DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   One cable for internet and TV (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/152515-one-cable-internet-tv.html)

[email protected] April 8th 06 04:29 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 
I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers


Dave Balderstone April 8th 06 04:40 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 
In article .com,
wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers


No. It's impossible. Go back to dialup for internet access.

Tony Hwang April 8th 06 05:05 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 
wrote:
I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers

Subsciribed to Rogers for TV and Internet service?
Do you have cable modem?

Randy Day April 8th 06 05:12 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 
wrote:
I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers


Ask at Home depot for a 'video splitter' or 'cable splitter'.
If the signal is already split a lot in your building,
there's a chance it may not work. Then you need a (more
expensive) signal amplifier.

Shane Glaseman April 8th 06 05:57 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 

wrote in message
...
On 7 Apr 2006 20:29:45 -0700, wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers


Go get a 1gz splitter. The cable company should give you one tho.


He'll also need two new, assumably short, lengths of cable to go from the
splitter to each device. Let's at least save him that second trip to the
electronics store, cursing us for not giving complete information (no, it's
not obvious, if you've never done it before).



buffalobill April 8th 06 11:10 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 
they'll probably hand you a splitter and some connecting cables at your
cable company.


m Ransley April 8th 06 01:21 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
I have a splitter and a switching splitter. A switch may or may not be
needed to keep signal strength high. Call the cable company to see what
they recommend. Any hardware store should have what you need to make
unplugging unesesary.


Mark Lloyd April 8th 06 04:26 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
On Sat, 08 Apr 2006 04:57:41 GMT, "Shane Glaseman"
wrote:


wrote in message
.. .
On 7 Apr 2006 20:29:45 -0700, wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers


Go get a 1gz splitter. The cable company should give you one tho.


He'll also need two new, assumably short, lengths of cable to go from the
splitter to each device. Let's at least save him that second trip to the
electronics store, cursing us for not giving complete information (no, it's
not obvious, if you've never done it before).


Maybe I'm too used to connecting those things to see it as
non-obvious, but you can look at the splitter (while it's still in the
package for most) and see that it needs cables on all connectors.
--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what
to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb
contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin

Shane Glaseman April 8th 06 05:30 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 

"Mark Lloyd" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 08 Apr 2006 04:57:41 GMT, "Shane Glaseman"
wrote:


wrote in message
. ..
On 7 Apr 2006 20:29:45 -0700, wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers

Go get a 1gz splitter. The cable company should give you one tho.


He'll also need two new, assumably short, lengths of cable to go from the
splitter to each device. Let's at least save him that second trip to the
electronics store, cursing us for not giving complete information (no,
it's
not obvious, if you've never done it before).


Maybe I'm too used to connecting those things to see it as
non-obvious, but you can look at the splitter (while it's still in the
package for most) and see that it needs cables on all connectors.


It certainly could just be me. But I've had too much experience telling
people "do this," without holding their hand and taking them step-by-step...
only to find that they couldn't make leaps that I thought were obvious. Not
that the OP here will have that problem, but why not just cover the
possibility?



[email protected] April 8th 06 08:12 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
I have been reading this thread - and have what may be a dumb
question...

Does the same cable that connects to TVs also provide internet service
in the USA too? We have cable (Bright House) for TV but it is basic
service so there is no box with it...we just hook up the TV to the
cable. In another room, we have a cable with modem for the internet
(Road Runner)...and it is connected to a router which is then connected
to the computer. I had no idea the same cable could do both things.
If we wanted to hook up a TV to the RR cable, could we do that? I
mean, buy a splitter, or perhaps figure out a way to setup a wireless
connection to the TV.? Just wondering.


Ralph Mowery April 8th 06 09:40 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
I have been reading this thread - and have what may be a dumb
question...

Does the same cable that connects to TVs also provide internet service
in the USA too? We have cable (Bright House) for TV but it is basic
service so there is no box with it...we just hook up the TV to the
cable. In another room, we have a cable with modem for the internet
(Road Runner)...and it is connected to a router which is then connected
to the computer. I had no idea the same cable could do both things.
If we wanted to hook up a TV to the RR cable, could we do that? I
mean, buy a splitter, or perhaps figure out a way to setup a wireless
connection to the TV.? Just wondering.

In the US the same cable that has the TV signal also has the cable internet
on it. YOu can take your cable modem and hook it to any TV connection in
the house or you could take any TV and hook it to the wire going to the
cable modem. The only place you may run into problems is if there are
splitters or amplifiers in the lines. The cable modem usually needs a
higher level than the TV does to work. Also the amplifiers may be one way
amplifiers and will not work on the internet.

In otherwords the cable comming into the house has all the signals on it.
Usually a single splitter is used to send the maximum signal direct to the
internet modem and the other side of the splitter is then sent to all the TV
sets and other splitters for them if more than one TV is in use.



mm April 9th 06 05:59 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 
On 8 Apr 2006 12:12:55 -0700, "
wrote:

I have been reading this thread - and have what may be a dumb
question...

Does the same cable that connects to TVs also provide internet service
in the USA too? We have cable (Bright House) for TV but it is basic
service so there is no box with it...we just hook up the TV to the
cable. In another room, we have a cable with modem for the internet
(Road Runner)...and it is connected to a router which is then connected
to the computer. I had no idea the same cable could do both things.
If we wanted to hook up a TV to the RR cable, could we do that? I


Yes, but you would only see 1's and 0's.

In various sequences.

Actually, I think it depends on the way the provider has it set up.
In Dallas I think there are two cables coming into the house, but
apparently in that part of Canada, there is only one.


mean, buy a splitter, or perhaps figure out a way to setup a wireless
connection to the TV.? Just wondering.


I think you could only use a router for tv for any digital stations on
the cable, and not for any other stations. All of the internet is
digital (1's and 0's) so it works.

BTW, I was kidding in my first line above. You would see some mixture
of black and white dots or areas, parts might look different shades of
grey, I think, but they wouldn't actually be the numbers one or zero.


Bob Vaughan April 9th 06 01:22 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
In article ,
Shane Glaseman wrote:

wrote in message
.. .
On 7 Apr 2006 20:29:45 -0700, wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers


Go get a 1gz splitter. The cable company should give you one tho.


He'll also need two new, assumably short, lengths of cable to go from the
splitter to each device. Let's at least save him that second trip to the
electronics store, cursing us for not giving complete information (no, it's
not obvious, if you've never done it before).



Lets not forget that these cables need to be high quality RG-6 or better,
not the crappy 30% shielded RG-59 junk with push-on connectors that you get in
the box with your VCR, which should be thrown in the junk pile..


--
-- Welcome My Son, Welcome To The Machine --
Bob Vaughan | techie @ tantivy.net |
| P.O. Box 19792, Stanford, Ca 94309 |
-- I am Me, I am only Me, And no one else is Me, What could be simpler? --

Mark Lloyd April 9th 06 05:55 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
On Sun, 9 Apr 2006 12:22:56 +0000 (UTC),
(Bob Vaughan) wrote:

In article ,
Shane Glaseman wrote:

wrote in message
. ..
On 7 Apr 2006 20:29:45 -0700,
wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers

Go get a 1gz splitter. The cable company should give you one tho.


He'll also need two new, assumably short, lengths of cable to go from the
splitter to each device. Let's at least save him that second trip to the
electronics store, cursing us for not giving complete information (no, it's
not obvious, if you've never done it before).



Lets not forget that these cables need to be high quality RG-6 or better,
not the crappy 30% shielded RG-59 junk with push-on connectors that you get in
the box with your VCR, which should be thrown in the junk pile..


RG6 or RG59 makes little difference for shorter cables. Push-on
connectors are leakier and less physically secure. I always use screw
connectors except for short tests. Same for crimped cable ends (with a
good crimper).
--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what
to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb
contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin

Mark Lloyd April 9th 06 06:07 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
On 8 Apr 2006 12:12:55 -0700, "
wrote:

I have been reading this thread - and have what may be a dumb
question...

Does the same cable that connects to TVs also provide internet service
in the USA too? We have cable (Bright House) for TV but it is basic
service so there is no box with it...we just hook up the TV to the
cable. In another room, we have a cable with modem for the internet
(Road Runner)...and it is connected to a router which is then connected
to the computer. I had no idea the same cable could do both things.
If we wanted to hook up a TV to the RR cable, could we do that? I
mean, buy a splitter, or perhaps figure out a way to setup a wireless
connection to the TV.? Just wondering.


Here (in east Texas) I have cable TV (not digital) and cable internet.
The first thing the cable connects to when it enters the house is a
1:2 splitter, with one side connected directly to the cable modem.
--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what
to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb
contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin

clifto April 10th 06 01:33 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 
wrote:
NTSC TV is a bandwidth hog. That is why the cable company is pushing
digital.


NTSC takes 6 MHz per channel. Digital takes 6 MHz per channel, more
if you want 1080p or higher resolution. They're pushing digital because
the set sellers want us to throw away all our existing televisions and
buy new ones.

--
All relevant people are pertinent.
All rude people are impertinent.
Therefore, no rude people are relevant.
-- Solomon W. Golomb

Bob Vaughan April 10th 06 01:43 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 
In article ,
Mark Lloyd wrote:
On Sun, 9 Apr 2006 12:22:56 +0000 (UTC),
(Bob Vaughan) wrote:

In article ,
Shane Glaseman wrote:

wrote in message
...
On 7 Apr 2006 20:29:45 -0700,
wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers

Go get a 1gz splitter. The cable company should give you one tho.

He'll also need two new, assumably short, lengths of cable to go from the
splitter to each device. Let's at least save him that second trip to the
electronics store, cursing us for not giving complete information (no, it's
not obvious, if you've never done it before).



Lets not forget that these cables need to be high quality RG-6 or better,
not the crappy 30% shielded RG-59 junk with push-on connectors that you get in
the box with your VCR, which should be thrown in the junk pile..


RG6 or RG59 makes little difference for shorter cables. Push-on
connectors are leakier and less physically secure. I always use screw
connectors except for short tests. Same for crimped cable ends (with a
good crimper).


I'll agree that at those lengths, the loss of the cable makes litle difference,
but what I'm concerned with is the shielding of the cable.

Cable TV is a closed system.. it uses the same frequencies within the system
that are also used by other users of the RF spectrum. Using inadequately
shielded cables can lead to interference to the cable tv signal from outside
sources, and more importantly, can lead to the cable tv system causing
interference to the outside services, which can include public safety,
broadcast media, cellphones, amateur radio, etc.

Bottom line: use high quality low-loss cables, preferably with double or quad
shielding, and 95-100% shield coverage.



--
-- Welcome My Son, Welcome To The Machine --
Bob Vaughan | techie @ tantivy.net |
| P.O. Box 19792, Stanford, Ca 94309 |
-- I am Me, I am only Me, And no one else is Me, What could be simpler? --

Mark April 10th 06 01:47 AM

One cable for internet and TV
 

clifto wrote:
wrote:
NTSC TV is a bandwidth hog. That is why the cable company is pushing
digital.


NTSC takes 6 MHz per channel. Digital takes 6 MHz per channel, more
if you want 1080p or higher resolution. They're pushing digital because
the set sellers want us to throw away all our existing televisions and
buy new ones.

--


analog NTSC takes 6 MHz for one analog program

digital cable TV is divided into 6 MHz channels but each 6 MHz channel
can carry 10 or more standard def programs or 2 high def programs on
cable..

downstream cable modem signals are the same as digital cable TV signals


Mark


Mark Lloyd April 10th 06 04:20 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
On Mon, 10 Apr 2006 00:43:27 +0000 (UTC),
(Bob Vaughan) wrote:

In article ,
Mark Lloyd wrote:
On Sun, 9 Apr 2006 12:22:56 +0000 (UTC),

(Bob Vaughan) wrote:

In article ,
Shane Glaseman wrote:

wrote in message
m...
On 7 Apr 2006 20:29:45 -0700,
wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers

Go get a 1gz splitter. The cable company should give you one tho.

He'll also need two new, assumably short, lengths of cable to go from the
splitter to each device. Let's at least save him that second trip to the
electronics store, cursing us for not giving complete information (no, it's
not obvious, if you've never done it before).


Lets not forget that these cables need to be high quality RG-6 or better,
not the crappy 30% shielded RG-59 junk with push-on connectors that you get in
the box with your VCR, which should be thrown in the junk pile..


RG6 or RG59 makes little difference for shorter cables. Push-on
connectors are leakier and less physically secure. I always use screw
connectors except for short tests. Same for crimped cable ends (with a
good crimper).


I'll agree that at those lengths, the loss of the cable makes litle difference,
but what I'm concerned with is the shielding of the cable.

Cable TV is a closed system.. it uses the same frequencies within the system
that are also used by other users of the RF spectrum. Using inadequately
shielded cables can lead to interference to the cable tv signal from outside
sources, and more importantly, can lead to the cable tv system causing
interference to the outside services, which can include public safety,
broadcast media, cellphones, amateur radio, etc.

Bottom line: use high quality low-loss cables, preferably with double or quad
shielding, and 95-100% shield coverage.


And keep the shield complete at the connectors. The twist-on
connectors can do a poor job of that. There was an obvious improvement
when I started using the crimped ones.
--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what
to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb
contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin

Mark Lloyd April 10th 06 04:23 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
On Sun, 09 Apr 2006 12:53:30 -0400, wrote:

On Sun, 09 Apr 2006 00:59:38 -0400, mm
wrote:


Yes, but you would only see 1's and 0's.

In various sequences.

Actually, I think it depends on the way the provider has it set up.
In Dallas I think there are two cables coming into the house, but
apparently in that part of Canada, there is only one.


mean, buy a splitter, or perhaps figure out a way to setup a wireless
connection to the TV.? Just wondering.


I think you could only use a router for tv for any digital stations on
the cable, and not for any other stations. All of the internet is
digital (1's and 0's) so it works.



Cable internet is on low VHF (the same basic band as Ch 2-6) on
Comcast in SW Florida. It all comes in on one cable.
Compared to old style TV the internet is not that much bandwidth.
NTSC TV is a bandwidth hog. That is why the cable company is pushing
digital.


The cable internet I have uses channel 99 (frequency somewhere between
6 and 7) for downstream and T-14 (frequency less than channel 2) for
upstream.
--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what
to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb
contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin

Mark Lloyd April 10th 06 04:25 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
On 9 Apr 2006 17:47:03 -0700, "Mark" wrote:


clifto wrote:
wrote:
NTSC TV is a bandwidth hog. That is why the cable company is pushing
digital.


NTSC takes 6 MHz per channel. Digital takes 6 MHz per channel, more
if you want 1080p or higher resolution. They're pushing digital because
the set sellers want us to throw away all our existing televisions and
buy new ones.

--


analog NTSC takes 6 MHz for one analog program

digital cable TV is divided into 6 MHz channels but each 6 MHz channel
can carry 10 or more standard def programs or 2 high def programs on
cable..


The local CBS station (analog on channel 19) here has digital on 19.1,
and UPN on 19.2 (the digital is actually ch18, but they call it 19).

downstream cable modem signals are the same as digital cable TV signals


And upstream uses a smaller band, normally below the frequencies used
for channel 2.


Mark


--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what
to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb
contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin

z April 10th 06 04:47 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 

Shane Glaseman wrote:
wrote in message
...
On 7 Apr 2006 20:29:45 -0700, wrote:

I have a question. There is one cable coming to the room that I have
sublet for internet and TV. Every time I wanna use TV I have to unplug
the Internet and vice versa. Is there a way to get an aparatus to use
both of them at the same time? I am in canada and TV internet cable is
rogers


Go get a 1gz splitter. The cable company should give you one tho.


He'll also need two new, assumably short, lengths of cable to go from the
splitter to each device. Let's at least save him that second trip to the
electronics store, cursing us for not giving complete information (no, it's
not obvious, if you've never done it before).


Amusing tale from the papers here last weekend; a woman comes home one
day to find her apartment robbed, TV, computer, VCR, game machine all
gone, doors all still locked. Next day she's in the bedroom, hears
something in the living room, goes out and finds the building
superintendent in the living room collecting the cables he forgot to
steal the day before.... Oops.


clifto April 10th 06 11:48 PM

One cable for internet and TV
 
Mark wrote:
clifto wrote:
wrote:
NTSC TV is a bandwidth hog. That is why the cable company is pushing
digital.


NTSC takes 6 MHz per channel. Digital takes 6 MHz per channel, more
if you want 1080p or higher resolution. They're pushing digital because
the set sellers want us to throw away all our existing televisions and
buy new ones.


analog NTSC takes 6 MHz for one analog program

digital cable TV is divided into 6 MHz channels but each 6 MHz channel
can carry 10 or more standard def programs or 2 high def programs on
cable..


They haven't got enough programming material to run a single program
all day as it is.

They'd never be able to do digital if they didn't force everyone
to buy new stuff. If it were optional, few would adopt it,
especially at today's prices.

--
All relevant people are pertinent.
All rude people are impertinent.
Therefore, no rude people are relevant.
-- Solomon W. Golomb


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:04 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter