posted by yersinia29
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There is one main outlet in my 3 story house. The circuit setup is thus:
1) Main outlet
2) 20 feet of coax
3) Splitter
4) 20 feet of coax
5) Splitter
6) 20 feet of coax
7) Splitter
8) 5 feet of coax
9) cable modem
When I first hooked up the cable modem, it was able to receive/transmit data just fine. However, the next morning, it suddently stopped working. It couldnt connect to the internet.
So, I backed up the cable modem behind the first splitter (each splitter is 3 dB attenuation, which if I'm interpreting correctly, represents a 50% loss in signal power). When I hooked it up here, it worked fine for 1 day. The next morning (it always works fine at night, then stops working in the morning) it stopped working again.
So I backed up the modem behind the 2nd splitter, and it worked fine for 1 day. However, the very next day, you guessed it, it stopped working again.
I'm assuming that the signal is too weak for the cable modem and that I have to plug it directly into the main outlet with no splitters in between.
My question is, why did the cable modem work at all? If the signal is too weak, why did it consistently work for 1 day and then stop all of a sudden?
Does the traffic of the surrounding network in the neighborhood affect my signal reception? this just doesnt make any sense to me.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Fade
Might it be something to do with the time of day?
My suggestion for you is to get some drop amps set up, or stop splitting the signal so much, or use a larger splitter and a longer piece of cable.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The amount of signal power your cable modem receives from the ISP should and almost always falls into the -8 to 8dB range. If this figure exceeds the -15 to 15 dB range, the modem will not operate at all. Rarely does the downstream power have anything to do with problems such as the ones you are experiencing.
Your problem is with loss, caused by excessive noise, resulting in too low of a SNR, or signal-to-noise ratio on the downstream portion of the cable between your modem and the UBR. You do not have to understand this terminology in order to check the status of your cable modem. Just understand that for Downstream, your SNR should be at 30dB or higher, and power should be between -8 and 8dB.
Upstream SNR can only be detected at the UBR cable end. Upstream power level must be less than 55dB.
Go to this web page...
http://192.168.100.1/signal.html
This will display your cable modem status.
Yersinia29, test for your downstream SNR under different scenarios, such as elimination of splitters, proper termination, etc... If your SNR drops between 24 and 29dB, you will have problems like those you described.
My suggestion. Go to Radio Shack, and buy(for about $40) a bidirectional cable amplifier, install it, turn it to maximum level, then test your SNR. Problem solved, most likely. Local traffic should not be an issue. If anything, changes in the temperature affect SNR more than anything else.