If you dial 17070 and select silent line test you can listen without the dialtone in the way.
A while ago the pole was replaced outside my house. The reason, I'll come to in a bit. There was crackling on the line after that, and sometimes the dialtone would go. Ringing the line usually brought it back for a short time, due to the ringing current.
It was obviously an intermittent fault, and one that wasn't going to go away. So I reported it to 150. I had to insist that the kid on the other end reported it, even though it showed as OK on his computer screen. What part of "intermittent" isn't clear?
Now for the reason the pole was replaced. I really do despair at the stupidity of things these days. Some new rule means that BT must check all dropwires and ensure that they are above a new limit. I'm not sure where the ruling is from, maybe the EU, they're famed for daft ideas. New poles have sprung up, where previously the dropwire would go directly from pole to property.
Some of the dropwires were a foot or two below the new limit, as the guy doing the surveying showed me. All properties are normal houses and not bungalows. Now the wires have been there for many years, and no tall vehicles have pulled them down to date. I am still awaiting this large vehicle, which should it manage to get down the entrance into my square would probably have to go across the grass in the middle. Yes, you guessed it, the rule only applies to wires above the carriageway!
Of course, it would have been sensible to make this new rule to only apply to new installations. But this sort of nonsense is how the 21st century British telephone network is run.