Have a look at and 13 of the following MoCA spec to see the frequency bands for MoCa 2.0 and 2.5 ops: The MoCA adapters should be able to cope with that either automatically or manually by setting the adapters to run in the D-High band. I suspect it will be some time before that happens, but, when it does happen, that will interfere with the lower D band of the MoCA system. That is in preparation to run DOCSIS 3.1 channels in the 1000 to 1218 Mhz frequency band. One point to keep in mind, Rogers is installing the newer CMC4000H splitters which run up to 1218 Mhz. I believe that the Holland splitters are built with a MoCA filter installed. If Rogers doesn't have the MoCA splitters available, you can get them from Holland Electronics: If you don't replace the splitter, you won't see the max data rate performance out of the adapters. That is necessary to fully support the higher frequency range (up to 1675Mhz) for MoCA 2.0 and 2.5. You should replace that splitter with a MoCA qualified splitter in order to see the 1675 Mhz performance on the inside ports of the splitter. Here's the spec sheet links for those splitters: I don't know if Rogers will dispatch a tech if you call in and ask for a tech visit for MoCA purposes, or if there would be any charge for a simple MoCA splitter and MoCA filter drop off. You could always ask a tech if you have the chance to see one in your neighbourhood. ![]() I don't know if Rogers techs actually carry those MoCA splitters or not. It looks like that MoCA splitter doesn't have a MoCA filter built in, so it should have a MoCA filter installed just ahead of it. Its not a MoCA splitter however and should be replaced with an Antronix MMC2003H-A splitter, which is MoCA qualified. The splitter is an Antronix CMC4003H splitter rated for 1218 Mhz. That certainly looks like a typical Rogers Fibre to the Home (FTTH) installation. My modem is an Arris XB6 and is currently plugged into the coax on main floor. I was trying to figure out where to put Moca filter (if this is necessary) and also whether I could run a third coax cable from that splitter to go into a Moca adapter and then run a 30 foot cat 6 cable to a splitter to plug into my TV, XBOX, and PC in the basement as I have no other coax outlets in basement for Moca. I am fairly decent with tech stuff generally and can usually troubleshoot well, but don't have a lot of knowledge on networking hardware. So is this small orange cable bringing in my rogers and my bell internet? The Rogers phone support said this was impossible and that I must have a single coax bringing in my rogers cable internet. The two coax from the splitter are going into the wall and I assume goes throughout the house, as I have coax in bedrooms upstairs and main floor. ![]() This plugs into the arris networking device and then goes to the adapter into the wall and goes to the splitter. As you can see I have black tubing with the small orange and blue wire coming from the outside. However, when I pulled out the Arris power plug my Rogers internet shut off. I called Rogers and spoke to a couple of tech's and they told me that this was not the Roger's line coming into the house and that it must be the bell setup. I took a picture of the networking setup I am a bit confused because this appears to be optical internet. I would like to install a Moca system in my house to wire the basement devices. ![]() I have access to Gigabit Rogers and also have access to Bell Fibe. I am in a new build townhouse that was completed in August 2019 near Ottawa.
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