krkaufman
Very Senior Member
The reason that the MEB1100 can't link with the NVG468MQ is because the two devices operate at different MoCA frequencies, by design:the MEB1100 is used to extend the ONT WAN connection (via CoAX) to the location of the NVG468MQ. The reason it doesn't work as a LAN is that the NVG468MQ uses 2 MoCA frequency plans: (1) for the WAN and (1) for the LAN. The WAN frequency will bind the Ethernet data into the WAN section of the router, and hence it's acting as a DHCP client there.
- MEB1100: MoCA 1.1 channel C4 (975-1025 MHz)... the operating frequency required to link with the ONT built-in MoCA WAN bridge
- NVG468MQ: standard MoCA 2.0 Extended Band D (1125-1675 MHz) ... built-in MoCA bridge for the router LAN, to function effectively as a MoCA access point for STBs and other MoCA-capable network clients.
Were the MEB1100 merely MoCA 1.1 but operated within the MoCA Band D range, yeah, it'd be able to connect; but it was designed to NOT connect to the FiOS router; the MEB1100 exists (within the Frontier context) because the NVG468MQ, unlike its predecessors, lacks a built-in MoCA WAN bridge; so the MEB1100 is designed strictly to make the MoCA WAN link with the ONT on behalf of a MoCA WAN-less router (see: NVG468MQ) -- when only coax connectivity between the ONT and router location is available.
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