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Forum Discussion
andybrwn
Jun 25, 2020Guide
CM1150V and coax line amplifier: passive or active return??
Hi All. After *a lot* of futzing with Xfinity regarding slow cable modem speeds, working with Netgear folks, and reading on this and other forums, I've concluded that I need a powered cable signal a...
plemans
Jun 25, 2020Guru - Experienced User
Amplifying a bad signal doesn't give you a good signal. It just gives you an overpowered bad signal. Its a recipe for spotty/slow service.
Your isp needs to get a decent signal to your home. If they can't do that, then they need to fix whatever is causing the power drop coming to the home. Whether that means running a new cable, fixing whats wrong at the box. That's a better plan than putting a powered amplifier on a poor signal.
- andybrwnJun 25, 2020Guide
I believe the SNR is okay, but its low power as I'm at the end of the line. I am looking into cable runs, F connectors & splitters that don't have terminators, etc.
- andybrwnJun 25, 2020Guide
Yes, I've been round with Xfinity/Comcast on this and they say it's good to the house. Based on a lot of reading, relying on them to fix is mostly likely futile, and I need to be sure my in-house lines are ship-shape.
- plemansJun 26, 2020Guru - Experienced User
do you have a screen snip of your logs and the cable connection page?
You can be over/under powered and still have a good connection.
- andybrwnJun 26, 2020Guide
yes, I believe the SNR is good, just power issues. I'm trying to attach PDF of the page that highlights the good SNR and bad power levels. My core question, however, is with a +10dB amp, can passive return work, or should I do active return.