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jeffmarks's avatar
jeffmarks
Aspirant
Nov 29, 2022

C7800 BRICKED

I've had my C7800 for about a year with very few problems until a few weeks ago. I'm not sure if it was firmware or just hardware malfunction but there is no signal reaching this unit. My ISP is Xfinity and this router was their best suggestion, although the most expensive. Now I am stuck with a router that is stuck in a rebooting loop. I can't find any firmware that the ISP is required to take care of to reload it so I guess I'm screwed here? I reattached my old Surfboard SBG10 and it is flawless, just doesn't take advantage of the speeds I also payed for. How can this situation get to this point? I paid extra for failure.

6 Replies

  • Upon hooking up to coax and starting the router the power and up and down signal lights blink. Followed by 2.4 and 5 channels which I can connect to but without internet. If you check the starting frequency it is and every channel following it absolute zero and never changes. After a few minutes of wireless led blinking all four LAN lights on the bottom blink together and the whole router restarts all over again. I don't know how I got to this point. Help.

     

    • plemans's avatar
      plemans
      Guru - Experienced User

      The C7800 I believe needs to connect back to the ISP or it reboots trying to fix it. 

      Did you have the ISP initialize the modem? (since you switched back to your other device)

      Also, if you have the working modem connected, do you have a screen snip of its cable connections page and event logs? 

      Maybe if the signal isn't good enough, the c7800 is failing its connections check. 

       

      Start with removing any amplifiers, signal attenuators, or splitters from the coax.
      From there check the line for kinks, damage, moisture in the line.
      Check the connectors for improperly made ends, foil touching the copper coax line, loose connections, bad/old/cheap connectors, or corroded connections. Replace them if you do.
      If you can, simply connect the modem right where the coax comes into the home. This prevents wiring in the home from being the issue. And some ISP’s charge if the wiring issue is in the home. So this helps prevent this.

      • jeffmarks's avatar
        jeffmarks
        Aspirant

        Thank you for the reply. Nice to finally have someone pay attention. Netgear pushes the responsibility on Comcast and Comcast isn't helping. My older modems power levels are as such: