Convert Your Coax Into POWERFUL Ethernet

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Thanks for checking out this video. Hope you learned something new.

SteveDOES
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Just bought a house a few months ago. First thing I did since I have a full basement is run RG6 and Cat6 to every room. Some rooms have multiple drops if there is a possibility in putting furniture in a different arrangement or the potential need for another jack elsewhere. Long ago, I used to install networks for a big box retailer, so I have the knowledge on how to do this.. Happy I did it. Just hope the next owner realized how nice it is to have the house 100% wired in every room and have an awesome network rack with nicely combed/labeled wires coming into a patch panel... The Coax to Ethernet converter is interesting, always wondered how fast they were.
Right now I can get about a gig from any room in the house, and that's nice to have.

JohnD-JohnD
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I have been using an Actiontec MoCA setup in my 3000 sq. ft. home for over 10 years. The main MoCA adapter connects directly to the Internet using ethernet cable via my router. This main MoCA adapter will now send Internet through my entire coax cable wiring in my home. So, I have three MoCA extenders that not only provide direct ethernet cable connections but also contain a dual-band Wi-Fi transmitter. Simply connect a MoCA extender to any coax outlet in my home and Wala I have high speed Internet access. We have coax cable throughout our home and this MoCA system has worked flawlessly. Highly recommend MoCA for anyone having coverage issues but have coax wired in their home. Before MoCA, I tried Powerline extenders but performance was mediocre at best. MoCA uses your home's "shielded" coax cable which protects the integrity of the Internet signal. Great video, thanks!

stevenz
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lol @ 1:50 he sets the AP right next to a fish tank. In case anyone is wondering, water is one of the best materials for absorbing radio waves. If you want to block your AP from covering a certain area, this is one of the best ways to do it. It's even better than concrete because it doesn't bounce off and reflect. It just stops it cold.

DriveCarToBar
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here is a better idea. I used the installed coax cables in the walls as fish tape to pull the ethernet cables. Doing this worked out very well. it was very easy and cheap to do

gulielmi
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I started doing ethernet over cable / MoCA about 2 years ago. My internet cable modem / my router had to be installed in a closet where house cable junctions were. I wanted to have a hard wired LAN connection for my office network / computers 60' away. Never had any problems with it. Good topic for a video as most people are not aware this can be done.

chuckhowland
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Just wanted to point out that even with out of use coax there are a few gotchas to watch out for. Splitters inside the walls can lead to problems if they're rated under 1000mhz. Powered "booster" splitters cause issues, and multiple splits can cause issues too. As long as each room is a home-run all should be fine but if there are issues, these are the things to check.

reasonerkevin
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I have used the ActionTec (now known as ScreenBeam) MoCA adapters for 4 years now and they work fantastic, giving me 1gb wired network speeds all through my home. Speedtest averages around 940Mbps down, 940Mbps up using AT&T Fiber for my internet provider. You can mix other brands in your MoCA network and they'll work fine... I have one of the Motorola MoCA adapters on a guest bedroom and it works with the ActionTec adapters.

mowcowbell
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We just bought a house in December that was built in 91 that is wired very well with coax all over the place even the kitchen. MoCa saved the day for us! So easy and fast!

AskMeWhen
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Bro! It’s important to tell everyone that you log into your AT&T gateway and place it in BRIDGE mode, to ensure you allow your Deco system to fully take over.
Just turning off the wifi broadcasting won’t do ya any good. You’ll experience intermittent connectivity.

joeykahng
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I also have been using MoCA for over 10 years (Tivo User). The modem router supplied by Comcast/Xfinity has it built in, but I did have to get assistance to enable it. It works flawlessly with no technical setup. I do have a filter to stop the signal at the demarc and a signal booster as I have numerous cable connections and spliters.

johnsanten
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I've been using the gocoax moca 2.5 adapters since last summer to get a wired connection into my home theater and it's been great. Just a heads up though that it wasn't completely plug and play in my house. Initially I was only getting about 90 Mbps through it. It ended up being due to 2 issues. One was I have a loose connection on one of my wall plates. The other was due to the cheap splitters that Cox or DTV (not sure who last touched before I moved in) used. Once I redid those connections I'm benchmarking over 900 on my gig connection now. I should fixed the wiring now to the far end of the house to put another node there with an AP to give a stronger connection to my cameras.

DesertILI
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Make sure you check behind that coax wall plate. Make sure that fitting is good. Lots of homes with pre-wired coax have bad fittings (braid coming out the back of the fitting, dielectric suck out, excessively long center conductor, braid wrapped around the center conductor) I could go on and on. These fittings were most likely installed by the builder, and they just don't have the experience with attaching compression style fittings.

InnovationTechWI
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WOW, YOU JUST REINVENTED MoCa lol. I am a former DirecTV installer, which I started by 1996. I made my first MoCa connection by 2008, after my MoCa training. Yeah, there is a lot advantage using MoCa, the primary reason was, distance, and time and labor saver. The most important thing I love about it is NOT speed nor packets lost. In some cases MoCa is obsolete use, mean while, for COAX LOVERS it is still a breath.

FelixLantiguaCamacho
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I too have Ethernet running throughout my house from a communications ingress in my first floor closet. Used a MoCa device to hardwire my office that didn’t have a network drop. Very easy to do.

eljefeyt
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Very helpful information, indeed! We have coax cables running to practically every room in our home. Our current setup with Spectrum cable internet is that the internet cable enters our home in the utility room in the farthest north corner of our basement. From there, there is a dedicated coax cable running to my office in the farthest south corner of the basement where we have our WiFi router to send a wireless signal to the entire house (5, 000 square feet). We then have a WiFi extender on the main floor somewhat close to the location of the WiFi router in the basement. This has been working pretty well for the most part to get a signal to the basement rooms, the Roku in the master bedroom and kitchen on the main floor and outside in the back yard. I like the idea of using the existing coax cables to increase the signal to other parts of our home. Until recently, our only option for internet service has been Spectrum cable. AT&T Fiber is now available to our home. We scheduled an appointment to have someone come to our home and get us connected but, we were not happy with how they were going to install it. Simply drill a hole straight through the wall (from the inside to the outside) in my basement office which would have been about six feet above the floor. We said, "Absolutely not!". We are going to ask an AT&T rep to come back out so we can discuss in more detail how they are going to get the line from the node to our home, where it needs to enter our home, what will be on the outside, where it needs to enter our home on the inside, what requirements are needed near the inside entry point (electrical outlet, etc.) so we can ensure proper installation. We were not impressed with that initial visit. The main thing is this video opened my eyes to more possibilities and things to consider before we make a change in our internet provider. So, I thank you for sharing this with us!

peterwinstonaldredge
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I dumped my cable TV (keeping ethernet) and then used MoCA adapters with ROKU across my internal coax cables. Works great throughout the house and saved myself $130/mo. Just needed the correct filter where the main coax comes into the house.

bme
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After spending thousands of dollars on different routers and Mesh systems over the years, I found this to be a great and fast solution. I used the one with the 2.5Gb ethernet jack and it served as a good backhaul for my Mesh system. Last week my internet provider marked the ground for fibre optic installation. They offer 8Gb internet speeds. I called my electrician and had the whole house done properly with Cat 8 Cables with ethernet jack outlets. Also, I upgraded my Wifi Mesh and purchased 2 Asus AXE 16000 (it has 2 10Gbe ports) routers. Finally, I bought a bunch of 10Gb switches to finish up this setup.
The MOCA setup is definitely great for those who need convenience and do not require more than 2.5Gb network speeds.

aalberto
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Just a heads up, new high split implementation from Spectrum and Comcast will disable this feature. They will utilize the higher frequencies from MOCA

nikolanaumovski
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One tip: Since the deco xe75 pro has three ethernet ports, you can use the 3rd port on your main router to go straight to the moca adapter. I have it setup this way for one less hop to the nodes.

NoName-viee