The Problem: Spotty Wi-Fi for Gaming
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Scenario: Colton needs a stable network connection for his gaming PC, but his Wi-Fi is inconsistent. His wife doesn’t want loose ethernet cables on the floor.
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The Constraint: Running new ethernet cables through the walls isn’t viable due to the home’s construction/age.
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The Solution: Use existing wiring already inside the walls—specifically Coaxial cables (TV) or Electrical wiring (Power outlets).
Solution 1: MoCA (Multimedia over Coax)
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Technology: Uses the existing coaxial cables (originally for cable TV) to transmit high-speed network data.
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Theoretical Speed: Offers performance up to 2.5 Gigabit, similar to a direct ethernet connection.
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Installation Attempt:
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They located a hidden coax cable behind a wall plate and drilled a hole to access it.
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The Setup: An ethernet cable goes from the router to a MoCA adapter, converting the signal to coax. Another adapter at the PC converts it back to ethernet.
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The Result: Failure. The MoCA light never turned on. This indicates the coax cables in the walls likely do not connect back to a central hub or are disconnected/cut somewhere in the house.
Solution 2: Powerline Adapters
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Technology: Transmits data signals over the electrical wiring of the house.
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Theoretical Speed: Rated for roughly 2 Gigabit, though real-world performance depends heavily on the quality of the power lines and distance.
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Installation: “Plug and Play.” One adapter plugs into a wall outlet near the router, and the other near the PC.
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Important Note: It is recommended to plug them directly into the wall, not into a power strip/surge protector, as strips can filter out the data signal.
Performance Test: Wi-Fi vs. Powerline
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Consistency is Key: The goal wasn’t just raw speed, but latency consistency.
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Wi-Fi Issues: While the Wi-Fi sometimes showed low ping, it frequently spiked to 25ms-50ms+ during use, which causes lag in gaming.
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Powerline Stability: The Powerline connection provided a steady ~10ms ping with very little variance, even while microwaving water (which can sometimes cause interference).
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Stress Test: They ran multiple Twitch streams to load the connection. The Wi-Fi struggled and dropped quality, while the Powerline connection remained stable.
Key Takeaways & Advice
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MoCA vs. Powerline: MoCA is generally preferred if you have working coax cables because it is faster and less susceptible to interference. Powerline is more flexible (outlets are everywhere) but can be “hit or miss” depending on your home’s wiring.
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Encryption: For both technologies, it is critical to use the built-in encryption buttons (similar to WPS). If you live in an apartment/duplex, your neighbors might share your wiring, so encryption prevents them from accidentally joining your network.
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Hub Limitations: If you add more than two MoCA/Powerline adapters, they act like a “hub,” meaning bandwidth is shared across all devices, which can reduce speeds









