Only 1 Up Channel Bonded & 51-55 Upstream / Bad Wiring or Buy Modem?
Modem: Netgear C3700-100NAS Connection: No spitters in the house. No TV. Modem combo is connected directly to the coax coming from the wall. Coax from wall is closest to the outside connection. Problem: I'm having some ongoing issues with my modem requiring frequent resets. I believe these problems to berelated tomy 51-55 dBmv and my only one locked bonded upstream channel. I believe this is a line problem, and not a modem problem Attempted Solution: Cox tech acknowledged my 51-55dBmv. The tech suggested that i buy a new modem because mine was more than 3 years old. I will post excerpts of this chat log below. Thetech offered to send a rented one to me. However, I discovered he modem came with a $20 self installation fee, so I refused this option. If the modem was the problem, i would rather usethat $20 to buy a NetgearCM600 or an Arrissb6183 and mate it to an Archer C or A7. Question: Does the tech's suggestion to buy a modem sound right to you?7.6KViews0likes0CommentsSB8200 lost upstream bonded channels - power too low
For about one year now, I've had an Arris SB8200 cablemodem and Cox 300Mbps Internet tier, and this has worked esssentially flawlessly in that time. I've had Cox Internet even longer with very few issues - until about two days ago. I noticed decreased download speeds, and when I logged into my account, I was notified that an "issue" in my area was detected, and I assumed my speed issue would be resolved when the issue was solved. About two hours later, the issue was clear, but my Internet speeds were still decidedly abnormal. I then noticed that the middle-two lights on the front panel of the cablemodem indicated the *downstream* connection was DOCSIS 3.1 (bonded downstream), colored blue, but the *upstream* light was now *green*, indicating only DOCSIS 3.0. This is a change from the previous behavior in which both up and down lights were bonded (blue). That was two days ago. The problem has persisted, across multiple reboots of my cablemodem, and reboots of the firewall appliance that receives the Ethernet out from the cablemodem. I contacted Cox and they said the signal looked clear, but they agreed that my struggle to reach 200Mbps (usually topping out around 170-190) is not consistent with the 300Mbps service tier. They went so far as to re-provision the modem, all to no avail. I took a look at my cablemodem serivce page, and it shows that the upstream channels hover between 39.0 and 42 dBmV. I found that Arris states the required upstream signal must be between 45-55 dBmV. A bit of Googling has revealed a bit of warfare normally has to be undertaken to get Cox to increase power to the upstream channels, which is precisely what the Arris tech support rep told me when I reached out to them for assistance (cablemodem is only one year old and under warranty). He flatly stated the ISP must increase channel strength. Excerpt of my upstream channel status listed below: 1 1 Locked SC-QAM Upstream 17400000 Hz 6400000 Hz 42.0 dBmV 2 2 Locked SC-QAM Upstream 23900000 Hz 6400000 Hz 42.0 dBmV 3 3 Locked SC-QAM Upstream 30300000 Hz 6400000 Hz 41.0 dBmV 4 4 Locked SC-QAM Upstream 36700000 Hz 6400000 Hz 41.0 dBmV 5 6 Locked SC-QAM Upstream 12600000 Hz 3200000 Hz 39.0 dBmV Itraced the line all the way back to the Cox input, eliminating an intermediate cable in the attic, and directly attached the Cox coax to the cablemodem and powered it up - no difference - bonded down, unbonded up. This means the signal to the modem from Cox is too low. But if I know from research Arris says Cox has to increase power, but Cox will refuse, what on earth do I do? Go out and drop another $200 on a new/different cablemodem? Any suggestions appreciated. -sd5.4KViews0likes25Comments