⚡ Upgrade your home network to pro-level speed and stability—because buffering is so last decade.
The goCoax MoCA 2.5 Adapter leverages existing coaxial wiring to deliver blazing 2.5 Gbps bandwidth with a dedicated 2.5GbE Ethernet port. Designed for ultra-low latency (3ms) and minimal interference, it supports simultaneous 4K/8K streaming, gaming, and file transfers. Ideal for professionals and gamers seeking a reliable, scalable home network upgrade without rewiring.
Brand | goCoax |
Product Dimensions | 13.9 x 7 x 1.8 cm; 320 g |
Item model number | MA2500D |
Manufacturer | goCoax |
Series | MA2500D |
Colour | White |
Operating System | Embeded OS |
Are Batteries Included | No |
Item Weight | 320 g |
Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
R**A
They really do work!
Living in Edwardian terraced house built in 1900, getting ethernet up to the loft conversion was out of the question. Despite lacking the foresight to have ethernet installed during a rewire in 2018... we did have lots of multiple coax aerial connections installed in every room (that have never once been used, thanks netflix....)Fortunately for me these all terminate at a splitter in the loft. I could not get a link to establish when including the splitter (presumably it is not the correct standard) but disconnecting the various feeds and testing them individually to bypass it... I eventually got a green light. That was a few weeks ago, and I have not had to do anything since. They really just work. Our FTTP connection is gigabit so I cannot verify the 2.5Gbps claim.... but can confirm they deliver the full gigabit speeds whilst introducing a negligible 1-2ms additional latency in comparison to being connected directly to the router. My results are still <10ms where it matters, so virtually impossible to notice.PROS:- They deliver results comparable to ethernet- Come with everything you need in the box (including a UK power adapter which is rare for these devices)- So far require little to no maintenance- Quite small and easy to hide including holes for wall mountingCons- Could be considered expensive when compared to more commonplace alternatives such as powerline adapters, but the results MocA delivers are far superior in my application- Require power (seems obvious but worth noting)If you are in a situation comparable to mine, these are a no brainer.
A**R
Not the cheapest solution but worth the money....
This works a treat - much more reliable and far quicker than a powerline adapter. I was previously having to reset the powerline adapter daily and it was notably slower. I've not had to reset this once and its very quick. This is compatible with UK aerial cables.
H**E
Works brilliantly, no configuration needed.
Pricey item, but worth it to get a lightning fast wired connection to the TV instead of the rubbish wifi, and without tracking messy cables through the house or tearing up the walls. We have 550mbps fiber and we saw no loss in speed using MoCA. Would recommend to anyone in a similar situation (a Coax socket by the TV but no Ethernet socket).
R**S
Fantastic!
I didn't even know these existed until recently, and having used power lines before I really wasn't expecting much but they are really good, I moved some of my networked gear to the other side of the house and it's been faultless. It took no time at all to connect them to the coax and and the speeds are as advertised too. I've not seen any packet loss or high latency either.A great alternative to power lines and a much better way to extend your network if you can't run ethernet through the walls.
A**M
Wow, expectations exceeded
Wasn't really expecting these to be any good, tried powerline adapters but they have always been flakey for latency, especially when gaming. Wasn't holding out much hope for these, but decided to give them a go since dropping ethernet to my living room from the office was going to be a big job (despite being in a new build, the walls are dot and dabbed so can't easily pass cable through without making lots of holes to aid the way). These though have saved a big hassle, and a bigger cost, even though they are expensive they are worth it and work incredibly well. My PS5 now has 800Mbps connection to the Internet, and my living room has 2Gbps connection to my server, all without holes! Only downside for me is that, I only have coax connection in my office and in my living room, these are separate feeds from the loft so I've had to join them up to create a single loop. Not a huge deal, means no more freeview TV but it's worth it for the performance upgrade and saved me shelling out for ethernet drops or an even more expensive WiFi 7 mesh system.If your in a similar situation, don't hesitate, buy 2 of these, they are well worth it. And up to 2.5Gbps is going to keep them lasting for a long time to come.
C**T
As fast as Ethernet
These work great and came with a UK plug!I tested two of these both with a direct coaxial cable between them and on my new-build home coaxial network which has a fairly typical "star" layout where cables go from each room to a central signal amplifier and aerial antenna in the loft (so quite long cable runs). In both cases I was able to max out the capacity of my hardware – 1Gbps ethernet.The tests also proved that these work well alongside the Freeview aerial signal and my preinstalled signal amplifier in the loft, which continues to work without any issues or interference.The 2.5Gbps rating is *not* full-duplex (i.e. not 2.5Gb up + 2.5Gb down concurrent) but rather dynamically shared between lanes and devices. This means that when I tested them with iperf3 in bidirectional/dual mode I could get the full 1Gbe ethernet full-duplex speeds (1Gbps download + 1Gbps upload concurrent; see first screenshot).The selling point of this model however is the 2.5Gbps capable ethernet port, so if you have network cards and/or switch capable of such speeds then you should see even more impressive performance. I only have 1Gbps ethernet devices so was not able to test that.The only downside to using these is the latency they add to the traffic: in my testing between 3ms and 4ms, but that is about the same as my Eero Pro Wifi6 extender, but my two Eero Wifi points can only do about ~400Mbps.The power consumption is about 2W per device which is incredibly efficient.Also, while not technically a fault since you know what you're getting when ordering and there are alternatives available, it is a bit annoying that these only have a single coax input and a single ethernet port each. You will need an additional coax splitter and ethernet switch to connect more devices. For this reason I will probably replace them with the Translite MoCA 2.5 with 2 Ethernet Ports Model: TL-MC85, but I am a bit skeptical since those are a USA model.
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