Forum Discussion
Allan - I moved the modem closer to the wall, cutting out a length of coax cable and a coupler. I’m unable to cut out the splitter because I have a cable box too. The problem has persisted despite the change. Can Cox check the connection between the junction box in the street and the end of the cable in my house?
- asinine5 years agoNew Contributor
Ok, I emailed cox.help@cox.com just now. I hope they call to set up an appointment tomorrow. The problem is persisting.
- JonathanJ5 years agoFormer Moderator@Asinine
We will respond to your email once received.
Jonathan J
Cox Moderator
- asinine5 years agoNew Contributor
I set up an appointment, and ... surprise! ... the tech found all the wires were fine and blamed my new modem I purchased in April (Netgear C7800, one of the ones listed as your preferred model for this level of internet service). The tech will happily let me rent a Cox panoramic wifi modem for $10/mo, while the device I paid over $300 for earlier this year collects dust. I am not happy.
I am now reading the tech support forum for the modem and they ... surprise! ... blame the internet service providers. The modem is apparently sensitive to the signal strength from internet providers. Is there a way to determine what the signal strength is for my house? This post suggests upstream 45-48 and downstream -7 - +7. The further from these suggested levels and the modem locks up - exactly what I'm seeing on my diagnostics.
See: https://community.netgear.com/t5/Cable-Modems-Routers/c7800-disconnecting-often/m-p/1948376#
I would like Cox to set my signal strength to work with the modem that Cox recommended for purchase. How do I make this happen?
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