Hi all,
Ok so have one cable outlet on the wall, trying to tie it all in to hardware above. I have cable from wall going to modem, the network cable going from modem to AppleTV box. I have another network cable going from modem to cable box, and HDMI cable going from cable box to TV in. No good?
Or wall - cable box, then network cables from AppleTV and cable box to modem?
I had modem in different room and AppleTV running off wifi instead of cabled in but had some lag. Can the modem work through a network cable to the cable box..? Or do I need a splitter?
Solved! Go to Solution.
> I have cable from wall going to modem
Good.
> network cable going from modem to AppleTV box.
Good.
> HDMI cable going from cable box to TV-in.
Good.
> I have another network cable going from modem to cable box.
Bad. The cable-box requires a coaxial-cable going to "cable-in" on the cable-box.
So, you need a "TWO-WAY" splitter, so that "half" of the coax goes to the modem, and another "half" of the coax goes to the cable-TV box. The "TWO-WAY" is needed to "send" to the Internet, and to use "Shaw On Demand" TV.
Of course, you will need two more coaxial-cable segments, one for each "half" of the above "split".
> I have cable from wall going to modem
Good.
> network cable going from modem to AppleTV box.
Good.
> HDMI cable going from cable box to TV-in.
Good.
> I have another network cable going from modem to cable box.
Bad. The cable-box requires a coaxial-cable going to "cable-in" on the cable-box.
So, you need a "TWO-WAY" splitter, so that "half" of the coax goes to the modem, and another "half" of the coax goes to the cable-TV box. The "TWO-WAY" is needed to "send" to the Internet, and to use "Shaw On Demand" TV.
Of course, you will need two more coaxial-cable segments, one for each "half" of the above "split".
splitters can cause -9 db or worse signal loss
> splitters can cause -9 db or worse signal loss.
Only slightly true, because signal-degradation - not "signal loss" -- will occur. But, the label on the splitter shows "2.5DB", not "9.0DB".
However, given that the original questioner probably has a Shaw-supplied splitter inside the Shaw "demarcation" box on the outside of his home, with multiple "runs" of coaxial-cable terminating in several rooms in the home, having Shaw replace an "N-way" splitter by an "N-plus-one" splitter inside that Shaw box, and running a brand-new coaxial cable into the room where the two devices (cable-modem and TV-box) exist, there still will be signal-degradation.
So, it does not really matter whether the splitter is inside the Shaw box, or is in the same room as the two devices.
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