<img src="http://drocket.net/images/cable_setup.gif">
I've had this setup running perfectly fine since I got cable internet, probably about 2 years ago. A couple of weeks ago, though, my cable modem stopped working: the 'cable' light flashed, indicating that it couldn't connect. I spent a few days cursing the cable company, figuring that it was a problem on their end, until I got sick of it and did some investigating. After fiddling with the wires a bit, I discovered that it seemed to be a problems with the wires (or something) - everything worked fine if I connected the modem directly to the outside wire (which is, honestly, the way that its supposed to be.)
So, I bought a new wire and a new splitter, figuring that it was just a problem with the old ones. After much more fiddling around, though, I've discovered that anytime I attempt to split the signal, the cable modem won't connect. The exact way it works is rather strange, though...
Putting the splitter in the wire (but not having the second output hooked up, it works fine. If a wire is attached to the second output (*even if the second wire isn't attached to anything*), though, it will not work. The presence of the wire alone (even the new wire) causes problems, regardless of whether its hooked up or not. That doesn't make sense to me... Isn't it already split with the splitter? Why would a longer branch on the split be the thing causing problems?
Any advice would be appreciated (beyond 'call the cable company'. That's what I'm trying to avoid doing. I'm not in the mood to wait for them sometime between 6AM November 23rd and 9PM February 7th
