krkaufman
Very Senior Member
The -15dBm TX Power value is a good sign, since the gear has backed-off from max amplification and is now actually reducing the power level (I believe max reducation is -30 dBm); however, the RX PHY rate indicates the adapter is connecting at standard MoCA 2.0 (sub-700 Mbps) rather than bonded MoCA 2.0 (near 1400 Mbps).
Given these stats, you should see effective throughput somewhere between 300-400 Mbps (standard MoCA 2.0 rate), but the goal would be getting as close to 800 Mbps as possible.
This is one reason I suggested the direct connection test between the MoCA adapters. You'd want to verify how to configure the adapters to maximize their connection rate before putting them into the thick of it, where you're left to wonder if the throughput is falling short because of a configuration issue or something amiss with the coax plant.
Given these stats, you should see effective throughput somewhere between 300-400 Mbps (standard MoCA 2.0 rate), but the goal would be getting as close to 800 Mbps as possible.
This is one reason I suggested the direct connection test between the MoCA adapters. You'd want to verify how to configure the adapters to maximize their connection rate before putting them into the thick of it, where you're left to wonder if the throughput is falling short because of a configuration issue or something amiss with the coax plant.
very simple TEST setup ... keep the main bridging MoCA adapter connected to your router via Ethernet, but bring the other adapter to the same room and connect them directly to each other via a known good coax cable ... "IN" port to "IN" port. Then power them up, and use your PC or a laptop connected to the second adapter to test your Internet download speed, if you wish, or use a tool such as LAN Speed Test, iPerf or jPerf with two computers to test the actual effective throughput over the coax/MoCA segment.
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