• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

get a new modem?

T2urtle

Diamond Member
I have comcast internet, doesn't say how fast on my statment but I have add-on " powerboost"

Currently its running off a SB5121 ( 5+ years old, not hacked or anything) goes thru my vonage linksys router and then on to my linksys router (DD_WRT)

I was thinking since the oldest unit is my modem, it should be time to replace it. No issues or anything but maybe i will see speed jumps if i get the SB6121
 
If you put a $10 bill into a larger purse it does not turn to be $100.

It stays $10.


😎
 
If it's working, why replace anything? What do your speedtests show currently?


speedtest puts in the 10-13mb/s download and 4 mb upload.

I read people claiming speed increases, but the main purpose for them buying was to save the $7/month modem rental fee from comcast. I own this modem so there is no benefit for me other then possible speed gains. My connect does get a little weird at times, not sure if its modem or router related.

My thought was 5 year old technology, cheap to upgrade, why not. I applied same theory to TV's once the price dropped to sub $500. Computers and laptops are the same. Why not network items.

If you put a $10 bill into a larger purse it does not turn to be $100.

It stays $10. 😎

I understand what your trying to say but not exactly a solid example. That $10 if used to measure speed, could become $11-12. But it could just mean trading that $10 for a nicer crisp $10.
 
My thought was 5 year old technology, cheap to upgrade, why not. I applied same theory to TV's once the price dropped to sub $500. Computers and laptops are the same. Why not network items.
Computers and TVs are technological commodities.

A cablemodem is strictly used to access a service, with a given rate plan, which does not succumb to moore's law, rather to the profits of a monopoly service provider.
 
Back
Top