From a DSLReports thread: "The initial guides from Actiontec and the MoCA Alliance indicated that simply adding one MoCA 1.1 device to a MoCA 2.0 network would drop all devices to the lower MoCA 1.1 speeds. It turns out that with the exception of the WCB3000N (MoCA 1.1) this is absolutely NOT true. As long as the traffic is between the MoCA 2.0 legs/devices, you should be able to get those speeds, assuming the splitters and coax allow it. If you run traffic between mixed devices, i.e., MoCA 1.1 and MoCA 2.0, that will always be at the lower speed."
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From a DSLReports thread: "The initial guides from Actiontec and the MoCA Alliance indicated that simply adding one MoCA 1.1 device to a MoCA 2.0 network would drop all devices to the lower MoCA 1.1 speeds. It turns out that with the exception of the WCB3000N (MoCA 1.1) this is absolutely NOT true. As long as the traffic is between the MoCA 2.0 legs/devices, you should be able to get those speeds, assuming the splitters and coax allow it. If you run traffic between mixed devices, i.e., MoCA 1.1 and MoCA 2.0, that will always be at the lower speed."
Thank you!