---
product_id: 24905668
title: "ScreenBeam Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter for High Speed Internet, Ethernet Over Coax - Single Add-On Adapter for Existing MoCA Network"
brand: "screenbeam"
price: "฿5397"
currency: THB
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 7
category: "Screen Beam"
url: https://www.desertcart.co.th/products/24905668-screenbeam-bonded-moca-2-0-network-adapter-for-high-speed
store_origin: TH
region: Thailand
---

# 1Gbps Ethernet speed Ethernet over existing coax wiring Low latency & secure wired connection ScreenBeam Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter for High Speed Internet, Ethernet Over Coax - Single Add-On Adapter for Existing MoCA Network

**Brand:** screenbeam
**Price:** ฿5397
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🚀 Upgrade your home network to pro-level speed and reliability—because buffering is so last decade.

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** ScreenBeam Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter for High Speed Internet, Ethernet Over Coax - Single Add-On Adapter for Existing MoCA Network by screenbeam
- **How much does it cost?** ฿5397 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co.th](https://www.desertcart.co.th/products/24905668-screenbeam-bonded-moca-2-0-network-adapter-for-high-speed)

## Best For

- screenbeam enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted screenbeam brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Blazing 1Gbps Speeds:** Experience lightning-fast wired internet that crushes Wi-Fi bottlenecks.
- • **Rock-Solid Stability:** Carrier-grade Bonded MoCA 2.0 tech delivers ultra-low latency for gaming & 4K streaming.
- • **Plug & Play Simplicity:** Set up instantly with your existing coax cables—no rewiring, no hassle.
- • **Compatible & Cost-Effective:** Works with most routers and modems—upgrade your network without breaking the bank.
- • **Expand Your Network Seamlessly:** Supports up to 16 nodes for whole-home coverage and zero dead zones.

## Overview

The ScreenBeam ECB6200 Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter transforms your home's existing coax wiring into a powerful 1Gbps Ethernet backbone, delivering ultra-fast, low-latency, and secure internet connectivity. Ideal for gamers, streamers, and professionals, it supports up to 16 devices on one network and offers plug-and-play installation without the need for new cables. Compatible with most cable providers and routers, this adapter is the smart, cost-effective alternative to unreliable Wi-Fi extenders and mesh systems.

## Description

ScreenBeam's ECB6200 Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter features a 2.0 Gigabit Ethernet port, delivering up to 2.0 Gbps In and 2.0 Gbps Out capabilities, giving you all the extreme high-speed bandwidth you need for flawless streaming of HD video, pristine online gaming, and all of your other demanding high-bandwidth applications. Experience an instant boost to network speeds with an extremely fast and reliable wired connection over your existing coax wiring. Plug and Play installation is as simple as it gets.

Review: Awesome way to get wired network speed and reliability - These really work well to create wired network speed and reliability utilizing existing physical plant. Our two-story house was built in the mid-nineties. I'm assuming many 1970's to 1990's, multi-story houses are in a similar situation; so I will describe in detail below. As in many houses from that era it has lots of cable jacks (like 1-2 in almost every room). Most are on RG-59 wiring and a few newer ones are on RG-6 wiring. Since the house is two story, getting WIFI to propagate through multiple walls, ceilings, and floors is difficult. We are also at the top of a hill and pick up lots of interference from our neighbors' WIFI routers. Plus the total number of WIFI clients these days limits throughput making WIFI okay for low-bandwidth applications (like smart home devices) but poor for streaming devices. Also, running new wires is basically impossible in rooms that have rooms above them as the plenum is too narrow to crawl (about 6" tall). The mid-90's phone network is pre-Ethernet and as such is a hub network on cheap phone wire not a star network on Cat3 or Cat5 like many newer homes. Basically this meant we had three choices: 1.) use wireless only, 2.) find a way to use existing wiring, 3.) cut open walls to run Cat7. Option 1: WIFI works for low-bandwidth devices, but with so many devices these days (easily about 50 for a smart home) the throughput is very limited. We decided to keep WIFI for portable devices and low bandwidth requirement devices, but go with something else for our streaming devices. Option2: Using the existing wiring to create an Ethernet seems like the best option. I decided to make this happen one way or another. The house had lots of coax and quite a few phone jacks too. I researched options. Phone is limited to VDSL adapters. The problem with these are they are just point to point. So you get one connection and that is it. I wanted to connect all my major streaming point (office computer, game room TV, living room TV, and bedroom TV). So VDSL was a no go. I discovered both MOCA and DECA. DECA is much cheaper, but won't interoperatre with cable. We use a cable modem, which would have meant a lot of work at the cable box to separate all the ports in the house except the cable modem. This would have required running at least one more line up to my attic as the cable modem line was shared with my office line. Also MOCA 2.0 supports about 9 times higher bandwidth than DECA. I decided these two things made MOCA worth a few hundred extra dollar, especially since this is a one-time investment. Option3: Cutting open walls is messy and expensive. I really don't want to do that. Updating my coax network: 1.) I went to the box and installed a MOCA POE filter at the input from the cable company. Don't forget this, or you maybe sending your LAN to your neighbors' houses. You can buy this on desertcart. 2.) I went to the box and also all lines I could reach in the attic and replaced all splitters with new ones rated for up to 2.4 gHz. A two way splitter comes with each Moca adapter (or set of adapters). I used one of these. Likely you need a larger one at the box. I bought a 4 way Moca compatible splitter from BAMF here on desertcart. Don't "daisy-chain" the splitters. Buy the appropriate size. You will get better bandwidth. Also don't skip this step. In doing this I replaced two splitters that were rated to 1 gHz. The Moca 2.0 channels are at 1.0-1.2 gHz. This would certainly have lowered my bandwidth, if I had not done this. The install: I installed five Moca adapters as follows: 1.) One is attached to my router - "coax in" line previously attached to the cable modem input, "tv out" out to cable modem input, Ethernet port to my router's Ethernet switch 2-4.) "coax in" attached to the cable jack by my TV's, "tv out" is terminated with an f-terminator, Ethernet is connected to a 5 port TP-Link Gigabit switch connecting my Fire TV and Smart-TV or Smart DVD player. 5.) Connects my office desktop computer the same ways as 2-4. After bringing my coax network up to date (described above). I just plugged these adapters in and it worked. No configuration needed. After installing my Internet speed tests with a laptop hooked to the switches maxes out at our ISP's limits. A network speed test using a 512mb file copy using LAN SpeedTest Lite shows the following 500-600 Mbs downstream 300-400 Mbs upstream I think the difference in downstream and upstream speeds is due to greater isolation on the output side of the splitters. After the install I was finally able to Steam stream games from my office computer to my FireTV in my Game Room.
Review: Flawless 4k steaming; Nearly gigabit speeds; Amazing! - I'm going to focus my review on some of the questions I had before purchasing. For some context, I have comcast 200 megabit download, 10 megabit upload. I purchased this product to get a wired connection from my NAS to my nvidia shield on my TV for video streaming, as well as a wired internet connection in another room across the house. For both applications, wifi would have been a major performance hit. I am only running through about 30 feet of RG6 coax. My setup involved replacing my 2 way splitter with a 4 way. This caused some loss of power, however the signal at my house is very good and comcast had installed a "pad" that reduced the power so all I had to do was remove the pad to make my signal normal. I was able to verify this through my SB6183 modem login screen. The first question I had when I purchased this was how it would work with the coax passed through the device to the modem, as there is only one coax wall outlet where my modem is located. It works perfectly, I was pleasantly surprised. I was worried the power would be reduced further like a second splitter or it wouldn't work at all, but neither is the case. Works great. The second question I had (which was answered by other reviews but hard for me to believe) was the performance. To my amazement, they perform just as well as a gigabit ethernet cable with the exception of a couple MS of lag. No big deal. Wired my speed test shows 28ms, and through the MOCA adapter it is 30ms. The speed is nearly identical. Im talking identical user experience to using an ethernet cable. I transferred a file from my NAS and it was gigabit speed. I am able to stream 4k content from my NAS on my nvidia shield TV now; something I was not able to do previously. You will need a POE filter for this at the point where the internet enters your house to prevent it "backflowing" through the cable into your neighborhood. Costs $10 and I already had one from the previous home owners having a DVR system that needed one (probably because it also used MOCA). I have tested twitch steaming and gaming through these devices and they work just as well as ethernet. The extra 2-3ms lag is virtually insignificant. You wouldn't know its there without the numbers to confirm it. Too long; don't read: Excellent, almost identical to gigabit performance. Modem can be passed through the device with no power loss. 1ghz splitters are fine, at least for me. Get a POE filter.

## Features

- Boost Your MoCA Network with this add-on for a 1Gbps ethernet-coax connection, surpassing traditional Wi-Fi speeds. Speeds vary due to network traffic, materials, and connected devices. Check compatibility with Bonded MoCA 2.0 for optimal performance.
- Add on to Your Starter Kit for a robust Ethernet network with Bonded MoCA 2.0, outperforming wireless for speed, latency, and security between router and any device with an Ethernet port. Supports up to 16 nodes on one network.
- Non-Compatibility: Not compatible with Direct TV, Dish or other satellite TV, AT&T internet, or AT&T U-verse coax networks. Comcast only supports MoCA 2.0 with Xfinity XB8.
- Router Requirements: Built-in or added MoCA capability for network connections. Most FiOS routers are compatible. Each network device (up to 16) needs a MoCA Adapter. Rooms with coax jacks need an ECB for Ethernet. Check coax MoCA compatibility.
- Device Compatibility: This MoCA adapter works with most devices and routers with an ethernet port. However, some DOCSIS 3.1 modems might conflict (frequency overlap) and cause random disconnects. Check with your ISP for a fix.
- Enhance Gaming and Streaming with our Carrier-Grade ECB6250 Add-On, featuring a 1Gbps network card for top 4K/HD performance. The carrier-grade ECB6200 with Bonded MoCA 2.0 achieves 1Gbps speeds while remaining a more cost-effective option.
- What’s Included? This package provides an add on to your MoCA 2.0 network setup with 1 ECB6200 Adapter, 1 Power Adapter, 1 Ethernet Cable, 1 Coax Cable, and a Quick Start Guide.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B013J7OBUU |
| Best Sellers Rank | #26 in Powerline Network Adapters |
| Brand | ScreenBeam |
| Built-In Media | ECB6200 Single |
| Color | Black |
| Compatible Devices | MoCA/Ethernet/Wireless Extenders/coax |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (906) |
| Data Link Protocol | Ethernet |
| Data Transfer Rate | 2.5 Gigabits Per Second |
| External Testing Certification | FCC, UL, MoCA |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00789286808929 |
| Hardware Interface | Ethernet |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 4.5"L x 2.2"W x 1.1"H |
| Item Type Name | MoCA networking |
| Item Weight | 0.3 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | ScreenBeam |
| Mfr Part Number | ECB6200S02 |
| Model Number | ECB6200S02 |
| UPC | 789286808929 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | HARDWARE: ScreenBeam Inc. warrants to the end user (“Customer”) that this hardware product will be free from defects in workmanship and materials, under normal use and service, for the period defined in the product user guide, quick start guide, or retail package, from the date of purchase from ScreenBeam's or its authorized reseller. ScreenBeam’s sole obligation under this express warranty shall … |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** ScreenBeam
- **Color:** Black
- **Compatible Devices:** MoCA/Ethernet/Wireless Extenders/coax
- **Data Link Protocol:** Ethernet
- **Data Transfer Rate:** 2.5 Gigabits Per Second
- **Global Trade Identification Number:** 00789286808929
- **Hardware Interface:** Ethernet
- **Item Weight:** 0.3 Pounds
- **Product Dimensions:** 4.5"L x 2.2"W x 1.1"H
- **UPC:** 789286808929

## Images

![ScreenBeam Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter for High Speed Internet, Ethernet Over Coax - Single Add-On Adapter for Existing MoCA Network - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71S0PJCEVHL.jpg)
![ScreenBeam Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter for High Speed Internet, Ethernet Over Coax - Single Add-On Adapter for Existing MoCA Network - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81c7F5GSK-L.jpg)
![ScreenBeam Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter for High Speed Internet, Ethernet Over Coax - Single Add-On Adapter for Existing MoCA Network - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81Kt9uYsZzL.jpg)
![ScreenBeam Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter for High Speed Internet, Ethernet Over Coax - Single Add-On Adapter for Existing MoCA Network - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81Mbx+k2lBL.jpg)
![ScreenBeam Bonded MoCA 2.0 Network Adapter for High Speed Internet, Ethernet Over Coax - Single Add-On Adapter for Existing MoCA Network - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81CoiM-aYcL.jpg)

## Available Options

This product comes in different **Style** options.

## Questions & Answers

**Q: What does "requires that your router support bonded moca 2.0" mean? can't i just use ethernet to ethernet via coax and get full speed bridging?**
A: That statement is a little confusing. 
If you only want to purchase one bonded MOCA adapter to extend the network via coax, you will need your fios/cable modem with router to support MOCA 2.0 bonded.  
If you are using the two adapters to extend out the network to two different locations via coax,  you will need your fios/cable modem with router to support MOCA 2.0 bonded.
Otherwise like most of us, we will need to use one of these adapters at the off the shelf router because most of the certified Doscis 3.1 cable modems will not have a built in router that also supports bonded Moca 2.0.

**Q: I already have moca built in, can I use each of these in other rooms to bring high speed data to them instead of using one to connect the router?**
A: MoCA acts like an ethernet bridge, meaning it "converts" Ethernet to coax and back again, so that devices connected appear to do so over Ethernet (except for delay differences). If you have MoCA in your house, and it uses the LAN channels (not WAN), and uses no privacy, then this device can connect to that and appear to be part of the same network. For example, for those with Verizon FiOS, they have two MoCA channels; one WAN (C4 - ONT to the router) and one LAN channel (D-channel). The WAN channel has privacy enabled, and most commercially-available devices won't communicate on that WAN channel. However, the LAN channel has privacy disabled, and most commercially-available devices will communicate on that channel. The router actually has two MoCA transfceivers (one for WAN, one for LAN). If you have a MoCA device that already communicates over LAN (i.e., Tivo box), then it can connect to the router, and likewise, you can use one of these devices (Actiontec) to join to the MoCA network to provide Ethernet to another room. The limit for MoCA 1.1 is 16 devices, AFAIK, but this is a MoCA 2.0 device and I can't recall that device limit, but it has to be at least 16 devices. Note that the router serves as a device, and is most likely the NC (Network Coordinator), depending on your coax topology and best signal device.

**Q: What comes in the box?**
A: Two Ethernet to coax adapter boxes, two Ethernet cables, two short coax cables with female connectors and a coax splitter.

**Q: Do any of these adapters allow input via Ethernet? All diagrams appear that input is via Coax only. My modem and current wiring is ethernet only.**
A: I guess it depends on how you're defining "input".  The idea is that you're converting RJ-45 to Coax, connecting via Coax then converting back to RJ-45.  So if your Modem is Ethernet (RJ-45) and you connect that to the Actiontec and connect the Actiontec to Coax then at some other point in your Coax wiring, you connect the other Actiontec and connect its RJ-45 to something (let's say a network switch with a couple of computers on it) then those devices can talk Ethernet to your modem via the Coax wiring by virtue of the Actiontec converting RJ-45 to Coax back to RJ-45.  Does that help?

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Awesome way to get wired network speed and reliability
*by J***K on January 15, 2017*

These really work well to create wired network speed and reliability utilizing existing physical plant. Our two-story house was built in the mid-nineties. I'm assuming many 1970's to 1990's, multi-story houses are in a similar situation; so I will describe in detail below. As in many houses from that era it has lots of cable jacks (like 1-2 in almost every room). Most are on RG-59 wiring and a few newer ones are on RG-6 wiring. Since the house is two story, getting WIFI to propagate through multiple walls, ceilings, and floors is difficult. We are also at the top of a hill and pick up lots of interference from our neighbors' WIFI routers. Plus the total number of WIFI clients these days limits throughput making WIFI okay for low-bandwidth applications (like smart home devices) but poor for streaming devices. Also, running new wires is basically impossible in rooms that have rooms above them as the plenum is too narrow to crawl (about 6" tall). The mid-90's phone network is pre-Ethernet and as such is a hub network on cheap phone wire not a star network on Cat3 or Cat5 like many newer homes. Basically this meant we had three choices: 1.) use wireless only, 2.) find a way to use existing wiring, 3.) cut open walls to run Cat7. Option 1: WIFI works for low-bandwidth devices, but with so many devices these days (easily about 50 for a smart home) the throughput is very limited. We decided to keep WIFI for portable devices and low bandwidth requirement devices, but go with something else for our streaming devices. Option2: Using the existing wiring to create an Ethernet seems like the best option. I decided to make this happen one way or another. The house had lots of coax and quite a few phone jacks too. I researched options. Phone is limited to VDSL adapters. The problem with these are they are just point to point. So you get one connection and that is it. I wanted to connect all my major streaming point (office computer, game room TV, living room TV, and bedroom TV). So VDSL was a no go. I discovered both MOCA and DECA. DECA is much cheaper, but won't interoperatre with cable. We use a cable modem, which would have meant a lot of work at the cable box to separate all the ports in the house except the cable modem. This would have required running at least one more line up to my attic as the cable modem line was shared with my office line. Also MOCA 2.0 supports about 9 times higher bandwidth than DECA. I decided these two things made MOCA worth a few hundred extra dollar, especially since this is a one-time investment. Option3: Cutting open walls is messy and expensive. I really don't want to do that. Updating my coax network: 1.) I went to the box and installed a MOCA POE filter at the input from the cable company. Don't forget this, or you maybe sending your LAN to your neighbors' houses. You can buy this on Amazon. 2.) I went to the box and also all lines I could reach in the attic and replaced all splitters with new ones rated for up to 2.4 gHz. A two way splitter comes with each Moca adapter (or set of adapters). I used one of these. Likely you need a larger one at the box. I bought a 4 way Moca compatible splitter from BAMF here on Amazon. Don't "daisy-chain" the splitters. Buy the appropriate size. You will get better bandwidth. Also don't skip this step. In doing this I replaced two splitters that were rated to 1 gHz. The Moca 2.0 channels are at 1.0-1.2 gHz. This would certainly have lowered my bandwidth, if I had not done this. The install: I installed five Moca adapters as follows: 1.) One is attached to my router - "coax in" line previously attached to the cable modem input, "tv out" out to cable modem input, Ethernet port to my router's Ethernet switch 2-4.) "coax in" attached to the cable jack by my TV's, "tv out" is terminated with an f-terminator, Ethernet is connected to a 5 port TP-Link Gigabit switch connecting my Fire TV and Smart-TV or Smart DVD player. 5.) Connects my office desktop computer the same ways as 2-4. After bringing my coax network up to date (described above). I just plugged these adapters in and it worked. No configuration needed. After installing my Internet speed tests with a laptop hooked to the switches maxes out at our ISP's limits. A network speed test using a 512mb file copy using LAN SpeedTest Lite shows the following 500-600 Mbs downstream 300-400 Mbs upstream I think the difference in downstream and upstream speeds is due to greater isolation on the output side of the splitters. After the install I was finally able to Steam stream games from my office computer to my FireTV in my Game Room.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Flawless 4k steaming; Nearly gigabit speeds; Amazing!
*by C***Y on November 15, 2017*

I'm going to focus my review on some of the questions I had before purchasing. For some context, I have comcast 200 megabit download, 10 megabit upload. I purchased this product to get a wired connection from my NAS to my nvidia shield on my TV for video streaming, as well as a wired internet connection in another room across the house. For both applications, wifi would have been a major performance hit. I am only running through about 30 feet of RG6 coax. My setup involved replacing my 2 way splitter with a 4 way. This caused some loss of power, however the signal at my house is very good and comcast had installed a "pad" that reduced the power so all I had to do was remove the pad to make my signal normal. I was able to verify this through my SB6183 modem login screen. The first question I had when I purchased this was how it would work with the coax passed through the device to the modem, as there is only one coax wall outlet where my modem is located. It works perfectly, I was pleasantly surprised. I was worried the power would be reduced further like a second splitter or it wouldn't work at all, but neither is the case. Works great. The second question I had (which was answered by other reviews but hard for me to believe) was the performance. To my amazement, they perform just as well as a gigabit ethernet cable with the exception of a couple MS of lag. No big deal. Wired my speed test shows 28ms, and through the MOCA adapter it is 30ms. The speed is nearly identical. Im talking identical user experience to using an ethernet cable. I transferred a file from my NAS and it was gigabit speed. I am able to stream 4k content from my NAS on my nvidia shield TV now; something I was not able to do previously. You will need a POE filter for this at the point where the internet enters your house to prevent it "backflowing" through the cable into your neighborhood. Costs $10 and I already had one from the previous home owners having a DVR system that needed one (probably because it also used MOCA). I have tested twitch steaming and gaming through these devices and they work just as well as ethernet. The extra 2-3ms lag is virtually insignificant. You wouldn't know its there without the numbers to confirm it. Too long; don't read: Excellent, almost identical to gigabit performance. Modem can be passed through the device with no power loss. 1ghz splitters are fine, at least for me. Get a POE filter.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review
*by M***. on November 22, 2019*

Wow, I am so impressed with how quick and easy this was. So I was doing so much research into these as the wifi has a lot of interference here which sometimes makes streaming choppy. I bought these and it is so simple, you just put a 2 way (***moca compatible**) splitter on your coax before your router, run one coax to your router, the other to this adapter and an Ethernet from your router to the adapter and that's it for this end. Now the other side you just go to any coax outlet, run a coax to your adapter and then pplug in your device's ethernet right into that and.... that's it! I plugged it in and had my tech had on all ready to configure something and play around and nope.. it just worked the second I plugged it in. Honestly I am thinking this is a better set up than using wifi, especially for old people, no passwords or fussing around just plug and forget about it. I attached a picture of the speed boost I got from switching, it doubled my download speed to what it actually should be! So things they don't tell you is you'll want: a POE moca filter at your coax coming in to keep the moca network in and other people's out, an extra coax to run to your router (as the old one is now going to the splitter and one included goes to the adapter) and lastly the 3 way splitter but make sure it is one that works with moca as your standard ones don't work with those frequencies I guess. Hope this helps someone!

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*Product available on Desertcart Thailand*
*Store origin: TH*
*Last updated: 2026-04-28*