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Discussion topic: sky puck cable

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This message was authored by: hairybob

sky puck cable

Hi, I have two tv's in a summer house for watching sport mainly. Do I need a separate ethernet cable for each puck ? A the moment I have one cable and a splitter wich doesn't want to work. Only one puck will work at one time. Both work separately as I have checked.

Any advice appreciated.

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This message was authored by: Jones_The_Cat

Re: sky puck cable


@hairybob wrote:

Hi, I have two tv's in a summer house for watching sport mainly. Do I need a separate ethernet cable for each puck ? A the moment I have one cable and a splitter wich doesn't want to work. Only one puck will work at one time. Both work separately as I have checked.

Any advice appreciated.


What broadband speed to you get and what kind of splitter are you using? You really need an ethernet switch like this one in order to have multiple ethernet cables providing broadband to multiple devices. 

You could always try using WiFi if it reaches your summer house. 

This message was authored by: mikealanr

Re: sky puck cable

Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more

Hi @hairybob 

 

You would need to use a switch. The ethernet cable from your house / router to the switch and two other cables from the switch to each puck.

 

You can get them relatively inexpensively on Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Network-Hubs-Switches/b?ie=UTF8&node=430573031

 

Hope this helps.

 

MikeAlanR

---
55" Gen 2 Sky Glass atlantic blue, 65” Sky Glass ocean blue, Sky Live, 4 streaming pucks and EE FTTP Busiest Home (circa 1.6 Gbps download). Sky SoundBox. Former Sky Q, Sky+ HD and Sky+ customer. Sky Mobile Customer.

Please Note: I am not a Sky employee. I am a fellow subscriber. Please do not PM me as they will not be responded to. Posting publicly to a thread increases the usefulness for all.
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This message was authored by: hairybob

Re: sky puck cable

Thanks for the quick reply, not being very tech savvy, i'm guessing a switch is a posh splitter ? Just to be sure, one cable from the router into the switch will run both pucks at the same time ?

 

This message was authored by: Jones_The_Cat

Re: sky puck cable


@hairybob wrote:

Thanks for the quick reply, not being very tech savvy, i'm guessing a switch is a posh splitter ? Just to be sure, one cable from the router into the switch will run both pucks at the same time ?

 


You would connect an ethernet cable from your router to the switch, then two more ethernet cables from any other ports on the switch to each puck. 

Both pucks will then receive your broadband and should work as long as your broadband is fast enough to support it. Sky Stream needs around 25-30Mbps minimum for one puck. 

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This message was authored by: hairybob

Re: sky puck cable

Thats great, i'll shall try that. appreciate the help,

Live long and prosper.

This message was authored by: TimmyBGood

Re: sky puck cable

Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more

@hairybob 

 

A 'switch' in this context is better understood as a multiplier, and permits numerous ethernet devices to be in use.

 

Although there are passive devices called an 'ethernet splitter' these won't do what you want: they 'split' a single gigabit eight strand cable into two separate four strand 100Mbs ethernet cables which is almost never actually appropriate.

* * * * * * *

Sky Glass 55" (on ethernet) & two Stream Pucks (one ethernet / one WiFi)
BT Halo 3+ Ultrafast FTTP (500Mbs), BT Smart Hub 2
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