The MoCA specs allow for MoCA devices to use different frequency bands in order to avoid the frequency bands used by the CATV or satellite TV signals that might also be on the same coax in some homes. The fewer splitters your MoCA signals have to to go through, the better. In fact, RG-59 should be avoided because its attenuation is too high. In general, something like quad-shielded RG-6 is going to work better than RG-59. Topologically, it's expected to be a tree made by a single splitter or a small hierarchy of splitters. MoCA is designed to work over the 75Ω coaxial TV antenna / cable TV (henceforth "CATV") / satellite TV cable you already have in your home. Using speedtest-cli I get ~850 on ethernet. But when testing with the MoCA bridge, it caps around 150. Using iperf3, I can get ~950 mbps to any of my VMs when plugged into the switch. As for coax cables, the only one I can view right now says catv 18 AWG on it.
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