this post was submitted on 30 Nov 2023
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Home Networking

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I have run a 15m (50ft) Cat6 cable from my modem on the main floor to the basement entertainment unit. At that unit I have a PS4, TV and Fire Stick. I want to connect both the TV and the PS4 to ethernet for now (Fire stick later if I buy the adapter). Do I just need a splitter at the entertainment unit end of this cable and will be good to go?

Later, if I get an unmanaged multiple-port switch for my main floor devices, can/should I connect this cable to the switch on the main floor, or should I leave it connected straight to the modem?

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[–] Brkdncr@sh.itjust.works 2 points 11 months ago

You need a switch at your entertainment center. They are relatively cheap.

Not sure what a splitter is but you don’t need it.

[–] releenc@alien.top 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

You cannot share Ethernet with splitters. Each device needs it's own cable back to a switch.

[–] SirLauncelot@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Thin-net and thick-net would like a word.

[–] TheHillPerson@alien.top 2 points 11 months ago (1 children)

As others noted, get a switch to put behind your TV. Plug your 15m cable, the TV, and the PS4 into that.

Later on, it doesn't matter where you put the modem end of that 15m cable. Theoretically, you could have faster internet access for the TV and PS4 by leaving it plugged into the modem. Fewer devices in the communication chain typically equals faster connections. Practically, it won't matter much. We're talking fractions of a millisecond latency difference. There are other situations where leaving it in the modem is beneficial including if you have a faster connection to your ISP than you have for your internal network connections or if you have a lot of contention for bandwidth plugged into a single port on the modem. Again, practically, none of these will matter for you. Just plug it in wherever is convenient or wherever makes you happiest.

P.S. That modem is most likely a modem/router/wifi access point combination device. Technically a modem is what converts from whatever medium your ISP uses (cable, DSL) to ethernet and a router is what allows you to use multiple devices with a single public IP. I assume you know what an access point is. If you have a fiber connection, it isn't even a modem, it is something else. Again, none of this really matters practically for your setup.

[–] advicemerchant@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

You're correct, it's a modem /router. Thanks for the advice!

To confirm my understating: it would be fine to have two switches in my home setup, yes? (Not worried about fractions of milliseconds at all). One switch in the basement, for 3 devices, and connected directly to the router via the cat 6.

And a second switch on the main floor, for 6 devices, also connected directly to the router.

[–] SirLauncelot@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Unless they changed their post, it said cable modem and cat6.

[–] MrMotofy@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

You're planning it incorrectly. Generally ALL jacks need a single run back to the basementUUtilities/Comms area of home where the large main switch is. The internet feed should also enter and terminate there. Then devices are connected or patched to wherever in the home you need.

Wiring 1 room to another is the wrong way to do it.

DON'T use network cable splitters, use at minimum a Gigabit switch with enough ports to do what you need, ideally with extras

[–] TomRILReddit@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

How are you converting from the 50ft coax cable to Ethernet?