@bchiodini - eviltoast
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  • 10 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: October 30th, 2023

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  • A $30 surge suppressor will not prevent this from happening again. You can see the fakespot review, for what it’s worth.

    Even a nearby lightning strike will overcome surge protection.

    As far as I know and have seen, eliminating the path for the conducted radiation is best, if not the only, way to prevent problems in the future.





  • The long white ‘cable’ is probably a tube with either a pull string for future fiber or already has the fiber in it. What does the writing say?

    A splitter will attenuate signal level to/from your modem. Typically 3-7 dB, depending on the splitter. If you do not have a need to split, the coax, use a female-to-female feed-thru connector. If the signals are already marginal, don’t use a splitter. Check the upstream signal level, before moving the modem. If it’s getting above 42-ish dB, then splitter is a bad idea. The downstream signal level should be above -5-ish dB if you will add a splitter.

    I haven’t noticed the S33 getting as hot as some older modems, but I haven’t paid that much attention. If it gets hot, then keep it in the open. Personally, I like to see all of the lights/LEDs.


  • I didn’t see anything in the AT&T list for fiber. It looked like all cellular.

    Be careful that the AT&T ‘fiber’ is fiber to the home, not fiber to somewhere near your neighborhood.

    A few years ago, an AT&T salesman knocked on my door and tried to sell me fiber. There wasn’t an inch of fiber in our neighborhood. I suspect it was fiber to the DSLAM and DSL to the home. It topped out at 40 Mbps.

    Spectrum was cheaper and faster for the price.