Convert Your Coax Into POWERFUL Ethernet

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  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 717

  • @SteveDOES
    @SteveDOES  Před rokem +15

    Thanks for checking out this video. Hope you learned something new.
    ► Look For More Of My Content Here - bit.ly/45yyC1U

    • @reginacastaneda4955
      @reginacastaneda4955 Před 3 měsíci

      Hey! I’d love to know why you used a switch instead of going from the Deco straight to the MoCA. Currently trying to solve a problem and that answer would help big time. Thanks!!!😊
      - Big fan

    • @SteveDOES
      @SteveDOES  Před 3 měsíci

      @@reginacastaneda4955 you could go straight from the Deco to the MoCA but, i have 12 additional cables running throughout my house so that's why i'm using a switch.

    • @chrisbullock6477
      @chrisbullock6477 Před 4 dny

      can something like a netgear 4 port switch be used on one of your outlets. Like in a media room where you have computers and other electronics?

  • @stevenz933
    @stevenz933 Před rokem +50

    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!

    • @isaiahalmodovar2036
      @isaiahalmodovar2036 Před 7 měsíci

      I've gotten the same moca adapter along with the moca router/extender and I can't seem to get anything connected, I have my adapter connected to the main router via ethernet, than the coax cable running to the router/extender yet can't seem to get internet even though it shows up on my wifi list & the coax cable doesn't light up on either ends of the moca devices even tho being connected directly, is there a way to fix these issues?

    • @stevenz933
      @stevenz933 Před 7 měsíci +3

      @@isaiahalmodovar2036 You may have a defective MoCA adapter(s). Test it by simply connecting a short maybe 2 feet of coax cable between the two adapters. If you still don't get the "Coax lights" to shine on both devices, then consider one or both adapters are defective. Good luck!

    • @Superman-xr1oh
      @Superman-xr1oh Před 2 měsíci +2

      ​​@@stevenz933It's not always the adapter. Linus from Linus Tech tried using MoCA adapters on one of his employee's internet setup and couldn't get it to work, adapters weren't defective. It depends on the coax wiring in your hous..

    • @Swordfish393
      @Swordfish393 Před 19 dny

      *Voilà

  • @JohnD-JohnD
    @JohnD-JohnD Před rokem +16

    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.

    • @dfektd1
      @dfektd1 Před rokem

      Thats something i want but im not smart enough to tackle this myself. The thought of me drilling and making holes in all the walls and not to mention the dangers of the whole operation... my partner will go ape shyt on me.

    • @philmccracken2012
      @philmccracken2012 Před rokem

      @@dfektd1 partner? Business partner? Or do you mean your wife or husband?

    • @dfektd1
      @dfektd1 Před rokem

      @@philmccracken2012 the wifey lol

  • @reasonerkevin
    @reasonerkevin Před rokem +147

    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.

    • @SteveDOES
      @SteveDOES  Před rokem +17

      Great advice! Thanks Kevin.

    • @steelfalconx2000
      @steelfalconx2000 Před rokem +4

      Yes any amplifier has to be moca bypass or it will kill the signal.

    • @stevenortiz8525
      @stevenortiz8525 Před rokem +3

      I think this is happening to me. I'm getting really low speeds and a ping of 40-50. I didn't expect to get 1 gbps but something like 400-500 would show me it's actually working. I don't even know how to get to the splitters. I think they're in the walls.

    • @reasonerkevin
      @reasonerkevin Před rokem +3

      @@stevenortiz8525 Any splitters are likely be in the attic, crawlspace, or behind a wall plate as they would need to be accessible if they go bad.

    • @nathanlowery1141
      @nathanlowery1141 Před rokem +3

      @@reasonerkevin depends on the age of the house. I’ve found them behind drywall in walls and in between sub floors.

  • @joeykahng6219
    @joeykahng6219 Před rokem +108

    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.

    • @AndyIno
      @AndyIno Před rokem +11

      Double NAT galore

    • @tekshield
      @tekshield Před rokem +4

      My DECO System issues IP's on a separate subnet than the AT&T Router, so I don't see any benefit in switching to Bridge mode. I am not having any issues and my internet speeds seem fine.

    • @rickrodriguez121
      @rickrodriguez121 Před rokem +10

      @@tekshield You're still in double NAT. It won't stop you, but it isn't ideal. Not best practice.

    • @rickrodriguez121
      @rickrodriguez121 Před rokem +7

      There are really two ways to tackle this. You can disable WIFI on the ATT router and then put your mesh units in access point mode. So they only do WiFi. That's fine. Or you can put it in bridge mode and have the Meshes do everything. The latter is ideal, but some ISPs are real arseholes about not seeing their router live.

    • @tekshield
      @tekshield Před rokem +4

      @@rickrodriguez121 I should of updated this, I went ahead a put into pass through mode!

  • @gulielmi2002
    @gulielmi2002 Před rokem +609

    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

    • @connorseemann5368
      @connorseemann5368 Před rokem +29

      That is precisely my thought and what I was planning on doing, fewer failure points too.

    • @gulielmi2002
      @gulielmi2002 Před rokem +30

      @J J the ones in my walls were stapled in using those nails in the shape of a U. it was loose enough for me to easily slide the coax and taped ethernet cable thru it. others might be different but all the ones I had would like this

    • @kevinacapps
      @kevinacapps Před rokem +44

      Totally agree, that is the better answer for regular size homes, but large homes with coax can go horizontal and vertical multiple times making it difficult to pull and more likely to snag somewhere sealed tight with fire resistant caulk or fire blocks. This product completely negates that issue while also letting the user keep there non-moca tv connection completely open and usable.

    • @dustinmuncy8740
      @dustinmuncy8740 Před rokem +36

      Hopefully others aren’t unlucky like myself… installers stapled the coax inside the walls before the drywall was hung.

    • @firenet3616
      @firenet3616 Před rokem +1

      Perfect! 😂

  • @chuckhowland5146
    @chuckhowland5146 Před rokem +27

    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.

    • @Dunnaveli
      @Dunnaveli Před rokem +2

      did this today for my ps5 no regrets

    • @ariesrising7257
      @ariesrising7257 Před rokem +3

      I used MoCa 2.5 adapters connected from my router in panel in laundry room to each coax cable and no problems.

  • @AskMeWhen
    @AskMeWhen Před rokem +5

    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!

    • @TheRealJLucas
      @TheRealJLucas Před rokem

      How much does it cost to buy a MoCa adapter and install it on each end, on each home run on your network? are these devices inexpensive?

  • @FelixLantiguaCamacho
    @FelixLantiguaCamacho Před rokem +1

    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.

  • @mowcowbell
    @mowcowbell Před rokem +42

    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.

    • @ytvideos101
      @ytvideos101 Před 5 měsíci

      I have 3 family members working from home that need hi-speed connectivity in each office location. So does that mean I would need 3 screen beam MoCA adapters, 1 for each room?
      TIA!

    • @mowcowbell
      @mowcowbell Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@ytvideos101 If they require an ethernet connection and can't use Wifi, then yes.

  • @InnovationTechWI
    @InnovationTechWI Před rokem +6

    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.

  • @DesertILI
    @DesertILI Před rokem +15

    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.

  • @johnsanten
    @johnsanten Před rokem +16

    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.

    • @BigWill3855
      @BigWill3855 Před rokem +2

      Wish I would have known this 4 years ago

  • @eljefe7070yt
    @eljefe7070yt Před rokem +1

    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.

  • @Clean97gti
    @Clean97gti Před rokem +1

    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.

  • @danc4046
    @danc4046 Před rokem

    This is how I have my home network set up. Even have the non-pro XE75. Love it, rock solid wifi signal in every corner of the house.

  • @ExploringLifeWithChris
    @ExploringLifeWithChris Před 9 měsíci +9

    Great concept. I never thought about reusing my old coaxial connectors this way. 👍🏽

  • @technerd9655
    @technerd9655 Před rokem +53

    As for the TP-Link Deco Mesh systems, in my experience they are a great bang for the buck. I typically deploy the P9 3 pack (when peak speeds are not required and stability and reliability are higher priorities) due to its use of powerline networking+wifi or ethernet+wifi combined backhaul for homes with walls that impede wireless (structural walls tend to do this, washrooms with a wire mesh in the floor to support tile, etc.) or where there are no electrical outlets available in the ideal locations for each AP (which I find common in homes here). Unfortunately the P9 is EoL and it's replacement the PX50 appears to be US only (TP-Link Canada told me they have no plans to bring it to Canada). I would love a hybrid mesh kit that supports max WiFi 6/6E speeds, ethernet backhaul, MoCA 2.5/3.0 backhaul, and Powerline AV2 2000 backhaul, that would be the mesh kit I'd provide clients without even considering anything else other than Uniquiti UniFi (which of course would be more expensive)

    • @TheRealJLucas
      @TheRealJLucas Před rokem

      Very nice

    • @mar4kl
      @mar4kl Před rokem +2

      I'll second all of that. I'm a professional IT consultant, and the P9 3-pack has been my go-to mesh kit for the last couple of years. I've worked with all the other major manufacturers' mesh kits, and they all require multiple attempts to get access points online, and then, after the mesh is up, I've often gotten called back when access points fall offline. None of the TP-Link kits I've deployed win speed competitions, but they have yet to generate an unhappy client. They set up like clockwork, usually on the first attempt, and they usually stay up until someone unplugs an access point or the power fails.

    • @technerd9655
      @technerd9655 Před rokem +2

      @@mar4kl Yeah, the P9 3 pack is great! I used it in a client's home, it's a split-level home with a thick load bearing wall in the middle of the home with no wifi and the home was likely built in the '60s, not sure when the basement was done, '90s or '00s probably, so a mix of older and newer electrical. Could not get a wifi signal from the upper levels to the basement with any normal router or mesh system because of the wall and the available power outlets for 2nd floor were not ideal from a wifi perspective. The P9 solved this problem perfectly, older electrical wiring, bad power outlet locations, thick wall and all! As long as the customer doesn't mind not having peak performance and prefers reliability and stability, then this kit makes for a happy customer!
      I've used Linksys Velops successfully too and heard good things about Netgear Orbis (mind you, not really a mesh system, but close enough), but despite the lower price points and supposed lack of features (tri-band with dedicated 5GHz backhaul, etc.), the Decos punch above their weight class! Just too bad the P9 is EOL and the replacement PX50 isn't expected to come to Canada. We need more hybrid powerline mesh kits.

    • @alvallac2171
      @alvallac2171 Před rokem

      *its replacement (possessive)
      it's = contraction of "it is" or "it has"
      All contractions use apostrophes. Possessive pronouns never do.

    • @SonOfAdolf
      @SonOfAdolf Před 5 měsíci +1

      What is sad, sad person you are. I truly feel bad for you.

  • @peterwinstonaldredge6927

    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!

    • @SonOfAdolf
      @SonOfAdolf Před 5 měsíci

      Do it yourself or hire a pro

  • @Rabblewitz
    @Rabblewitz Před rokem +4

    Back in the day, ethernet was run using Coax, so no surprise there. 🙂 The bummer is that we only have three Coax connections in our house, and mostly in the wrong areas for something like this. When we built the house 25+ years ago, we had ethernet put in ... unfortunately for nowdays, all Cat 5. Worked great for many years ... initially ran off a 10 Mbps hub ... but now it restricts anyone on the network (I connect directly to the Router, but no one else can) to about 80 Mbps. I've been thinking about adding Mesh to make my wife happier.

    • @ivekuukkeli2156
      @ivekuukkeli2156 Před rokem

      Really so. Ethernet started with thick-coax, then come thin-coax with BNC-connectors, both with tapped connections in the middle, then come AT&T_Systimax + RJ-45 with start shaped cabling, now Systimax is called Cat-cable.

  • @bme7491
    @bme7491 Před rokem +2

    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.

  • @aalberto4961
    @aalberto4961 Před rokem

    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.

  • @KonfusedDude
    @KonfusedDude Před rokem

    I wish I had seen this six months ago when I set up my vacation home with extra mesh routers that I probably didn't need. Great info thank you. I will now go back and do it right.

  • @okinawadonkichi
    @okinawadonkichi Před 2 dny

    I have a single ActionTec MoCA adapter connected to my router. This allowed me to get rid of the Verizon FiOS router which also acted as a MoCA adapter for the 3 cable boxes while still allowing for on demand and interactive content. Works wonderfully.

  • @NoName-vi3ee
    @NoName-vi3ee Před rokem +9

    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.

  • @travis1240
    @travis1240 Před rokem +3

    Yeah have been using MOCA for 7-8 years now. It's the backhaul of my mesh wifi network. Most streaming apps work a lot better over a wired connection and MOCA fits the need.

  • @wilsonvalderrama1131
    @wilsonvalderrama1131 Před rokem +1

    Couple years ago i was looking for this option but there werent many options so now i know its viable. Thanks for this video.

  • @jap322
    @jap322 Před rokem +23

    Thank you. I didn’t know this was possible. I am faced with the same situation trying to set up a backhaul for my mesh system. This was great help… thanks 🙏🏽

  • @waynethompson1115
    @waynethompson1115 Před rokem +2

    For ppl who cant figure out their coax, they sell a simple toner at Lowes or Home depot. If you're using a cable company, you will need a mocha filter at the demarc, outside hookup, to prevent mocha from getting in the mainline.

  • @boondockmutiny9955
    @boondockmutiny9955 Před rokem +1

    I have fiber run to my house but no ethernet to the rooms. So I used the existing coax with moca 2.5gb adapters, ran the fiber ONT into the moca and then from moca back to ethernet into a pfsense router. Using that existing coax that was doing nothing to avoid running ethernet and destroying some walls. It works!

  • @Angie-ei9yw
    @Angie-ei9yw Před 24 dny

    Steve I’m getting ready to wire up my villa after watching your videos. I ordered my pieces needed and get started tomorrow. Fingers crossed! 👍

  • @nikolanaumovski720
    @nikolanaumovski720 Před rokem +3

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

  • @MikePowlas
    @MikePowlas Před rokem +3

    You can have one MOCA at modem feeding more than one MOCA thru-out the home. They are great to use.

  • @agtechnology8999
    @agtechnology8999 Před rokem

    What I have is a MoCA block installed in the ceiling of my basement. So, basically it allows you to pump in the signal from the screenbeam then it sends the ethernet signal out through all of the coaxial terminations in your home simultaneously. So, same thing as you have here except instead of plugging the screebeam into one coaxial, you tie it into the coaxial MoCA splitter block.

  • @technerd9655
    @technerd9655 Před rokem +8

    I see that you covered the RJ-45 CAT5/5E/6 jack with tape, are you planning to replace your existing network cable with MoCA? Unless your cabling is older CAT5 (most CAT5 made in the last 10 years is probably actually CAT5E even if no5 rated as such), then I would not use MoCA as a replacement, only in addition to. My recommended hierarchy of different LAN connectivity is as follows:
    1) Fibre (only if money is not really a concern)
    2) CAT5E/6/6A
    3) MoCA 2.5 (or soon 3.0, but. MoCA adapters can get expensive, at least here in Canada)
    4) MoCA 1.0/2.0 (only if 2.5 is not available to you)
    5) Powerline networking (preferably the AV2 2000 spec for close to full duplex gigabit speeds, no experience with the latest Gh.n standard from Europe that is used by TP-Link in their latest hybrid powerline mesh wifi system PX50, which unfortuantly wont come to Canada apparently)
    6) WiFi (unless mobility is required or not supported, such as new Roku and most smart home devices (don't even get me started in the lack of wired options for smart home devices) WiFi is lowest priority for me.
    I tell customers all the time wired is ALWAYS superior to wireless, unless mobility is required, most are baffled by this and don't seem to understand. Oh the power of marketing.

  • @StambaughDesignsBellingham
    @StambaughDesignsBellingham Před 11 měsíci

    LUCKY YOU to have all your coax cables neatly organized into the box…I have ONE coax cable that works in the entire house so I need to go underneath and try to figure out how I can drag it to the other side of the house and up into the wall to move my internet setup…nice.

  • @pickelsvonbrine
    @pickelsvonbrine Před rokem +13

    I used MoCA adapters to put wifi into a 15000 sq house a few years ago. They had home run coax to each room. Ended up installing 7 wifi routers to cover the entire home. I used software to see signal strength and moved things around as needed. They had barely any coverage to full coverage. One room on the east end had a 3 foot thick wall of brick and stone from an old expansion.
    The other part is I had to HIDE the routers....

    • @Clean97gti
      @Clean97gti Před rokem

      Why did you use routers everywhere?

    • @THANOS_Disciple
      @THANOS_Disciple Před rokem

      @@Clean97gti I think the idea is that it adds wifi wireless signal strength to all sides of the home. Acts like a mesh system but better, along with extra ethernet plugins for each router. I'm thinking of doing the same but with 2 routers or maybe 3.

    • @Clean97gti
      @Clean97gti Před rokem +2

      @@THANOS_Disciple Don't use routers. Use wireless access points.
      If need be, put a PoE switch in to run the AP and give you the extra network port you need. There are also access points that will give you an additional LAN port on-board. Unifi and Ruckus both come to mind. Even the TP Link Deco Mesh units give you an additional port.

    • @ToddMoore1
      @ToddMoore1 Před 8 měsíci

      15000sqft house?😮 Well done

    • @pickelsvonbrine
      @pickelsvonbrine Před 8 měsíci

      @@Clean97gti I dodn't have much of a choice but to use wireless routers. This was several years ago when ACs were crap. Also, i could not use PoE. There was no direct ethernet. I ended up having to create a moca network for everything.

  • @steelfalconx2000
    @steelfalconx2000 Před rokem +1

    As a fiber optic installer sending 2gigs over moca 2.5... yeah it works good 👍

  • @dhbwifiguy
    @dhbwifiguy Před rokem +5

    I’ve been told “MoCA is the home run”. It is amazingly fast. I’ve also found homes that have CAT 5 run for the home phone which nobody uses anymore. That is an easy conversion for hi-speed Wi-Fi.

    • @adamr4198
      @adamr4198 Před rokem +4

      I’ve seen videos where the installer uses the old telephone wire to pull the new CAT 5/6 wires through the walls and into the desired rooms.

    • @dhbwifiguy
      @dhbwifiguy Před rokem +1

      @@adamr4198 That is one that I will keep in my back pocket. Thanks!

    • @Super3DFlyer
      @Super3DFlyer Před rokem

      I'm getting 1GB over my Cat 5, not 5e, but Cat 5. Even had the ability to plug in some POE Unifi inwalls without issue to the regular cat 5, and it works great.

    • @GuidoLoko
      @GuidoLoko Před rokem +1

      @@adamr4198 That’s what I’ve been doing for several years, I wired every “phone jack” (PSTN?) in my house, to be used strictly used for internet data, it’s nice to have Ethernet connections all over the house…..it just sucks that all these “smart devices” only run on wifi.
      I’m looking to bypass this crap modem/router (moto BGW210) that AT&T uses for my 1g fiber internet, the WiFi signal blows!
      I’m thinking I can get by with 2 mesh devices…..any thoughts?

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 Před rokem

      Cat 5 isn't for home phone

  • @johnmcelroy7042
    @johnmcelroy7042 Před rokem +6

    I don't know if anyone mentioned it, but it is a good idea to put a MoCA Point of Entry filter on your cable inlet to avoid having your network go back up the cable line outside of your house.

    • @michaelgrimmett5612
      @michaelgrimmett5612 Před rokem

      This!!!

    • @slkfjariao
      @slkfjariao Před rokem

      lol, that's too advanced for this CZcamsr. Don't worry, just send all your network traffic to your entire town by doing the method shown in this video. CZcams is great, but sometimes in this example, it's really not. Perhaps the CZcamsr might take a intro to networking class first.

    • @zacklundgren
      @zacklundgren Před 10 měsíci

      @@slkfjariao Looked to me he only hooked to individual panel to room lines, not a splitter

  • @shysnip3r15
    @shysnip3r15 Před rokem +1

    If you place your mesh waypoints within a proper range from the main hub and the device supports wifi 6E it should always fluctuate between 700 - 900 mb/s wirelessly .

  • @marshred
    @marshred Před rokem +1

    I log into my ISPs modem/router and turn off the wifi and put it into NAT Bridge mode. Now it only works as a Modem. Then I use my own business class router to manage the Clients in my home. WiFi access points, TVs, Computers, Phones and large Security Camera system are all managed much easier with your own Router and APs.

  • @someoneoncesaid6978
    @someoneoncesaid6978 Před rokem +21

    MoCA 3.0 is supposed to start shipping pretty much any time now. It's rated at 10Gbps. If you're looking at getting into MoCA and can wait a bit longer, it's probably worth it to wait until later this year / early next year for the massive speed boost of the new version.

    • @devonsykes2598
      @devonsykes2598 Před rokem

      Moca 3.0 is very out dated we’ve been using moca 3.1 for years

    • @someoneoncesaid6978
      @someoneoncesaid6978 Před rokem

      @@devonsykes2598 - Huh??? Can you point me to a shipping MoCA 3.0 or 3.1 adapter currently on the market? The MoCA 3.0 specs were released in 2018, with the first commercial chips expected to start being available to product manufacturers in late 2022 / early 2023. Once the chips are available, then companies will probably take a couple months to ramp up production of products and put them on the market.
      There's literally no MoCA 3.1 spec even on the MoCA alliance roadmap, let alone shipping product (which is usually several years after a spec is released).
      Maybe you're confusing MoCA with HomePNA 3.1? But, HomePNA 3.1 has a maximum speed of 320Mbps, where MoCA 2.5 has a maximum speed of 2.5Gbps and MoCA 3.0 has a maximum speed of 10Gbps.

    • @devonsykes2598
      @devonsykes2598 Před rokem

      @@someoneoncesaid6978 no lol moca 3.0 has been homes for years. I’m a cable technician…. I instal moca 3.1 modems on the daily. Very little people still use dated 3.0 modems

    • @devonsykes2598
      @devonsykes2598 Před rokem

      @@someoneoncesaid6978 hitron makes a moca 3.1 so does airis and sagecom… I install multiple a day

    • @devonsykes2598
      @devonsykes2598 Před rokem +1

      @@someoneoncesaid6978 it’s impossible to achieve more than a GB of speed in a coax line anyways. Fiber yes coax is limited. Like I said search up sagecoms wifi 6 or hitron 3.1 moca it’s like a tall box Bassicly

  • @ejvegajr
    @ejvegajr Před rokem +1

    You don't even need the gateway installed. You can remove it completely. The internet is actually coming from the smaller coax box called ONT

  • @dbess1
    @dbess1 Před 3 měsíci

    FINALLY an easy solution to my back haul problem. Thank you! Subscribed

  • @tp2100
    @tp2100 Před rokem +8

    Another great video! I wish more people would talk about MoCA adapters and how they could save a lot of money and time!

    • @TheRealJLucas
      @TheRealJLucas Před rokem

      odds are you would not save money in the long run But definitely save time.

  • @turtletrade
    @turtletrade Před rokem

    Great vid. I have fiber to the home that connects in my basement. From the switch I use a straight run coax leftover from an old dish system (via goCoax adapters) to my eero Wi-Fi router upstairs: 500 Mbps up/down.

  • @tksoul22
    @tksoul22 Před rokem

    I love this I’ve never thought about using moca for these type up setups. Great video. 👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾

  • @sprtndlx
    @sprtndlx Před rokem +1

    I've been using the screenbeam for a while now, it's better overall to just try to install ethernet anyways using the existing coax routes but if you are renting this is just fine. could vary depending on if you have cable tv or not despite them being on different frequencies

  • @jeffgrey675
    @jeffgrey675 Před rokem +3

    Just installed a set of screen beams in a 100+ year old house with virtually no access to pull new cat 6 cabling! Saved me so much work of trying to pull cabling! Of course the coax wasn’t labeled so it was the last coax cable I tried out of 4 that connected to an old 3 way switch!

  • @JackRussell021
    @JackRussell021 Před rokem

    That's pretty similar to what I have in our house MoCA over the cable for a backhaul between two mesh routers.

  • @richardconrad698
    @richardconrad698 Před rokem

    Good video, I hadn't thought about this as an option! I use the Deco X60 (great deals at Costco), and the ethernet backhaul is a must in my opinion! I did buy a switch and put the routers into AP mode, which completely disabled all of the built-in software features of the Tp-link devices... So I returned the switch and bought an unmanned switch. Modem-Deco1-unmanned switch-deco2/deco3/nas/future deco4

  • @donnelmoss757
    @donnelmoss757 Před rokem

    Yo thank you so much for showing us this device. I was wondering how I can fix a issue I had and you answered it. Coax to Ethernet Thank you.

  • @user-so6wu2wd2s
    @user-so6wu2wd2s Před 7 měsíci

    Steve, your videos are great! I've been frustrated by the interior coverage of Verizon FiOS wifi in my home. I don't have a ton of devices, but smart TV coverage is the most frustrating. Typically only have one TV on at a time and distance from that to a FiOS repeater is not more than 35 feet (same level of the house with almost direct line of sight). Instead of renting a second extender from FiOS, I'm thinking mesh wifi. My big question is do I still need the FiOS proprietary modem/router as the initial node in the network? I have bundled TV/Internet/Phone. I'm also considering cutting the cord on TV and going Internet/streaming only but have a lot more research to do on that. Thanks!

  • @skwira000
    @skwira000 Před rokem +1

    The biggest thing is be careful that one of your cable or satellite boxes are not already using MoCa. Whole home DVRs often use MoCa. I used MoCa to network 2 TiVos and it was the way to go.

  • @jeremykerr2790
    @jeremykerr2790 Před rokem

    How does the speed, performance and stability compare when doing it this way vs. a powerline adapter? I ask because I'm currently using a powerline adapter to connect all my devices upstairs when the cable modem and main cable input are downstairs.
    The powerline adapter I'm using provides dual ethernet out so that I can hard-wire my wireless mesh device upstairs and one other device of my choosing. I also have a coax output in the same room as my powerline adapter upstairs, so would the MoCA provide significant speed/performance/stability improvements if I went direct to the mesh device and bypassed the powerline adapter?

  • @tpadave2203
    @tpadave2203 Před měsícem

    Been using moca for years now and twice I had a problem with a malfunctioning action tech causing issues and disconnects with the rest of my system. Went through 2 expensive routers last time before unplugging the actiontec and the router worked flawlessly after that. New screenbeam and all is well.

  • @Wraith_of_Wrath
    @Wraith_of_Wrath Před měsícem

    Something additional you should mention is once everything is connected, unplug and reboot all equipment and those speeds should be even better once everything has been reset.

  • @rfrancoi
    @rfrancoi Před rokem +2

    DAMN! Now THAT was a GREAT video. Very informative, and well delivered. Thank you Mr. DOES.

  • @Adam1llion
    @Adam1llion Před rokem +1

    Since my router using the coax cable in the gameroom would I use a coax splitter? One side is router other side is the ScreenBeam device? Then I plug in the other ScreenBeam where I want the connect to go?

  • @user-bc5vb4ww3y
    @user-bc5vb4ww3y Před 7 měsíci

    Great video. I have the same set up as you except my extender is Eero. My cable modem is in the basement. I was able to find the coax to my office which is upstairs. I can see on the Eero app that it is wired to the right room. Unfortunately it is only modestly boosting the speed. I don't think the connections are off so I am trying to figure out why there is no appreciable increase. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks.

  • @ajohns1382
    @ajohns1382 Před rokem +1

    Hi, is there a way to convert the coax wall port to a analog line? My builder put coax cables throughout my house and in my office I have no telephone line port for my fax machine but 2 coax ports.

  • @tekshield
    @tekshield Před rokem +3

    My biggest issue so far with ATT Fiber is, they installed the router in my Garage. I am concerned that heat will negatively impact the router come summer time. I may have to consider investing in having a Fiber drop installed from the Entry point of the house to the Wiring closet.

    • @IwCk
      @IwCk Před rokem +1

      You will be fine unless the temp go over 60+° C in your garage.

    • @tekshield
      @tekshield Před rokem +1

      @@IwCk Thanks, that is also what AT&T told me, so for now I will just monitor it. Thank you!

    • @starmc26
      @starmc26 Před rokem +2

      It'll be fine, really.

  • @PeatyR
    @PeatyR Před rokem

    Question, cable connections are throughout my house. One of them is used to connect to my cable Modem, which is connected to my wifi Orbi router. Can I use a cable splitter and use the same cable outlet that feeds my modem to the screenbeam device to connect to my wifi Router? Will the signal piggyback on the cable to send to a cable jack elsewhere in the house? I have a spot that needs a stronger signal than my mesh system will deliver.

  • @vincetheveganprince
    @vincetheveganprince Před 6 měsíci

    I am just learning about this from you and very excited to do it but I have a question. I'm going to get the Deco XE75 3-pack so does that mean I'll need 6 adapters total for the wired backhaul?

  • @SimpTote
    @SimpTote Před rokem

    Pretty cool. Kind of reminds me of powerline adapters.

  • @dalotheman1
    @dalotheman1 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Can you use a 4 to 1 coax splitter at the router? I have 4 coax cable runs and it seems like a lot of clutter at the modem.

  • @giogio6974
    @giogio6974 Před 7 měsíci

    What do you need the splitter for? Also, if I have a current mesh system and i want to plug a few of them in by ethernet through coax, will they still function properly like a mesh system or will they behave like independant access points?

  • @YoutubeUser_2020
    @YoutubeUser_2020 Před rokem

    You suggested a good idea. However my room has single TV receptacle. How can I use it to connect to the modem and through a coax/Ethernet adapter to the router at the same time?

  • @claytonjames4779
    @claytonjames4779 Před 3 měsíci

    I have frontier internet in southern California and the mocha adapters that they install in my house Would fail regularly and they actually sent a tech out to disable them all. I hope these will work better

  • @companyoflosers
    @companyoflosers Před 5 měsíci

    the problem is with a modern home network structure, you likely want all the cable to go back to one location inside your house like a closet or a wall panel somewhere. Mine on the other hand all goes back outside where the main line from my provider comes into the house outside my garage. I don't want my network rack in my garage. Where I live is SUPER warm and humid and electronics will not do well out there. The best place would be an unused closet on the complete opposite end of the house, so I cant even use the old coax cable to fish through new Ethernet cable and even if I could, most builders clamp or nail cable to the framing of the house instead of being sensible and using conduit.

  • @anthonygiordano1126
    @anthonygiordano1126 Před rokem

    27 years ago, when I had my house built, I had the builder wire each room with 2 coaxial cables and 2 phone lines! I was going to use the second coaxial cable to send video through out the house from my laserdisc player and 3 years later my TiVo. After a few years I wanted to network my 2 desktop computers and I didn’t want to hassle of running cat5 cables through my walls, so I repurposed the coax to network the computers. It worked well for years until WiFi came out .

  • @NotJiml72
    @NotJiml72 Před 10 měsíci

    Do you need to put an adapter where the internet enters your home? For Tivo I always needed one.

  • @DenisSmaglo
    @DenisSmaglo Před 3 měsíci +1

    Hey Steve! Can you do the same with the Powerline adapters? I.e. use them to connect two parts of the mesh system?

  • @SomeSloan
    @SomeSloan Před rokem

    Hey there! I just need some help understanding something ab using MoCa's.
    So I just wanted to know if I HAVE to have two MoCa devices? For example, I am trying to get an ethernet connection in my bedroom for my PC, and I have a coax outlet that does already receive signal in the room. I tested it with our wifi router and it worked as if it never knew it was moved to a whole different room, which was great! Only thing is we want to keep the router in the living room. So if the coax outlet already is putting out signal...do I need to have a second MoCa for the router? Or can I just buy a singular unit and put that in the room?
    Thank you for any advice!

  • @playstereo
    @playstereo Před rokem +2

    Thank you for the video. But I do not agree this is a solution, If your particular home they ran all the cables to one spot. Most cables installers from providers will run the cables to the outside of the home or garage depending on the setting and from there they will use a splitter. I want to say 80% of homes you will find this. You will have to reroute and rewire the Coax cable, might as well use CAT 6. You got lucky the cables were ran that way in your case.

  • @machdaddy6451
    @machdaddy6451 Před rokem

    I found out about MoCA, because my cable company uses it to network our DVR devices. I have been using MoCA devices for a few years now. It is such a great sollution.
    Your can just add a MoCA adapter with WiFi and in my experience it's superior to MESH WiFi.

  • @johnk3852
    @johnk3852 Před rokem

    Does this method limit you from using 6E? I thought you would need to run 6E ethernet through your house to use hard wire. Or do you just need to run 6E cable from the coax converter, and it will work?

  • @papafonde6773
    @papafonde6773 Před rokem

    the best part of any hardware change.....ok LETS SEE HOW FAST THIS BABY GOES!!!!! its really half the fun...

  • @courtney0485
    @courtney0485 Před rokem

    If I plan to run a deco mesh system with 2 satellites, do I need to do anything to my existing coax cable network? Or just put a Moca adapter at each router? FYI, all my wall jacks run to a splitter in the attic. I don't have any services currently running on this system.

  • @DerrickThomas17
    @DerrickThomas17 Před 11 měsíci

    Excellent video Steve. I stumbled upon your channel. I'll definitely be taking advantage of my coax cable now since I cut the cord 10 years ago.

    • @SteveDOES
      @SteveDOES  Před 11 měsíci

      Happy to hear this video was helpful:)

  • @PasPas29
    @PasPas29 Před rokem

    What about if your modem is conmected through a coax do you need to screenbeam adapters for it to work?? Thank you inadvance

  • @cl88888
    @cl88888 Před rokem

    thx for the video. It's great to see double speed of the Deco in the den... but is it possible to get the speed of what you paid for (1000 up & down) in the den? If you connect to the "main" Deco in your closet that connects directly to the cable modem, do you get 1000 up and down?

  • @bobbypeck5065
    @bobbypeck5065 Před rokem

    This Ethernet backhaul method do you get different SSID for each router? If yes so it isn't mesh network right?

  • @Tacticalpanda757
    @Tacticalpanda757 Před rokem +1

    If im just trying to get a Ethernet in my PC room that has a coax outlet, will one work?

  • @riffdex
    @riffdex Před rokem

    I don’t have any network boxes around my house (coax/Ethernet) except for the coax that comes into my house to provide my cable modem and ultimately router with internet access. I want to install network infrastructure in my house so there’s a panel in each room. I can run wires through the crawl space. I was just wondering if it’s necessary to put coax on each of these or would a more modernized setup just prioritize Ethernet? I have no intention of getting a cable TV Service. Also is there any sense in me installing optical fiber into the infrastructure to be ready for the future?

  • @BillBaran
    @BillBaran Před rokem +2

    Does it work with a loop?

  • @LostNomad95x
    @LostNomad95x Před 4 měsíci

    What do you think about power line adapters with Ethernet ports like the TP-link AV2000?

  • @1slyboy
    @1slyboy Před 11 měsíci

    Great video - I’ve been considering this but would prefer MoCA 3.0 with 10Gbs Ethernet when available.

  • @sohosterable
    @sohosterable Před 3 měsíci

    This is a life saver! Thanks for the video. If I were to get the ones with two coaxial connections, can I still pass through ethernet data since my existing coaxial to my computer room is for cable modem internet and not for TV?

  • @iananglum8701
    @iananglum8701 Před 9 měsíci

    Question,. Can I bypass using another router and still use my modem with wifi capabilities to use the mesh wifi with an attachment via coax? I would love to install a mesh node in another part of the house, but not need another router middle manning the modem and mesh system.

  • @nolodudes78
    @nolodudes78 Před rokem

    I have a nightowl NVR SYSTEM that requires power over eithernet. Do you think this conversion eithernet to coax to eithernet will power cameras?

  • @MiiV2
    @MiiV2 Před 10 měsíci

    Hey I was wondering so I don’t have cable tv but I have a coax. Do I actually need it or do I have to switch to eatherbet because it’s the thing that’s limiting me from moving my modem and router

  • @geo8rge
    @geo8rge Před rokem

    Does this MOCA stuff interfere with the cable box or adapter your cable provider supplied?

  • @sagarsriva
    @sagarsriva Před rokem

    Nice video. Thanks. Can you tell if more such MoCA pairs can be used in one home on a single cable network together? And also does it work on with cable running simultaneously?

  • @cfitt
    @cfitt Před 9 měsíci

    Hi, Love you videos! Do you think I can convert my Starlink Cat 6 line to Coax that runs through my home and then back to Cat 6 on the other side to my eeros router? Thank you!

  • @brianpiper3188
    @brianpiper3188 Před rokem +3

    That's all well and fine if you want shortcut and cheap. Realistically, a roll of cable isn't that expensive and the ability to have POE is a game changer. It's like using the wireless that's built into an ISP modem, just don't do it.

  • @xgoz
    @xgoz Před 6 měsíci

    Great vid! question: I have two homes on my property. I want to connect two routers to two locations connected to the same internet connection.
    The main home has main internet connection. The second home (mobile home) has the coax connection. Will this give me the solution that I am looking for two separate both routers to two homes connected to one network? Will this also give me two separate SSID?
    any insight is appreciated!

  • @AndrewJamison79
    @AndrewJamison79 Před 10 měsíci

    now using the backhaul feature would those other ethernet ports become bridged to the main unit? in essence making the other 2-3 poorts not used by the back haul just a network switch

  • @dr.yacovodonatopascual4427
    @dr.yacovodonatopascual4427 Před 4 měsíci

    It never crossed my mind convert my house' coax into Ethernet. However what I did was to use the tp-link AV2000 to convert current/power lines to Ethernet. What do you thingk about this conversation? Is it better to use the Coax-Ethernet option? I still have cable with Xfinity so I'm connecting their cable box from a wall coax. Thanks!