Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Hi Neighbors,
We have an inactive co-axial jack in one of our bedrooms where we want to activate it and put the modem and router in that room. Xfinity is going to charge $100 for the home visit. I wanted to reach out and see if any Villagers do this for cash on the side. I always thinks its nice to offer up the work to fellow Villager first before the big corporation comes Monday at 3pm for their appointment. Reach out to me if this is something anyone wants to take on. Cheers, Dylan |
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#2
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If yours happens to be this way then what you would need to do is identify which cable comes from that room and connect it to the cable from the street. If you currently have active coax in multiple rooms then there must be a splitter which is likely also in that white box in the garage. It might be as easy as connecting that particular cable to the splitter. Take a look, it might be easy enough for you to do yourself.
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#3
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While I can't speak to an Xfinity tech here in TV, did they actually agree to make the jack work or just to show up? There really is no mystery to the way Coax works. I've done the Xfinity hook up at 3 houses but all the jacks worked. Most of these houses have a spiderweb of wires above the living space, it's probably just disconnected somewhere, possibly in the garage. People more familiar with your model might have a better idea. |
#4
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What service do you have. I have century link.
cable or internet connection? not spliced into the supplier box in that room where ever that is? Cable suppliers charge for the connections which means you will have to have receiver box when it’s connected. Not sure about internet service? IMO don’t think you can just hook up Jack without have supply source at both ends, prove me wrong? so I can do it? Meaning encrypted box to read the supplier service or outside antenna to receive local stations. That’s how I understand it? I was going to try that couple months ago also, but when I tried to open up the supply box outside yellow jackets nailed me. So, that plan has to wait? |
#5
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Well, if your modem is currently connected to the coax close to the TV, then you will have a splitter there. Remove the splitter, modem & router and reconnect the TV there.
Then take the splitter to the white box in the garage. Disconnect the coax connection. The cable from outside goes into the splitter that has 1 input on a side. Connect the cable that was originally connected to the outside cable to one of the inputs on the 2 input side of the splitter. You should have 2 other coax cables (if a 2 bedroom). It will be a 50/50 chance of picking the correct one. Connect one. Then go to the room you want the modem in and connect the modem and router. If it all connects to the internet, you guessed correctly. If not go back to the garage and choose another coax. Keep trying until you connect the correct coax. Want to make it easier and be able to label all of the coax in the garage? Do you have a multimeter? If not, you can get a useful one at Harbor Freight cheap - about $7. There is a harbor freight in Leesburg. 2257 Citrus Blvd, Leesburg, FL 34748 7 Function Digital Multimeter and follow this video: Trace coax wire Just connect one of the short pieces of coax from your original modem/router installation to the wall jack in a room and have a point there to test with the meter. Should be able to test and label 2 or more coax in less than 15 minutes. |
#6
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Pennsylvania, for 60+ years, most recently, Allentown, now TV. ![]() |
#7
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Mr. Villagetinker, I love reading your posts, you are a world of knowledge and a neighbor everyone would love.
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Odalis Jersey Gal |
#8
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My house has a 5 coax cables coming from the outside box to the irrigation box. One cable for each coax hookup in the house. In order to activate one of the inactive cables you have to do so in the outside box and then attach it to the splitter in the irrigation box.
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#9
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No idea which xFinity equipment you have. All my boxes are all wifi based. No Cat 5 hardwire connections needed.
I have the Coax connected Decoder box ( if that is what it is called) in the bedroom in the Armoire. This box talks to the set top boxes and the Router. I put the router in the center of my house and I get a signal everywhere, even all the way out to the curb. Have xfinity change out your boxes. |
#10
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It will be easy IF there are already connectors on the coax cables that are in the low voltage box in the garage. Either disconnect existing coax from splitter and reconnect the coax to desired room.
If the other coax cables do not have connectors, then the job is more involved: - identify which cable goes to desired room - install appropriate connector. Down here in Marsh Bend, only 2 of the 10 coax cables were terminated with connectors, and none of the Ethernet cables were terminated. I had Galaxy come to our new home to properly terminate all the cables, label them, and test them. Then I added a large splitter to provide a working coax cable connection to each room. For Ethernet I just left cables as is, as I decided on whole house mesh WiFi to take care of internet. Even though I could have done the cable and Ethernet connecter installation all myself, I decided Galaxy's price was right, as all my tools and test equipment were still at my previous home in Oregon. It's a mystery as to why this wasn't done originally when the home was built.
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-------------------------------------------- Mike Village of Marsh Bend -------------------------------------------- We live in interesting times -------------------------------------------- |
#11
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#12
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I can help you but not until the first week in November. Let me know if you still need help then.
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#13
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A coax cable is not an internet cable. The coax cable is needed to hook up an xfinity modem/router. It’s very easy, a 5 minute job to hook up the xfinity box to a “working” cable and configure the xfinity router.
Here’s where it gets tricky: If his is a new home, you need someone to hook up the source coax cable in the network box to the cable going to the bedroom and then the tech will need to activate the service. Then, if this is a new house, your coax cables are not terminated in the network box and new ends will be needed on those cables. IMO: you don’t want the xfinity box in your bedroom unless you plan on putting in another router in your other common rooms, if you don’t do this, your wifi coverage will suffer. Unless you are using a cable service for dish or direct tv service, put the xfinity box in your living room. I’m using multiple wired routers in my house that I setup, so the xfinity box is in a room and hat also has an internet cable/phone port. I reterminated all the phone ports (the cables used were cat 6 in the walls) and then setup routers in other rooms so I can get multiple wired ports from each router and my wifi signal does not degrade going from room to room. |
#14
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The outside cable box most likely has a splitter for the number of tvs that were connected when Comcast did the original hookup. Purchase a splitter with enough ports for the remaining unconnected cables and connect all of them. You won’t have to guess which room cable is “hot.”
Last edited by G.R.I.T.S.; 10-17-2021 at 08:32 AM. Reason: Word order. |
#15
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We have our router connected where there is both a landline & coax connection. We'd like to move the router to another more central location in the home to improve wifi through out the home. Is that an Xfinity or a Galaxy job?
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Closed Thread |
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