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#1 |
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Location: Merrymeeting Lake, New Durham
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RLW,
A few suggestions,
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#2 | |
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Location: Alton Bay on the mountain by a lake
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Last edited by RLW; 03-01-2011 at 11:53 AM. Reason: added last sentence |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Gilford, NH
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Has anyone else that has Metrocast Internet tried out the new modems they are providing. Amazing Speeds.
We got a notice that with a swap out of your old modem (no charge, you just have to go to Metrocast in Belmont and pick it up) Just hooked it up and here is the result.. and this is on my wireless here at the house.
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"Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, if he gets angry he'll be a mile away and barefoot!" unknown |
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#4 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Laconia NH
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I called Belmont and they say the old modems are fine?????
I have had problems with Metrocast from day one. I had pixeling on digital channels and at times the TV will display no or low signal. As for internet I should be able to stream video. Some nights my blu ray will say I need more bandwidth and some nights it works perfect. On most phone calls the help desk usually tries to solve the problem over the phone or tells you to swap the router at the Belmont location. What does the router have to do with the TV signal? One time a technician came to the house and determine the signal was too weak. He replace the cable from the box on the house to the splitter in the house. The test was positive and there was plenty of signal. Not long after he left I started to have the same problems. After numerous phone calls trying to solve the problems on the phone, they sent another technician to the house. The technician notice a weak signal at the outside box. He says the underground cable needs to be upgraded from the box to the pole. They are not responsible for that and suggested the association replace it. Of course the association says nada. Anyway, I will bring the router in and request a new one.
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#5 |
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Winnisquam, NH
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My modem is 4 years old, well that's if it was brand new when I started service and this was my speed. Anyone have any ideas? Should I get a new modem?
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#6 |
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Location: Welch Island and The Taylor Community
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Link to the tiered structure:
http://www.metrocast.com/internet_packages.cfm |
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#7 |
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Slickcraft is right. It is linked to the Ultra package.
Here is the notice I received in the mail. All I had to do was bring my old Metrocast modem to the office and they handed me the new one. They would come to the house and do it for you, but it's really just unplugging the old one and plugging in the new one. I did have to get on the phone with their tech support for them to push some buttons on there end to finalize the install. I have to tell you it's like lightning on the download side. IMG.pdf
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"Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, if he gets angry he'll be a mile away and barefoot!" unknown |
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#8 | |
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Metrocast says that it is
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#9 |
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Laconia
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I have High Speed Internet which is supposed to have 15 mbps downloads and 1 mbps uploads. I ran the test and got results of 5.78 mbps and 1.47 mbps. I called Metrocast Support and he had me disconnect the power to the modem and replug it. Not much change. He would have had me run the modem directly to the computer rather than through router, I have a real rat's nest behind the monitor, so I'll try that tomorrow. I have a tentative appointment for a technician to come Tuesday to check out the modem. Now I'm wondering if maybe I could just exchange the modem.
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#10 | |
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While results will vary with overall internet loading and your location, your 5.78 download speed should be much better if you have the same plan. Note that Metrocast also has a "high speed basic" plan that is rated at 4/.256 vs the "high speed internet" plan rated at 15/1. Now that is a real play on words. |
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#11 |
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When we decided to get somewhere near this century as far as tv's were concerned, and got a flat screen HD tv, Metrocast came out to hook up the digital box. He put a meter on,and discovered the signal was way too low to get a good picture. We were last call on a Fri, and I am sure he was not a happy camper.
He investigated, and found that at the Metrocast modem that was installed by them when we went to the VIP package a few years ago, there were not one, but two splitters attached to the cables that came to the back of modem. He disconnected both as they were not splitting off anything, and connected the cable directly to the modem. He said each splitter has a negative effect on quality due to impedence, I guess. We went into the crawl space, and found the splitter that takes the outside signal, and splits off to our two tv's. He was going to check the signal there, but had to get the meter. As he was coming back, I pointed out the "outside cable box" where the wire came to the house from the pole. On a hunch, he opened it and found yes another spiltter being used to connect two cables, rather than a union,or what ever it is called in electronics to connect two together. He removed it, and replaced with a union. Back inside, and the signal had come up dramatically...He finished the hookup and got us up and running. He did say our internet speed should improve as well. I had run speed test a few days before because the other half was complaining, and after he left, we had gained over 1 MB speed. Bottom line, you may have a tech who will correct the ills of other not so conscientious techs. Good luck.
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#12 |
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With all of the complaints I might have with Metrocast, one of them is NOT the tech guys. Almost every time I have called Internet Tech support they have been VERY good. They have put up with a lot of very stupid questions from me over the years and got my problems fixed. I always call the front desk and compliment them after they fix my problem.
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"Before you criticize someone, walk a mile in his shoes. That way, if he gets angry he'll be a mile away and barefoot!" unknown |
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#13 | |
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Location: Laconia
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Is there any reason why the change to all digital at the beginning of this year would have an effect ? That's when it became a real problem. |
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#14 |
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Something to think about:
Half-a-billion internet-connected devices and counting. The average US household now has 5.7 internet-connected devices, and more and more of these are smartphones and tablets. Will there be enough internet to go-around? http://www.zdnet.com/half-a-billion-...ng-7000012958/
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#15 |
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The MetroCast technician came today and checked the box across the street, the box at our house, the output of the modem and the wired output from the router. Got no changes in the download speed. It stayed at about 5.8 mbps per the webmasters speedtest.net. Then he downloaded the test from speedtest.net as follows and got 16.25 mbps. He couldn't explain the difference. He did download Foxfire for me which seems to be a lot faster than Internet Explorer.
http://www.speedtest.net/result/2634712488.png |
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#16 | |
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Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Merrymeeting Lake, New Durham
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How old are the lines in your association? If 20 years or so, they are most likely RG59 or similar, which was the standard at the time. Most modern systems now need RG6 or better to function well. Also, on the comments about splitters, yes, every split degrades the signal. If you split too many times, you can degrade the signal enough that you need an amplifier. But all this requires testing tools that are beyond the cost reach of most consumers. |
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#17 | |
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The units were originally wired with cable in the BRs, LRs, and kitchen. Because of the analog cable and the serial wiring, the technician disconnected the original cable and ran a digital cable from the outside box to the garage. In the garage he put a 'union' and told me to have an electrican route all the outlets in the house to the union. Big bucks! I took a look at what I got. The cable ran from the union to the LR where there is a splitter into two cables, one for the TV and one for the router. Shouldn't there be two cables from the union to avoid the splitter? I notice there are two outside boxes where the cable come out of the ground. One for each unit. I notice there is a splitter between the ground wire and the two boxes. I don't know the difference between a splitter and a union other than the union in the garage allow up to six cables to be attached. Can I get away from all the splitters?
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#18 |
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The splitters are passive devices with the common 2 way split sending ideally 50% power down each of the two branches. As they are not ideal and have some internal loss you get about 40% power down each branch.
Having three two way splitters between the entry and the tv brings the signal power down to about 0.4 X 0.4 x 0.4 = .064 or only 6.4% of the original power. Four way and higher order splitters again just divide the available signal power in addition to suffering some internal loss (AKA insertion loss). Any unused port on a splitter should be terminated with a 75 ohm resistor otherwise some of the inbound power will be reflected back. Our VIP installer checked the power level at all points of use in the house and made sure that any unused taps were properly terminated. I don't recall if he just did that or if I had to ask. |
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upthesaukee (04-06-2013) |
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#19 | ||
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New wiring would have better shielding, hence the recommendation that you upgrade all your internal wiring. (As you note, for an existing house, usually big bucks) You also need to consider the weakest link problem. Namely, if you upgrade all your internal wiring, but the wire from outside is still bad, your signal will still be bad. Conversely, if you upgrade underground but don't do the internal, you may still have a problem. Though the closer you can get the good signal to the end, the better your chances of overcoming signal problems. Hard to tell without seeing things, but it sounds as if what you are describing as a "union" is just a big, more specialized splitter. It may have some amplification capabilities from the small amount of power on the cable. But unless it has a plug and it's own power source, it's probably not an amp. Sounds like he upgraded your line from where it comes out of the ground into your garage, and set things up so IF you rewired the house, you could run all the lines back to this 6-output splitter in the garage. Still leaves you with the problem of the bad line from the pole to your garage. Quote:
Whether he split the cable in the LR or in the garage really doesn't matter. Assuming both your TV and computer needs are in the LR, it was easier to split the signal there to save running two lines the whole way. In the end, he needed to get a signal to your TV and to your cable modem, which I assume is also located in your LR. Getting a bit deep for this forum at this point, and probably more than you or everyone else wanted to know. If you want to learn more, I suggest trying one of many audio/video/cable forums out there, perhaps starting with the Metrocast one. |
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