The WAN is just a wide area network that uses the mobile phone system though, at least here in the South where we cannot use the LRR connectivity. If there is no mobile phone signal then there is no way for the meter to connect. We went through this in a lot of detail back when we had a smart meter fitted, about three years ago now. Despite the best endeavours of SSE they just couldn't get the meter to connect.NikoV6 wrote: ↑Tue Sep 13, 2022 2:22 pm Smart meters do not use the mobile phone signal, they use the local WAN (Wide Area Network) for security reasons. It is possible for them to use MESH (if its fitted to the particular meter), MESH is useful if you are in an area of poor WAN coverage and I believe you can effectively piggy back off of other neighbours meters (TBC)
Long running battle with Octopus who told us repeatedly for six months we could not get a signal as in poor WAN coverage area. OFGEM completely useless in being able to help, poor WAN coverage is not a concern of theirs.
In the end, Octopus agreed to fit a smart meter as I argued it would still need reading if it failed to operate as a smart meter (it will operate as a dumb meter)
Engineer came out, and give him his due he spent about two hours getting it to link, which it did with the aid of an additional antenna in the meter box. All was well for a couple of months and then the signal dropped. Out they came again and after a bit of faffing its worked fine since.
They are obliged to fit a smart meter if you request one, the fact that the infrastructure in your area may not support it is the problem that needs addressing. Don't let them fob you off with their postcode search, get them to come out and physically check the signal at your property. You may find like we did that it will connect!
The Zigbee mesh backup connectivity system is very short range. It works OK when houses are close together, but here, where my nearest neighbour is a fair distance away, the mesh system cannot connect either. My nearest neighbour cannot get a phone signal either, so even if the mesh system could connect it still wouldn't be able to connect back to DCC.
I've looked into whether there is a likelihood that we will get a mobile phone signal here, really because it would give us better broadband. Sadly the one company that investigated installing a mast about a mile up the valley cancelled the project on the basis that the cost was too high for the small number of customers the mast would provide a service for. The parish council have a working group looking at getting better connectivity here, but if that happens it seems likely to be fibre, rather than a link to the mobile phone network.