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I can't find any 12-way splitters with Moca. Can I get a 2-way splitter and attach two 8-way splitters to that? I see Verizon only sells 4-way. What is the best approach?
thanks
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@XoomVids wrote:I can't find any 12-way splitters with Moca. Can I get a 2-way splitter and attach two 8-way splitters to that? I see Verizon only sells 4-way. What is the best approach?
thanks
Problem is every time you split the signal, the signal strength is 3db less. Eventually you get too weak a signal to be usable. You should use a MOCA 2.0 certified 2 way splitter, send one port of it to each of the 8 ways as you describe. All 3 splitters have to be MOCA 2.0 certified. It may or may not work, depending on the starting signal strength. They must pass at least 1650 Mhz. These might work better as they are 6 way instead of 8 way: https://www.monoprice.com/product?p_id=10016
@XoomVids wrote:I can't find any 12-way splitters with Moca. Can I get a 2-way splitter and attach two 8-way splitters to that? I see Verizon only sells 4-way. What is the best approach?
thanks
Problem is every time you split the signal, the signal strength is 3db less. Eventually you get too weak a signal to be usable. You should use a MOCA 2.0 certified 2 way splitter, send one port of it to each of the 8 ways as you describe. All 3 splitters have to be MOCA 2.0 certified. It may or may not work, depending on the starting signal strength. They must pass at least 1650 Mhz. These might work better as they are 6 way instead of 8 way: https://www.monoprice.com/product?p_id=10016
10-23-2020 12:44 PM
Why do you need drops?
As clem said, splitting drops the power by half every time.
A 2 way splitter cuts each in half. A 4 way splitter cuts each one in 4ths and an 8 way cuts it down in 8ths.
I would say an 8 and a 4 (vs 2 8s).
And put the longest runs on the 4s.
I would recommend that you use low loss cables