Moca ethernet not working1/13/2024 If all of the lights are on and you can access, it is definitely a network configuration issue. If there are splitters/amps they won't be in the wall, they will be in the attic/ceiling along the main cable runs. If the amp is not bidirectional and/or enough bandwidth it will attenuate the signal. If the splitters don't have at least 1.5 GHz bandwidth (preferred 2) they will attenuate the single too much. have you followed the cable lines through the house to make sure you don't have a dopy extra splitter or cable amp in the chain? I had a couple I needed to find and upgrade. If it's an access point, you don't want it acting like a router.just a switch with a wireless connection. if you are using the second router as an access point, make sure you have the Ethernet cable plugged into the "switch" connection and not the solitary cable modem connection. If it gets an IP address and good connection speed, then it's your router/AP connection that's not setup right. if you already have one router working and not the second, I would try plugging in a laptop into the Ethernet jack in place of the second router. ![]() are both lights on each of the MoCA devices lit? One light is for the MoCA connection, the other is for Ethernet connection. are you sure you have power connected to everything? Silly question, but I have lost time troubleshooting when I haven't plugged it in! **This is where the issue is, I am not picking up an internet signal into the ASUS AP.*** Any suggestions would be helpful, thank you. (2) main coax is going into my cable modem with a LPF (although Moto SB6141 already has a built-in LPF, might this be overkill?) (3) Cat cable from Cable modem is going into Actiontec ECB6200 MOCA, (4) "Coax in" from Actiontec Moca is going to a BAMF SB-2003 3-WAY SPLITTER, that splitter goes out onto 3 coax's that go throughout the house, (5) one of those coax's goes to my main Asus wireless router (of which I'm getting a successful internet connection, clocking over 240Mbps on down stream), (6) and another coax goes to a 2nd asus wireless router in AP mode which is connected by the following, coax out of the wall into another actiontec moca, out of actiontec moca and into a switch, out of the switch and into the main wan port on the asus AP point. please look over these steps and advise as I am not getting an internet connection to my access point (ie: Asus wireless router in AP mode) (1) I have the main Coax from my ISP going directly into my punch box where all the coax's from the home come into. I am attempting a similar setup at the punch box in my home. JrClocker, thanks for the diagram on your setup. If you need more than 8, then I could see running more than one line, but can't imagine a scenario (in a home) where someone has 8 devices hard wired in one room and is operating them all at once.Įdit: Also, if you're using Cat6 that supports 10Gb bandwidth so you could always get a higher speed router and switch when the time comes. If you think you need 3 then buy an 8 port switch. ![]() Plus, if you're using a switch you can never run out of ports so that comment doesn't make sense. Certainly not if you're doubling what you really need.Īgain, I'm curious to know what people are running where they need more than a gigabit of bandwidth simultaneously in one room? Almost no one has gigabit internet yet and most gaming consoles don't come anywhere near that speed so the only thing I can see is if you were copying huge files between multiple computers where you would actually saturate a single line. The cheapest I found CAT 6 plenum rated cable is $0.30/ft (if you buy 1000ft) which isn't breaking the bank, but it isn't cheap. Plus if it does, it really isn't hard to re-pull it using the old wire. The likelihood of a LAN cable failing is extremely low.
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