I doubt you're going to get a reply, but I will add this. Signal levels in that 
range are undoubtedly a local issue. Its either your drop, one of your 
splitters, or the tap on the pole. First thing I'd do is check with a neighbor 
thats on the same run and see what they say. That will pretty much confirm its 
something very local to you. Nex thing I'd do (if you're just refusing to call 
the cable company) is plug your modem straight into the ground block. That 
would eliminate your house wiring and your splitters.

 
If those signals were the same across the city, for all purposes, they are 
down. Almost everything is two-way, tv, phone, and of course 'net. There's no 
way they have a wide outage and don't know it. Customers may be soft on calling 
some issues, but that many, not a chance.


 
-----Original message-----
From:Edwin Pers <[email protected]>
Sent:Fri 09-01-2017 03:55 pm
Subject:Northeast TWC/Spectrum contact?
To:[email protected]; 
Hi
Can someone from TWC/Spectrum’s northeast division please contact me off list? 
AS11351 for what it’s worth

About a week ago my modem dropped from 24 bonded channels at about -6dBmV to 19 
channels ranging from -9.30 to -21.30dBmV, and I started seeing very high 
latency and packetloss. I’ve also been seeing a lot of Lost MDD’s and RCS 
Partial’s in my event log.

Haven’t put a tdr down the customer side cabling yet but I doubt that’s the 
issue, it’s only a 25’ run and a visual inspection doesn’t show anything out of 
the ordinary.

Sorry for spamming the list, but every time I’ve called TWC customer support 
lines in the past I’ve been transferred between 5-8 people who each told me to 
reboot my modem and check the cables.

Thanks for your time,
Ed Pers


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