
  6. NUVISIONS
    0.53% Coverage
    > 0.53
  7. > 0.49

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