Forum Discussion
Hey, Bruce. Verify this for me or tell me I'm wrong. If the cable from the tap to the customer’s house wasn’t replaced and all the internal wiring and the modem are the same, wouldn’t Cox changing the main line from cable to fiber be transparent to a customer? Wouldn’t the only noticeable difference be a likely improved signal?
From the neighborhood node to the house wasn't replaced? Yes, it'd be transparent to the customer because the neighborhood node would be converting the signal from light to electrical.
Light being immune from EMI, yes, much better signal...that is, if OP had a noisy signal.
- CurtB3 years agoHonored Contributor
Wouldn't the main line from neighborhood node to the tap have to be replaced too? I thought the tap converted the signal. If that's not the case, then wouldn't my neighbor, who shares the tap, and I both have to change our internal wiring if one of us wanted to change to all fiber? Wouldn't Cox have to replace the line from node to tap then? I'm asking because this is your bowl of rice, not mine.
- Bruce3 years agoHonored Contributor III
The tap or NID or NIU on your house would only connect to whatever technology of the Internet provider (fiber or copper). It wouldn't convert the signal but accept the signal as is from the pedestal or neighborhood node.
You could change your internal wiring to fiber if you wanted, but you couldn't connect it to the demarc of Cox because Cox has coax connected to your demarc. Since your tap is connected to the pedestal with coax, Cox would be looking for a DOCSIS to authenticate and not an ONT.
If Cox told the OP his or her residence is only configured for fiber, this sounds like it was news to the OP because somebody ran fiber within the residence without he or she knowing.
Yes, if Cox told the OP his or her residence is configured with only fiber, somebody would have had to replace OP's wiring and tap and install an ONT.
- CurtB3 years agoHonored Contributor
Thanks. That’s a thorough explanation. The node converts signal, not the tap.
I knew that if I wanted to convert to all fiber, the line from my house to the tap would have to be replaced. All my internal wiring would have to be replaced and my modem would have to be replaced with an ONT. But, I’m not planning to change my internal wiring for fiber.
I got a bit more confused than usual when you said “From neighborhood node to the house wasn’t replaced?”. When the main line runs parallel to houses, wouldn’t replacing cable with fiber also include from the node to the tap?
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