Does it matter which way you plug an ADSL filter?

ADSL filters are usually marked. One port goes to the wall plug and the other to the telephone. However I have plugged them the other way round and didn’t notice any difference.

Does it matter how you plug them?

It always has for me. phone doesn’t work if its backwards.

The filter removes the high pitch squeal from dsl. I used a wall phone for awhile without a filter and put up with the noise.

When I got my VERY FIRST DSL modem a few years ago, the first thing I did was plug in the ADSL filter backwards. The DSL reception that I got at the modem was awful.

The “modem” port is unfiltered, the “telephone” port has the filter. If you plug it the wrong way round, I think the modem won’t work.

That’s right. Filter backwards in the line from the wall socket to the telephone, but the modem couldn’t connect to the outside world. IIRC, it did connect but only very sporadically. Go figure.

I’m surprised by these answers. Our DSL came with one splitter, that plugs into the wall, the modem, and a phone, and obviously that one needs to be connected correctly.

Apart from that, we got several filters, that just filter the DSL part of the signal from the phone part of the signal. These are used for any other phones in the house. Those have to transmit the phone signal both ways for the phone to work, and I’d expect the attenuation of the DSL signal would be the same both directions as well.

Are people here mixing up the splitter and the filters?

Except if you talk into it, your DSL will disconnect. The filter prevents the DSL noise from annoying you on the phone, but it also prevents your talking from screwing up the DSL signal. Both voice and data need the filter in place to work correctly.