I said that ? haha.. Well,, you do want a modem with a seperate router. We are rapidly approaching 2Gbps+ in DOCSIS cable speeds. In fact there are plans by Cox communications to be at 2.5Gbs up and 12 Gbps by 1str qtr 2025. They plan on offering speeds about 1Gbps in the next few months. SO.. Its now time to go multigig for many people. Higher speeds tho might have downsides for audio use. A lot of people like 100Mbps ethernet for example. So a 2.5Gbps from the modem to the router *might* or *might not* be a good thing for audio.
So its time to consider a new modem and a new router. There are routers like Mikrotik where you can set the speed of a ethernet port.. These could be very useful as you can have multi-gig for the house but have a 100Mbs ethernet right on the router.
A Arris S33 modem is supported in most cable companies. Its good to 2.5 Gbps. It does not have phone services. You need a router and wifi and all that would need to support 2.5 Gbps.
As far as what sounds best in the new DOCSIS 4 world that is coming, GOOD QUESTION.. If your streaming audio from online services all the new changes that come with DOCSIS 4 will have some impact.
A big change is coming for streaming audio from the net.
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Please note its directional. in one direction, my modem simply refused to lock on to a signal . the other direction works perfectly. no loss of speeding stable connection. YMMV
Last month, however, i did try by happenstance the Arris SB8200 (Broadcom chipset, but modem only), and I can attest that it did sound much better than my previous Gateway all in one Arris SBG8300 (with Intel Puma). The delta (uplift) between those two I would describe as: more solid, better depth of imaging, less noise in imaging. The sound stage became enriched with more low-level detail. Sort of similar to the difference between MP3 and Redbook, however, the difference here was more about stillness, ease, soundstage body, and noise floor reduction.
I wanted to pass on to everybody, everyone should get one of these and put it on the cable modem.. Breaking the ground loop connection that comes from the evil cable company
Is your gizmo fully broken in? Say +500-hours (or so)? Just curious.
Every time I introduce this little gizmo into my system (on the back of my modem), the phantom image in my stereo playback gets a tad more solid, the sound a tad more balanced, and the noise floor lowers ever-so-slightly. When I remove this little gizmo, the converse happens: phantom image illusion gets a tad lighter, and the sound has less weight (thinner).
Perhaps our systems react differently, we have different preferences, or (most likely) I may be having a placebo effect. Over the next few weeks, I will try to remove and test my gizmo again (for A:B:A testing), and see if I am just having a placebo effect. Thanks for the sanity check.
Is your gizmo fully broken in? Say +500-hours (or so)? Just curious.
Perhaps our systems react differently, we have different preferences, or (most likely) I may be having a placebo effect. Over the next few weeks, I will try to remove and test my gizmo again (for A:B:A testing), and see if I am just having a placebo effect. Thanks for the sanity check.
vert...if you don't mind me asking, what size DC plug does the MG8702 take? I have one on order, and also have a JS-2. It would be nice to know ahead of time if I have a cable that fits it.
vert...if you don't mind me asking, what size DC plug does the MG8702 take? I have one on order, and also have a JS-2. It would be nice to know ahead of time if I have a cable that fits it.
In my setup (which has virgin media modem , sotm switches and the phoenixnet) this gizmo softened my sound. Made it dull. Robbed the dyanamics
I took it out after a week or so.
Fritzbox has launched modems with fibre input.
The simpler unit 5530 has no usb output (which I don’t need) might do less harm to sonics because of that.
There is a great discussion about the chips with CABLE MODEMS where they seem to play a major role (Broadcom vs Puma) but I am not aware that the chips are as important with FIBER MODEMS.
I'm looking at the Fritz!box 5590 and hope to be able to connect it to the incoming fiber directly, BUT...I hoped it would come with TWO FSP+ cages, and not just one for the incoming signal...
I found some routers that do have more than one FSP+ slot Microtik etc but am struggling to find more info on the usability in a home network. Ideally I want to separate my audio network from everything else and leave enough room for IP TV and WIFI, current ISP connection is fiber @ 200mbps, but I can go to 1Gb in the new home....