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Forum Discussion
nooope307
Apr 04, 2024Tutor
RS700 not connecting to internet
Hello, I recently purchased a Nighthawk RS700 to set up with my Charter Spectrum internet. Working with 500 MB/s down and I wanted to boost the signal in my house. I cannot get the RS700 to find ...
- Apr 04, 2024
I managed to find the answer. I dont think the RS700 is capable of handling the Cat8 cable I was using on the AR500. I switched the modem to router cable to the provided Cat 6 cable in the box. Now I have internet connection.
nooope307
Apr 04, 2024Tutor
I should mention I tried the Netgear genie a couple times with no luck.
- nooope307Apr 04, 2024Tutor
I managed to find the answer. I dont think the RS700 is capable of handling the Cat8 cable I was using on the AR500. I switched the modem to router cable to the provided Cat 6 cable in the box. Now I have internet connection.
- schumakuApr 06, 2024Guru - Experienced User
nooope307 wrote:
I dont think the RS700 is capable of handling the Cat8 cable I was using on the AR500. I switched the modem to router cable to the provided Cat 6 cable in the box. Now I have internet connection.
Hard to imagine - the cause seems to be much more likely that many devices can't handle these (expensive, overpriced, ...) cables. So called CAT 8 and CAT 8.1 cables and connectors are qualified to deal with 2000 MHz bandwidth - that makes up 40 Gbit/s over just 30 meters. All the marketplaces are full with reports and complaints that these cables simply "don't work".
These cables make - honestly spoken - no sense in any home and most small business network environments, certainly not in the days of the year 2024. On one hand, you don't have any devices or switches operating on 40 Gbit/s. CAT 6a supporting 500 MHz qualified (or similar CAT 7 supporting 1000 MHz or 1 GHz qualified) cables are perfectly sufficient for a 10 Gb Ethernet copper link - and all these operate reliably. What's not the case with these CAT 8 or CAT 8.1 stuff. None of these will make your network any faster or more reliable. Facts proof exactly the opposite. The net is full with reports. Last but not least, these cables are much more rigid, thicker, much less flexible, had to route around objects, ...
For these (and many more reasons) lading edge manufacturers launching 40Gbps and 56 Gbps over copper link are making use of a connector system similar to the SFF-8431 and SFF-8679 specifications - this is what both the networking and the storage industry is using. Confusion included, the first victims already asked in this community for "how to configure an DAC-cable" to work on an Ethernet switch. Answer: You can't - different communication protocol. And the story continues. SFP28 (25G), QSFP+ (40 G), QSFP+ (56G), and QSFP28 (100G) already exist in the field.
Modern cabling systems like the Swiss https://www.rdm.com/cat-8-1/ are making use of zones - depending of the usage - 24m/40GB/s, 50m/25GB/s, and 90m/10GB/s.
- nooope307Apr 09, 2024Tutor
Interesting. Thanks for the information. I bought those Cat8 cables off Amazon some time ago and honestly never really researched their quality or specs. I saw some gains on my old router and just assumed they were an improvement.