Our cable company recently upgraded their connections to our residence from coax to fiber-optic. As a result, the modem and router had to be moved into the basement from an upstairs room, impacting Wifi speeds, especially as it was just a cheapish router.

AFAICT, they didn’t remove some of the coax wiring throughout the house. They did remove it from a few rooms, but not all of them. Would this be a good case for Ethernet over coax? Presumably I would just run Ethernet from the modem, into the coax adapter in the basement and then upstairs, and plug the Ethernet upstairs into the router?

The main run of coax in the basement is still intact, and it’s running from the basement into the same room that the modem was previously hooked up in. Glad they left that bit.

Thanks…

2 points

Sure, you can consider using MoCA, which is for networking over legacy coax cabling.

It’s too bad that you couldn’t get the installers to install the fiber run into the basement too. For home networking purposes, it can be convenient to have all the services drop to the same utility area and never land inside the living space.

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1 point

I use MoCA adapters myself in a point to point topology (also called home run) and couldn’t be happier. I can pull 2.5 gbit over twenty year old coax.

And MoCA 3.0 will support 10gbit!! Absolutely Wild!!

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