Cable Modem Problem

I’m having a problem with my cable modem. I believe that the problem occurs when I try to split the signal between my TV and cable modem. I’ve bought several top notch cable splitters but they either don’t work at all or slow the cable modem considerably when compared to a direct connect. Also, previous splitters have worked well and then slowed my modem down to a crawl after a month or two of use. Why is that? What am I doing wrong and what do I need to fix my problem? Thanks for your help.

You are doing something Very Wrong. Stop it and call the cable company. Cable modems/TV work quite differently from just CATV alone. They will put a quality splitter and a special filter on the TV line. You don’t have the filter and are probably using an incorrect filter.

Nowadays, with digital cable, etc., regular old do-it-yourself cabling is A Real Bad Idea.

I have had regular Cable TV guys come out to my house, see that I have Cable modem, and call a specialist in that is certified to work on the line. You are not certified. You are not even Cable TV pro. In addition to you cable modem fouling up, you are also fouling up your neighbor’s connection as well. This Is Not A Good Things.

I disagree with ftg here. Installing a cable modem in my area (Philadelphia PA) required no special “filter” or any other equipment other than a line splitter which you can get at any Radio Shack. I connect at an averge of 1.3mb a sec with no problems using either the splitter or directly connected.

If you are experiencing intermittent slowness I would suggest it is a problem other than your splitter or lack of a filter.

Umm… ftg may have a point. Not all cable systems are the same and some breakouts may require more isolation than others. In any event, the problem may orginate a bit further upstream so calling the cable company is probably a good idea.

http://www.cable-modems.org/

http://www.cablemodemhelp.com/tvsplitter.htm

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

Umm… ftg may have a point. Not all cable systems are the same and some breakouts may require more isolation than others. In any event, the problem may orginate a bit further upstream so calling the cable company is probably a good idea.

http://www.cable-modems.org/

http://www.cablemodemhelp.com/tvsplitter.htm

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