Hi, all. Trying to sort options and hoping to rule this in/out.

Frontier DSL, installed 10 years ago as AT&T Uverse (Voice/Internet/TV then; dropped voice/TV a few years ago) with a Pace 3801HGV gateway. Phone jack was in a bedroom. Installing tech replaced that with a new wall jack that has phone/data ports and a coax jack. Coax runs out of that wall jack to another coax wall jack across the room. Then in the living room, coax runs from another jack there to the gateway. So, outside the wall, it’s all coax.

Frontier wants me to replace the Pace. They have sent me two Arris NVG443B which do not have any coax input. Connecting the Arrises via the modem’s DSL port to the data port on that bedroom wall jack has not produced working internet through numerous online/phone chats. They insist there is no current option for a modem that will connect via coax, and they need to send tech to get one of the Arrises working.

Short question, I guess, is, is that correct? Are there really no up to date versions of that Pace gateway or its like that I can just plug and play via coax? Or has this ship sailed and I’m going to need tech help? Much thanks in advance.

  • Sleepless_In_Sudbury@alien.topB
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    10 months ago

    I’m going to assume it might not be HomePNA running on the coax, then, but is that the only thing you’ve got attached to the coax? Try outside where the telephone drop cable ends up at your house if there’s nothing else inside.

    That thing is a passive balun, which simply converts telephone signalling to or from the balanced twisted pair from or to the unbalanced coax, but it also claims to be a DSL filter and there is no way your modem should be downstream from that. What that suggests is that the balun is taking signal from the coax and putting it on the twisted pair, after filtering the DSL, for use by a POTS telephone. What is putting the signal on the coax is still a mystery, but there might be another balun, without the filter, at or near the telephone demarcation.

    In any case it is becoming clear that the carrier is asking you to install a DSL modem when you don’t have the right wiring to plug it into. You may need to ask them to come and fix their mess.