Moving my AT&T U-Verse Around: What I Learned
We are currently remodeling (really just painting) our office to turn it into IKup’s new “Big Boy” room and this necessitated that we move our AT&T U-Verse gateway (router) to a different location. We decided to move it to the living room next to the TV which had several benefits for us. First it allows us to hook up our blue ray player in the living room to the Internet for streaming of movies and Pandora, second it allowed us to put the network printer in the kitchen and receive a strong enough signal for it to work.
However, we were left with a problem. We decided during all of this to add a TV and blue ray player to the bedroom in the back of the house, but now the gateway that sends the TV signals is in the front of house, instead of in the next room like before. The new LG BD570 Network Blu-Ray Disc Player was going to be hooked up via WiFi, so that just left the TV. This seemed simple enough, the TV to the living room before this was running from the office to the living room via a coax cable in the basement, so I should just be able to run the TV back the opposite way to the bed room.
This was a fine idea, except what when I tried, recorded shows did not show up on the box in the bedroom. In the U-Verse system you have a DVR box where you can pause live TV and where all of your recorded shows are stored. This box can be attached to the gateway via coax with no problem since the recorded shows are stored on it. If you want to watch TV in other rooms you receive a Set Top Box (STB) from AT&T. You can watch live TV (but can’t pause) and recorded TV on the STB, but only (as I learned today) if you connecte the STB via an Ethernet cable (not the coax). This is actually pretty cool that the video signals run via Ethernet cable and not coax.
Lesson 1: To watch recorded TV on the non DVR box in the U-Verse setup it has to be connected via Ethernet to the gateway.Additionally, I learned (I think) that you can only have the coax or the Ethernet cable hooked up to one of the U-Verse boxes, but not both. It seems to only be able to handle one link. I am not exactly sure if this is true, but it seems to be.
Lesson 2: You can only connect a coax or Ethernet cable to a U-Verse box, but not both.
So, I had one 50′ cable I could run through the wall, across the basement, back up to the bedroom and to the STB. This was pretty easy because the coax was already in place and I just had to follow it backwards. Sadly, this cord was about 10′ short. At first I thought to try and use a router to fix the problem, but I didn’t really want to have to keep the router plugged in all the time. (Plus, when I tried it, it didn’t work.) So, I wanted to install a Cat 5 wall plate to basically just extend the cable. I headed to Home Depot to purchase said wall plate.
The front of the wall plate looks simple enough as shown below, but the back blew my mind!
This picture shows the finished product but there were eight wires on the back of the wall plate and the colors of the wall plate wires did not match the colors of the wires in the Cat 5 cable!?! And, GE didn’t supply any instructions!! So, thanks to Google, I found a tutorial at Servers Servers to explain all of the colors of the wires to connect. And even then, I had to follow a slightly different set of instructions down in the comments of that page because of my setup.
Lesson 3: To install an Ethernet wall plate you will have to strip off the end of an Ethernet cable and connect the colored wires to other colored wires.Once I had the wires connected to the wall plate, I plugged in the Ethernet cable to the new wall plate to the U-Verse STB and all was well. Hopefully this will help you find a way to fix any problem you are experiencing.
Popularity: 1% [?]


