• 0 Posts
  • 30 Comments
Joined 11 months ago
cake
Cake day: October 30th, 2023

help-circle



  • A $30 surge suppressor will not prevent this from happening again. You can see the fakespot review, for what it’s worth.

    Even a nearby lightning strike will overcome surge protection.

    As far as I know and have seen, eliminating the path for the conducted radiation is best, if not the only, way to prevent problems in the future.





  • The long white ‘cable’ is probably a tube with either a pull string for future fiber or already has the fiber in it. What does the writing say?

    A splitter will attenuate signal level to/from your modem. Typically 3-7 dB, depending on the splitter. If you do not have a need to split, the coax, use a female-to-female feed-thru connector. If the signals are already marginal, don’t use a splitter. Check the upstream signal level, before moving the modem. If it’s getting above 42-ish dB, then splitter is a bad idea. The downstream signal level should be above -5-ish dB if you will add a splitter.

    I haven’t noticed the S33 getting as hot as some older modems, but I haven’t paid that much attention. If it gets hot, then keep it in the open. Personally, I like to see all of the lights/LEDs.



  • I didn’t see anything in the AT&T list for fiber. It looked like all cellular.

    Be careful that the AT&T ‘fiber’ is fiber to the home, not fiber to somewhere near your neighborhood.

    A few years ago, an AT&T salesman knocked on my door and tried to sell me fiber. There wasn’t an inch of fiber in our neighborhood. I suspect it was fiber to the DSLAM and DSL to the home. It topped out at 40 Mbps.

    Spectrum was cheaper and faster for the price.



  • As u/michrech said, lag-free gaming is not possible. There will always be lag at some point. There are hundreds of posts in this subreddit about lag.

    Your friend has the right idea, a dedicated WiFi6 AP wired to your router via a PoE switch. Place the AP in the same room that you will likely game wirelessly.

    Do you already own the ASUS RT-AX86U Pro? If so, try it before you buy something else. ‘Gaming’ is mostly just marketing BS. In the consumer world ‘Pro’ doesn’t mean much, either. The ASUS RT-AX86U looks like it will route 1 Gbps.

    Whichever router you pick, disable its WiFi in favor of the ‘real’ AP.







  • I’m not sure where the .40. address is coming from. My Arris modem’s admin page lives at 192.168.100.1. I don’t need to do anything to my router to access it.

    The router knows that it doesn’t own a 192.168.100.x subnet and forwards that traffic ‘toward’ its default router, where the modem will reply. Not all modems use the .100. subnet. Arris and Motorola do.

    In a typical (Arris/Motorola) config, if you watch the ethernet traffic while the modem is coming up and the router is DHCP’ing for its WAN address, you will see the WAN get 192.168.100.xx address until the modem negotiates with the ISP. The modem will then drop and restore link to the router forcing the router to do another DHCP request. The response to this second DHCP request receives the public IP address for the router’s WAN port.

    If you run wireshark on a PC connected to the modem while powered off, then power on the modem, you should see a gratuitous ARP advertising the modem’s IP and MAC addresses. This will probably be the management IP address of the modem.