On Sat, 29 Jan 2005 06:57:09 -0500, Thomas wrote:
I use Charter Communications as my ISP. At one outlet in the house I
have a CTV splitter to connect to both a TV and my cable modem.
Worked well for 2 years. Then, all of a sudden, no internet service.
Chater finally asked if there was a splitter. When removed the internet
service returned. Replaced with a new, more expensive splitter and all
is well with both TV and internet.
Charter said that splitters go bad. Rarely, but it does happen.
Wondering how a splitter can go bad. Isn't it a simple voltage divider
with an impedance match to 75 ohms? Are there capacitors in there that
could go bad?
Figured someone here would have opened a splitter at one time or another.
Thanks.
Thomas
I never opened one. I always believed they were intermeshed coils, or
basically an isolation transformer similar to an audio transformer
that allows one 8 ohm input and two 8 ohm outputs. Of course, CTV
splitters have much higher frequencies to deal with and are much
smaller. They also generally have a very high loss figure 7 db or
more.
--
Buck
N4PGW
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