9/16/2023 0 Comments Rogers cable moca adapters![]() ![]() The input jack is connected to the inbound RG-6 cable, and the modem is connected to the output jack. There are other adapters on the market which have two coaxial jacks, one for input, one for output. The latest Actiontech ECB6250 adapter only has one coaxial jack, so you would need a second splitter to connect the modem and adapter to the inbound cable. The satellite splitter has to provide that same range from the output port to the input port and reverse.ĭepending on which adapter you buy, you might not need that second splitter. ![]() The MoCA 2 splitter provides the internal port to port frequency range which supports the MoCA Delta-High/Extended band, which runs up to 1675 Mhz. One key point is that you need a MoCA 2 qualified splitter as the main splitter, with a high frequency splitter such as a satellite splitter for the second splitter which then connects to the adapter which then connects to the router. *Added setup that you included will work, or should work as expected. What I'm unsure of is first, whether this is a feasible setup and second, how is the adapter hooked up to the router? Should it be via the LAN port? The other slight concern (but I think this is the point in the Filter) is that no one outside my home will be able to gain access to my NAS or computer_A. Ideally, I'd like "computer_A" to be able to access the NAS. ![]() Incoming -> Cable -> MoCA -> MoCA -> cable -> splitter -> ModemĬable Ground POE splitter -> MoCA adapter -> router -> NASīlock Filter -> cable -> adapter -> computer_A In a recent thread, I saw an example of a setup like this but I've modified it to be closer to what I'd like. I'm confused about how to hook up my router with the adapters and the modem such that I still just have one network with all my devices on it.Ī lot of setups/diagrams I've seen indicate that I'd need splitters. What I'm confused about is how I can do this using my own router with the modem in bridge mode. In simpler terms, I'd just like to 'extend' my current LAN using coax (and I only need to extend it to one other room). What I'd like to do is to use the existing coax runs in my home to hook up an ethernet backhaul to a mesh node (technically it doesn't even have to be a mesh node but could just be to connect another device like a PC). My understanding is that in bridge mode, there's no MoCA enablement from the 4582 but I could be wrong. I've currently got a CODA-4582 (which supports MoCA 2.0) but I prefer to use my own router and put the modem in bridge mode. This is not my preferred solution as there is a NAT behind a NAT now.ĭoes anyone know what i should be looking at to solve this problem? Power levels in modem seem to be fine, so i am thinking its not an ISP issue, though knowing Rogers, I am not 100% convinced it isnt.There's been a slew of threads lately on MoCA and I have my own questions on setup. So far, seems to have stopped the random disconnects from ISP. ISP Tech put modem in gateway mode for testing. I recently reverted to stock openwrt image to try and eliminate bad configuration, with no success. I am unable to read logs on the modem (doesnt seem to store any.Rogers/canada ISP) Nothing in system log tells me why this would be happening. ![]() Randomly 3 times an hour the modem will disconnect from ISP.
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