- Can I use/convert the broadband thick white cable as cat5 cable?
- Posted by none on June 30th, 2005
Hi
Please could someone give me advice regarding my blueyonder cable modem.
A white box has been installed in the cellar - a black cable from this
goes out into the garden and then into the 'internet' cloud. A thick,
white cable comes out of this box, runs through the house, up to my back
bedroom and into the cable modem. On the white cable, as it connects to
the cable modem are four "interconnecting connectors" which are the same
as the final connection to the cable modem but look like they are there
to lower or raise the signal on the cable.
I have now realised that it would have been better to have kept the
cable modem in the cellar, attach a switch to the cable modem and run
cat5 through the house to the back bedroom for that computers internet
connectino. Then I could put another cat5 up from the cellar to the
lounge and have an internet connection there.
My question after that long ramble is can I convert this thick white
cable that is running through the house to cat5 (is there an adapter?)
so I can install the cable modem next to teh white box in teh cellar,
attach a switch in teh cellar, and use this white cable as a cat5
connection to the pc upstairs?
Phew...
Any help appreciated
- Posted by ABC on June 30th, 2005
"none" <""richardm\"@(none)"> wrote in message
news:1120128758.86512.1@doris.uk.clara.net...
The white cable is probably 75 ohm coax and will be unsuitable for cat5.
- Posted by Yddap on June 30th, 2005
In news:1120128758.86512.1@doris.uk.clara.net,
none" <""richardm\"@(none) <""richardm\"@(none)"> opined very noisily:
connection to the
modem
You cannot use Cat5 in place of the Co-ax cable
Cat 5 can only be used after the cable Modem the White cable is a RF cable
which carries internet and TV signals
to a modem ( cable modem or Set top box) where the signals are de-modulated
and sent to the appropriate recipient
A PC or TV
--
Yddap
Remove guts to reply
- Posted by Spack on June 30th, 2005
Yddap wrote on Thu, 30 Jun 2005 13:03:39 GMT:
The restriction on one MAC address connected to the cable modem on
Blueyonder was removed months ago (at least before Oct 2004), so you can now
use a switch or a hub rather than a router.
Dan
- Posted by poster on June 30th, 2005
On Thu, 30 Jun 2005 15:12:56 +0100, "Spack" <news@worldofspack.co.uk> wrote:
forgive me if wrong, but I didn't see BY mentioned by the original poster.
- Posted by Spack on June 30th, 2005
poster wrote on Thu, 30 Jun 2005 15:34:27 +0100:
This entire thread has been about Blueyonder.
Dan
- Posted by Richard Sobey on June 30th, 2005
On Thu, 30 Jun 2005 15:34:27 +0100, poster <us-mail@rocketmail.com>
wrote:
The second line says:
Richard
- Posted by kraftee on June 30th, 2005
poster wrote:
Read it again...
- Posted by Yddap on June 30th, 2005
In news:gn08c1ted2e58mel6nu8766scg98cu5lr6@212.159.2. 85,
poster <us-mail@rocketmail.com> opined very noisily:
I did
cut /paste of 1st line of OPs post
" Please could someone give me advice regarding my blueyonder cable modem."
--
Yddap
Remove guts to reply
- Posted by cw on June 30th, 2005
You can't convert it to Cat5 however you may be able to find an old
networking card that has a coax socket on it for running the network over
that cable.
It is the kind of thing most computer folk still have knocking about
somewhere even though they'll never user it.
--
Colin
*Drop DEAD from the email address to reply*
- Posted by Ivor Jones on June 30th, 2005
cw wrote:
Unlikely it will work unless it's a Token Ring card. Ethernet over coax
(T-Base 2) uses 50 ohm coax not 75 ohm, which the TV coax will be. It also
has a max. speed of 10 Mb/s not 100.
Ivor
- Posted by Ivor Jones on June 30th, 2005
Ivor Jones wrote:
Oops just seen my typo - that should read 10base2 not T-base-2..!!)
Ivor
- Posted by Bob Eager on June 30th, 2005
On Thu, 30 Jun 2005 21:34:42 UTC, "Ivor Jones" <ivor@despammed.invalid>
wrote:
All the TR I've seen does not use coax.
--
[ 7'ism - a condition by which the sufferer experiences an inability
to give concise answers, express reasoned argument or opinion.
Usually accompanied by silly noises and gestures - incurable, early
euthanasia recommended. ]
- Posted by Ivor Jones on June 30th, 2005
"Bob Eager" <rde42@spamcop.net> wrote in message
news:176uZD2KcidF-pn2-bZGsLqMfKmPs@rikki.tavi.co.uk...
Hmm, maybe I got it wrong, it's been a while. There was certainly one type
of network that used 75 ohm coax. Ethernet is definitely 50 ohm though..!
Ivor
- Posted by Bob Eager on June 30th, 2005
On Thu, 30 Jun 2005 22:50:35 UTC, "Ivor Jones" <ivor@despammed.invalid>
wrote:
There was coax to certain types of terminal, but I have two different
types of TR cable here; one is 8 way twisted pair (well, I think it's
twisted, but the thickness of electric iron flex), and the other is
Cat4. And all the gear to go with them!
--
[ 7'ism - a condition by which the sufferer experiences an inability
to give concise answers, express reasoned argument or opinion.
Usually accompanied by silly noises and gestures - incurable, early
euthanasia recommended. ]
- Posted by Ian Stirling on July 1st, 2005
none <""richardm\"@(none)"> wrote:
Assuming you have Cat5 at the computer.
Take the second white box, and simply move it down to the cellar, removing
cable clips as you go.
Place second white box next to first box, and then attach cat5 cable to it.
Job done.
Coil loose cable out of the way.
- Posted by David G. Bell on July 1st, 2005
On 30 Jun, in article <Xns9685E3A179035cwfidei@84.92.1.10>
usenet@fidei.DEADco.uk "cw" wrote:
There are different sorts of coaxial cable, with different electrical
characteristics. That might not work, even if you can find compatible
hardware.
Cable is cheap. Installation is what costs. It might not be too hard
to replace the coax with Cat5, depending on how it was run through any
walls and floors. You can use the old cable to pull new cable through a
hole or duct.
--
David G. Bell -- SF Fan, Filker, and Punslinger.
"I am Number Two," said Penfold. "You are Number Six."
- Posted by none on July 1st, 2005
Thank you all for your replies
I will transport the cable modem down to the cellar, unpick the coax
cable, and run cat5 through the same holes back up to the bedroom.
Must try harder with the planning next time 8/
Ian Stirling wrote:
- Posted by Peter Watson on July 1st, 2005
Ivor Jones wrote:
Peter