Connect with us

News

Data coverage in Winchester – The Full Investigation

Meadbh Corbett

Published

on

Mobile app speed tester showing poor network speeds

“Anyone else in SO22/SO23 Winchester experiencing extremely poor 4G speeds? I’ve been struggling for months with poor 4G speeds in Winchester (in the city centre mainly).” 

This was the beginning of a thread on the Vodafone community network which spans years.

User highpriest first complained about the issue back in 2018, and it has yet to resolve itself almost seven years later.

The data connection in Winchester is patchy at best and non-existent at worst. 

I investigated three main areas: The University of Winchester (King Alfred Campus), Winchester Cathedral, and the High Street.

I downloaded a speed tester app on my phone, turned on my data, and saw where it took me. 

For reference, a slow internet speed (download speed) is usually considered anything under 10 or 15 megabytes per second (Mbps), but a good speed for most activities is over 20Mbps.

The average speed for EE mobile broadband, according to OpenSignal, is 47.7Mbps download, and 9.8Mbps upload. How does Winchester compare?

THE UNIVERSITY OF WINCHESTER.

This is where I began. I, along with quite a chunk of the city population, have been annoyed with the poor data connection for quite a while now, but it was when I actually tested how bad it was that I realised how big of an issue it was.

In our campus newsroom, the app failed to work on mobile data.

The wi-fi connection wasn’t much better.

The download speed didn’t even get above 1Mbps – the 20-second average according to my app was just 0.06Mbps, and the upload speed couldn’t even register. 

I then ventured outside – perhaps it was just the fault of being in the building.

But outside the campus chapel, braving the baltic February winds, my mobile connection froze once more.

The average download speed was a measly 4.67Mbps, and the average upload was 0.12Mbps – despite my phone claiming it was connected to 5G.

Here, I also talked to second year student Izzy, who said the poor connection gave customers at her part-time job one more thing to complain about:

“So many people complain because they can’t get on the wi-fi because the signal is so bad…You can never get it anywhere. They try to get a discount, and when they can’t get it, then they’re angry at me. Do something about it, Winchester!”

WINCHESTER CATHEDRAL.

Out of the three places I investigated, this had the better data connection.

It’s a lot less busy than the other two locations on a Monday afternoon, but it still isn’t up to scratch.

At most, it reaches a download speed of 17 Mbps – before swiftly dropping to an overall average of 11 Mbps.

When I talk to two French tourists, they’re really not impressed.

They tell me they thought it was just because they were in the Cathedral, but after leaving, it became evident that the mobile coverage was simply just bad.

Another Winchester student comes by, and I ask him how he finds the data connectivity in the city centre.

“I think it’s pretty rubbish,” he says.
I managed to get a good enough connection to stream a YouTube video here – but it was low quality and took a while to load. 

WINCHESTER HIGH STREET.

“When you go into the town more, it doesn’t really connect with anything,” another Vodafone customer tells me.

While the original poster at the beginning of my investigation has since changed provider, this young woman hasn’t.

“I struggle when I need to text people, or meet up with others,” she says – so she usually tries to connect to various public wi-fi networks, though she explains these usually don’t work either. 

When I test the data strength – it doesn’t work.

The app doesn’t think I have any internet access at all.

I move around a bit to find a spot where it works, and try again.

This time, I get a download average of 8.44Mbps and an upload average of 3.60Mbps.

Far below where it should be. While it could be understandable that such a busy area would be a bit overwhelmed, that doesn’t negate the inconvenience for vendors in the street, people trying to send texts, or even those who live nearby, as one older woman points out;

“I live in the centre… I find that, in the evenings, it gets a lot slower, when everyone is home, and everybody starts using it.”

User strowger on the original Vodafone thread also commented in 2019 that they had performed their own speed tests living in the centre – 07:30am resulted in 4.25Mbps download speed, and 5.07Mbps for upload speed.

They then repeated it at 7 at night, and got results of 1.65Mbps down, and 1.26Mbps up.

This was compared to their best results in Newbury – at 108Mbps down and 40.9Mbps up.

The original poster highpriest responded with a test at Badger Farm, calling the download speed “practically useless”.

Many Vodafone employees have offered many possible causes or solutions in the thread over the years – a community manager under the username TJ suggested in 2019 that due to a local mast “undergoing some work at the moment”, which they said may be the cause of “a little extra disruption”.

User sappercaptain shared a message they had received from customer support in 2019, stating that there was maintenance work scheduled for November of the same year which should have helped, and it also linked to a status checker – which currently claims that Winchester has a near complete “good” coverage. 

highpriest also claimed a few months ago that they had written to the previous MP Steve Brine “numerous times” about the issue, as well as both Hampshire County Council and Winchester City Council, but “of course nothing happened”.


Overall, one thing is for certain: the data connection in Winchester is weak and in serious need of improvement, regardless of the data provider.

And unfortunately for us, this almost seven years long thread suggests it won’t be solved any time soon.

Continue Reading

News

Calls for new 20mph speed limit on Winchester road

Lennie Teague

Published

on

People in Winchester are calling for a new 20mph speed limit on Worthy Lane after two accidents in recent months.

Two cars crashed near the entrance to the Cattle Market car park in November and another crashed near a pedestrian crossing on Andover Road in October.

Some think that the current 30mph limit on the street is too fast and a reason for the accidents, but others feel a reduction is not needed.

One Facebook commenter compared the potential change to the city centre and said: “We don’t need the speed limit changed it’s already a 30mph zone, bad enough towns a 20mph.”

Another resident even felt changes wouldn’t stop crashes and said: “Speed reductions don’t stop accidents. Accidents happen, you can look at the causes of each one, like the professionals do and then make a decision. Passers by probably know very very little about traffic management.”

Someone even claimed pedestrians could be the cause, saying: “Perhaps more education for pedestrians, it’s not always drivers who are at fault.”

Winchester City Council has pushed for a change with traffic expected to increase after Kings Barton is completed and the planned development of Sir John Moore Barracks.

Hampshire County Council has not responded to the demands despite pressure from residents and the city.

WINOL reached out to the city council and county council for comment, but both are yet to reply.

Continue Reading

News

Jury trials to be scrapped for minor crimes

Avatar

Published

on

Jury trials for offences likely to carry a sentence of three years or less are set to be removed under new reforms, the Justice Secretary has announced.

Volunteer magistrates will take on such cases, while serious crimes – including murder, rape and robbery – will continue to be tried by a jury.

Speaking in the Commons, David Lammy said he was following the recommendations of Sir Brian Leveson, who suggested limiting jury trials for lower-level offences to reduce court delays.

Lammy added that defendants would no longer be able to choose between a jury trial and a judge-only trial in some cases, saying that “other judicial systems do not let defendants choose a jury trial, as people can do in England and Wales”.

“Today I am calling time on the courts emergency that has left victims of the most serious crimes waiting years for justice…

“The system we inherited has led to a Crown Court backlog due to hit 100,000 outstanding cases by 2028.”

He said the new “Swift Courts” system would allow cases to be processed around 20% faster, helping to tackle delays that currently see suspects waiting years for trial.

Critics raise concerns

Legal experts and civil liberties groups warned that the changes could have serious implications for justice.

The Free Speech Union highlighted that defendants facing juries are nearly twice as likely to be acquitted on free speech grounds compared with those tried without juries.

Ministry of Justice data suggests:

  • Crown Court cases with juries: 21.6% acquittal rate (up to 25.8% recently)
  • Magistrates’ courts: 11.4% acquittal rate (10.1% recently)
  • Speech-related offences: 32.1% acquittal with juries vs 14.1% without

Mary Prior, head of 36 Crime at The 36 Group, said:

“We must stand up for our ancient liberties. Before the Ministry of Justice removes the right of the public to decide guilt, the evidence must be examined carefully. Support legal professionals working to protect the right to jury trial.”

The Law Society warned:

“Determining a person’s guilt or innocence is a collective duty – limiting jury trial so severely disregards justice as we know it. This is a complex situation that requires investment and reform across the entire criminal justice system.”

The Criminal Bar Association added that there is no clear evidence the reforms will reduce backlogs and urged the public to lobby MPs and support legal professionals defending jury trials.

What Experts Say

Critics say the backlog is caused by underfunding and staffing shortages, not the jury system itself. They warn that moving cases to judge-only trials could erode transparency, fairness, and civil liberties, particularly in cases involving speech or expression.

The government has pledged to publish a full impact assessment alongside legislation, but legal professionals insist that robust evidence, safeguards, and investment are needed before removing the public’s right to decide the outcome of thousands of criminal trials.

Continue Reading

News

Greens become third-largest political party in the UK

Avatar

Published

on

Membership of the Green Party has overtaken the Conservatives, making them the third largest party in the country.

The party now has more than 126,000 members, an 80% increase since Zack Polanski was elected as leader last month. 

After his appearance on BBC One’s Laura Kuenssberg show, Polanski said the Green Party saw 1,000 new members join in just over two hours. 

The party’s leader insists that “British politics is changing” and previous “support for old-style parties” is “shrinking”.

The Green Party is gradually climbing the polls in voting intention, but Reform UK close to the top with over 260,000 members.

The last official figures published in August 2025 shows that Farage’s party need only 70,000 more members to match with Labour. 

While countering Reform, the Green Party reportedly now have more than double the members of the Liberal Democrats. 

Polanski declares that more people in the country are “choosing a new kind of politics” where they’re offered “a bold, hopeful vision of prosperity, equality and unity”. 

A rise in support for the Greens suggests many are moving away from a “broken” two party system, according to Polanski.

Their increase in numbers “reflects growing public frustration with the political status quo”. 

Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2017 Zox News Theme. Theme by MVP Themes, powered by WordPress.