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Forum Discussion
Moocow9m
Jul 10, 2020Aspirant
CM1200 Moca Support
I have recently moved and would like to setup MoCA in the new house as wifi will not reach the other levels and I perfer not to use extenders. I don't know how to check if a modem has support and I a...
- Jul 10, 2020
> 2. While I used "Modem" I more ment CM1200, which looks to be a
> modem+router, but only called a modem, as most modems I see these days
> do, [...]The CM1200 might _look_ like a modem+router, but it really is only a
modem. And the difference matters.Visit http://netgear.com/support , put in your model number, and look
for Documentation. Get the User Manual. Read. Pay particular
attention to what the User Manual says about how to use its "LAN ports".
(And, what it doesn't say.) A forum/Web search for that model number
might find more than one fellow who misinterpreted the significance of
its multiple LAN Ethernet ports.> 1. The new houes does have multiple co-ax ports(its my understanding
> all of them would be connected) and the problen is about coverage
> without running new cables.In that case, using MoCA might make some sense. But, the cost of
multiple MoCA-Ethernet adapters might make running some Ethernet cables
look more attractive.
My vague impression is that Netgear doesn't do much with MoCA. (I
see one old (MoCA 1.1) adapter, the MCA1001 ("MC1001"?).) If I were
interested in MoCA, I'd be looking elsewhere. If you're looking for a
router in any case, then you might find a router with a built-in MoCA
adapter more attractive than a router which needs a its own external
MoCA adapter.
antinode
Jul 10, 2020Guru
> 2. While I used "Modem" I more ment CM1200, which looks to be a
> modem+router, but only called a modem, as most modems I see these days
> do, [...]
The CM1200 might _look_ like a modem+router, but it really is only a
modem. And the difference matters.
Visit http://netgear.com/support , put in your model number, and look
for Documentation. Get the User Manual. Read. Pay particular
attention to what the User Manual says about how to use its "LAN ports".
(And, what it doesn't say.) A forum/Web search for that model number
might find more than one fellow who misinterpreted the significance of
its multiple LAN Ethernet ports.
> 1. The new houes does have multiple co-ax ports(its my understanding
> all of them would be connected) and the problen is about coverage
> without running new cables.
In that case, using MoCA might make some sense. But, the cost of
multiple MoCA-Ethernet adapters might make running some Ethernet cables
look more attractive.
My vague impression is that Netgear doesn't do much with MoCA. (I
see one old (MoCA 1.1) adapter, the MCA1001 ("MC1001"?).) If I were
interested in MoCA, I'd be looking elsewhere. If you're looking for a
router in any case, then you might find a router with a built-in MoCA
adapter more attractive than a router which needs a its own external
MoCA adapter.
schumaku
Jul 11, 2020Guru - Experienced User
antinode wrote:> 1. The new houes does have multiple co-ax ports(its my understanding
> all of them would be connected) and the problen is about coverage
> without running new cables.
In that case, using MoCA might make some sense. But, the cost of
multiple MoCA-Ethernet adapters might make running some Ethernet cables
look more attractive.
My vague impression is that Netgear doesn't do much with MoCA.
And there are reasons for this .... Unless your Coax-/RF-cabing is an isolaed thing, e.g. feed from a multi-user sat receiver you might be fine. If using a CableTV provider network - if connected by pure RF on a longer range from a headend to multiple houses it's guaranteed your CableTV provider won't like this idea. Or your wife won't be able to see her preferred channel....