I recently found out that my normally cost-conscious father has been renting his modems from his ISP for like 25 years and for Christmas I want to give him the gift of not having to pay $15 a month to Comcast anymore, but I was hoping for some guidance.

He’s currently paying for 800mb/s and they have him Arris TG3482G wireless gateway.

He lives in a ~1700 sf one story (plus basement) housee. All three bedrooms (and maybe the kitchen?) are wired with with ethernet jacks if that matters. Both he and my mom have said the signal in their bedroom can occasionally get spotty (in the rough sketch of their house below, the router is in the basement roughly on the X, room with occasional coverage issues is red square). That initially made me think maybe I should look into a mesh network, but then I realized it could just be that the signal on those modem/router combos really is that bad and a decent traditional modem could suffice.

Their internet usage typically consists of your run of the mill web surfing and occasional streaming. My dad also works from home over the wired connection.

They recently moved their landline over to Xfinity, so the modem requires voice. The modems xfinity lists as compatible with their plan:

  • NetgearCM2050V
  • Motorola MT8733
  • Arris T25
  • Netgear CM1150V
  • Arris SBV3202
  • Netgear C7100V
  • Motorola MT7711
  • Arris SVG2482AC
  • Arris SBV2402

Any thoughts on which modem and router would best fit their situation and needs? Obviously the CM2050V appears to be the superior modem on the list, but also seems like a overkill given their plan and usage habits (unless it’d be a good idea for a bit of future proofing in case their plan ever gets upgraded?).

https://preview.redd.it/t4u5ysbfcl2c1.png?width=1714&format=png&auto=webp&s=1fdd52b6961209600b2850c5d1cb377b641c7e00

  • StalkMeNowCrazyLady@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Well yeah each service provider is only going to troubleshoot to the end of the equipment they are responsible for. For water that means your water meter, for for power your power meter, for ISP it means the outside line demarcation point where it turns into your equipment.

    If they own the ONT modem/router they can troubleshoot to that point. If you provide your own all they can do is send a tech to make sure their signal is active and if it is they’ll charge you. If you use their equipment they’ll troubleshoot it and assume that the issue isn’t a simple layer 1 issue, and if it is will.sometimes eat the cost on a quick repair if it means keeping you subscribed and happily paying equipment fees each month.

    • WildMartin429@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      What I’m saying is they would not check the line. If you reported a service outage they would tell you it was probably your modem going bad since you weren’t renting a modem from them. In order for them to check the signal and check the lines you would have to replace your modem with their modem. $120 a year for a piece of equipment that you can buy for 60 bucks it’s just so ridiculous.

      • StalkMeNowCrazyLady@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        If they have no outages reported in the area and you’re the only one down they will send a tech to test the fiber or copper line that feeds your home. If they find the line is good then the rest of it is on you and they’ll likely charge for the techs time that did the test. They should provide a certified result of their fiber or copper line test though.

        We have to deal with this all the time at our data centers. Even with in house techs that can test and tell us the fiber is down likely due to a line being cut by the construction crew 100ft away, the ISP will still send their tech to find the exact same results before they send out a repair crew.