I think you'll find about 100mbit will be about the limit, at least without repeaters every 100 yards..coax drops too much power too quickly...fiber would be good, single mode for distance, and multimode to the house, in fact, there are fiber modems that can be used up to the computer...biggest problem there is if you have a laptop, connecting and disconnecting when you move it..those connectections need to be immaculate at the ferrule, or attenuation can kick in and give you an intermittant signal...
Pretty much the only bandwidth limit on fiber is the modulation speed and multiplexer abilities.
Mike
Ah, attenuation as the ultimate limiting factor of usable frequencies on coax instead of interference with the TV signal had not occurred to me. (Duh, of course
)
Doing a little reading.. this:
http://www.epanorama.net/documents/wiring/coaxcable.html and this:
http://www.hathway.com/bci/faq3.htmare the most appropriate so far. Still don't know exactly what freqency ranges are free on cable networks (if any...). Curious to see where it all falls. TV broadasts contain huge amounts of information in analog form (huge...)
lesse, ~300 lines of analog signal per TV frame at ~60Hz ~= 18000 128 bit bytes per second ~= 2.3Mbit
well maybe not so huge... but if you ran 128 channels of it (sacrificing some TV?) you gould get up to ~300Mbit or 0.3Gbit... hmmm... lots of digital media though... one could replace the TV content easily enough.
Bing! I wonder if some kind of fourier transform (?) or simliar data manipulation could be used to encode network information in an analog signal... back to the idea of using a few (128
) pairs of TV channels for the job for a potential 150Mbit...? (oh, the cable modem and its terminus already do essentially this.) Perhaps 100Mbit is the practical limit... but bump the TV off the line...Reusing existing copper networks with new digital formats could be huge... or I could just be baked...lol.