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Something is definitely wrong on that line. The SNRs are much lower than they should be and there is a wide variance of power levels with a high of 7.1 dBmV at 807 MHz and a rapid dropoff above 830 MHz to a low of -7.7 dBmV at 969 MHz. That's a range of almost 14 dBmV which is not normal or even close to normal. It's about the worst I've ever seen.
Unfortunately this could be caused by any number of things: faulty parts, faulty cables, etc, etc. Only a Cox tech can diagnose it. You'll need to call for another one, and another, and another until you get one who has the skill and time to resolve the issue. I wouldn't waste time or money on any type of filters or other add-ons until you can get those signals more in line with what they should be.
- wptlrn4 years agoNew Contributor II
Thank you!!
So I actually just plugged in a new modem, have been using it for about 30 minutes, and the connection seems to be better--see below. Could it just be that the modem, which was purchased in 2018, needs to be replaced?
Channel Lock Status Modulation Channel ID Freq. (MHz) Pwr (dBmV) SNR (dB) Corrected Uncorrected 1 Locked QAM256 37 369.0 16.3 40.3 0 0 2 Locked QAM256 1 783.0 7.7 36.4 0 0 3 Locked QAM256 2 789.0 8.6 37.0 0 0 4 Locked QAM256 3 795.0 8.1 36.7 0 0 5 Locked QAM256 4 801.0 8.9 37.2 0 0 6 Locked QAM256 5 807.0 8.8 37.1 0 0 7 Locked QAM256 6 813.0 7.8 36.4 0 0 8 Locked QAM256 7 819.0 7.8 36.4 0 0 9 Locked QAM256 8 825.0 6.8 35.5 0 0 10 Locked QAM256 33 345.0 16.2 40.1 0 0 11 Locked QAM256 34 351.0 16.4 40.3 0 0 12 Locked QAM256 35 357.0 16.7 40.6 0 0 13 Locked QAM256 36 363.0 16.2 40.3 0 0 14 Locked QAM256 38 375.0 15.7 40.2 0 0 15 Locked QAM256 39 381.0 15.4 40.1 0 0 16 Locked QAM256 40 387.0 14.8 40.0 0 0 17 Locked QAM256 41 393.0 14.9 41.2 0 0 18 Locked QAM256 42 399.0 14.5 41.1 0 0 19 Locked QAM256 43 405.0 14.8 41.0 0 0 20 Locked QAM256 44 411.0 15.2 41.3 0 0 21 Locked QAM256 45 417.0 15.8 41.4 0 0 22 Locked QAM256 46 423.0 16.1 41.6 0 0 23 Locked QAM256 47 429.0 16.1 41.5 0 0 24 Locked QAM256 48 435.0 15.3 41.1 0 0 Total 0 0 - Dave94 years agoContributor III
Those signals are still odd. I think the reason you're seeing different numbers is because the modem locked on to a different frequency band. Now you have 400/800 MHz channels instead of 800/900 like you did in your first post. The signals on the 400 MHz channels are too high and there's still a dropoff of almost 10 dBmV between the lowest frequency channel and the highest. Something is affecting the frequency response of the line, and based on the signals I would guess that there is at least one unnecessary amplifier in there along with possibly a high-cut filter or else just a defective cable or other defective part that is negatively affecting higher frequencies.
- wptlrn4 years agoNew Contributor II
Wow nice catch--the first Cox tech did install an amplifier.
But now my question is, if things seem to work well with this new modem, despite the less-than-ideal signals, do I need to worry? Could the underlying problem, whatever it is--unnecessary amplifier, defective cable, etc.--damage the modem, such I will eventually need to address it?
At a minimum, I will remove the amplifier and re-post the numbers. But to the extent it is in-house cabling issues, do you recommend I fix those, even if the new modem seems to work OK?
Thanks so much for your advice thus far.
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