![]() Finally my primary TV and the MOCA extender are co-located at the end of one coax segment. Am I better off just leaving it this way, or should I use a combiner or diplexer to join the segments that will run from the new OTA and the MOCA connection on the main router? If the latter, should I put them on the input side of the whole house splitter? What specific devices would work best?ģ. ![]() THe only thing on the input side is the cable from FIOS, which is no longer in use. Right now, all of the coax segments in my house terminate on the output side of the whole house splitter. Will the OTA antenna interfere with the MOCA extender or vice-versa?Ģ. THis leads me to the following questions:ġ. Finally, the ActionTEC extender sits right next to the TV that I want to hook up to the OTA antenna. ![]() I plan to connect my antenna in my attic via a currently unused coax segment that also runs to the box. Note that both the main modem and the Actiontec extender are both on segments of the whole hose coax cabling that are connected to the "output side of the whole-house splitter in the main panel where all of the coax runs in the house come together. From my main router I connect via MOCA to an Actiontec WCB6200Q extender in a remote part of the house - this seems to work very well. Currently my internet comes from the FIOS box on ethernet to my main router. To complete our recent cord cutting from cable TV, I need to add an OTA antenna in my attic. with a question on how to make MOCA and OTA antenna work togehter using same whole-house coax wiring
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