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Mon, 8 Nov 1999 22:39:54 -0500 |
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I have done it your way with no problems.
The technician who relocated my modem when I moved even said it should be
OK.
He also said that my signal was too strong and put a choke on it, which
should be removed if I switched to a splitter.
Keep in mind though, that you need to have a splitter that will handle the
signal speed.
Mine says 5-1000 MHz 3.5 db.
Hope this helps.
Darren K. Page
Montreal, Qc
[log in to unmask]
The question is whether or not this is advisable. My cable company has
said not to do it, and that I risk weakening the cable modem signal so
it may not be able to lock on properly. On the other hand, I have other
friends (different cable providers, though) who have done this without
apparent harm.
Does anyone have any bad experiences doing this. If I don't split the
cable going into the modem, this will force me to spilt a cable going to
a real TV in another room and necessitate a much larger cabling job, so
I would like to avoid this if I can. Of course, I do not want to
decrease the functionality of my cable modem.
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