You do realize Comcast sells 3 tiers...

Basic 768up
High 6Gup
High+Boost 16Gup

I have the BASIC and the numbers I cite exceed what they sold me so I cannot
fault that.  But, they put a "brake" on the pole to keep it below the upper
tiers and behind them in priority.  Where does one get a splitter with a low
impedance through channel such as you describe?  Would there be a WiFi
solution to this that can reside behind my router?  Can it "see" the cable
TV carried into the cable modem via the computer?

-----Original Message-----
From: Richard P. [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, December 11, 2008 10:12 PM
Subject: Re: speedtest


Yes, there are splitters with different impedance's. Cox has the cable
hitting the splitter and then the lowest impedance output (3.5db) of the
splitter along with the shortest run of cable going to the modem. The higher
impedance (7.0db) connections go to the TV sets. One time after doing some
maintenance the connections got mixed up and the Cox help desk was able to
see this through the modem signal strength reading. I swapped the terminals
back and the signal strength came back up to normal. Here is an example of a
similar splitter:

http://www.dslreports.com/faq/3399

Regardless, your numbers seem abnormally low for cable on a regular basis.
Adding 30 to 40% by bypassing the TV isn't a solution. Tony is probably
right in suggesting that the bigger problem is more likely outside your
house, rather than inside. I had a similar issue and the technicians found a
bad connection at the pole and a shorting out cable, both problems outside.
Get a technician out there.

Richard P.

> what can I conclude from these results for my comcast sold as 768up 
> speed basic internet via cable?
>
> speedtest.net 1867u/145d NY.NY
> speedtest.net 1195/116 Newark,DE (listed preferred) frontier.net 
> 1115/335 voip.com 1004/361
>
> do these results have any meaning?  are they accurate?  are there 
> better places to check this?
>
> there was a "splitter" installed by comcast to allow a tv about 10 
> feet before my cable modem.  I took it out and put in a "bullet" rated 
> for over 3g and the speed went up about 30-40%.  Was the splitter 
> defective?  Is there some sort of splitter I can get that will better 
> distribute the signal as I want to hook up a tv near the computer?  
> Can I hook the TV up somehow behind my router instead of on the cable 
> before it?


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