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NBN Coaxial Cable

17/11/2025
by Rick Coleman
NBN Coaxial Cable

G'day! You've just moved into a new place or you're checking your address on the NBN website. You see those three magic letters: HFC. This means your connection to the high-speed internet is delivered via an NBN coaxial cable.

It's that same thick, round cable that's been used for Pay TV (like Foxtel) for donkey's years, and for a massive chunk of Australia, it's the pipeline for our internet. But what is it, exactly? And why is the quality of this one cable so fair dinkum critical to you getting a fast, reliable stream of the footy?

Let's get the lowdown.

So, What is an HFC Connection?

HFC stands for Hybrid Fibre Coaxial. In plain English, it's a mix of two technologies:

  1. Fibre: NBN runs a super-fast, high-capacity fibre optic cable to a "node" (a box) somewhere in your street or neighbourhood.
  2. Coaxial: From that node, it uses the existing, high-quality coaxial cable network (the old Pay TV lines) to run the last little bit of the connection to your house and into your wall.

That NBN coaxial cable is the final, crucial link that plugs into your NBN connection box (your modem).

Why This Cable is So Bloody Important

It's not just any old bit of wire, mate. An NBN coaxial cable is designed to carry a massive amount of high-frequency data, which is what lets you stream 4K movies and have five people in the house on Zoom calls at once.

But here's the catch: that high-frequency signal is extremely sensitive to interference. The magic is all in the shielding inside the cable.

A cheap, dodgy, or damaged cable is the number one reason for a flaky, slow HFC connection. It lets in "noise" (interference) from 4G/5G mobile towers, your microwave, or even your neighbour's dodgy drill. This "signal leakage" makes your NBN connection drop out, buffer, and run slow as a wet week.

The Only Cable to Use: RG6 Quad-Shield

For an NBN coaxial cable connection, the Aussie standard is RG6 coaxial cable. But if you want a rock-solid, professional-grade job (and you do), you need to make sure it's "Quad-Shield" (QS) RG6.

As the name suggests, this stuff has four layers of shielding, not just one or two. It's the absolute best way to block out that interference and ensure you're getting the clean, fast signal you're paying for. A pro installer, sourcing their gear from a proper electrical wholesaler, wouldn't be caught dead using anything less.

The CRITICAL Safety & Compliance Warning: DIY vs. Pro

Righto, let's get dead serious for a sec, because this is the most important part of the whole article.

  • DIY (Go for it, mate!): Buying a pre-made NBN coaxial cable (a 'patch lead') from a shop to run outside your walls from the wall plate to your modem? Go for your life. Too easy.
  • PRO ONLY (Stop!): Is your NBN wall plate in a stupid, inconvenient spot? Need to move it to the other side of the room? This involves running a new fixed cable inside your walls, floor, or ceiling.

In Australia, this is strictly not a DIY job. Any fixed data, communications, or antenna cabling must be installed by a licensed cabler (registered with ACMA).

Why? It's the law, mate. A dodgy install can create "signal leakage" that doesn't just knacker your connection – it can leak interference back into the network and mess up the NBN for your whole bloody street. Don't be that galah.

A Professional Job Needs Professional Gear

A licensed cabler or licensed electrician knows that a rock-solid, high-speed network relies on high-quality, compliant components from end to end. They can't risk a job on a cheap, flimsy cable that will fail in a year.

This is why they source their gear from a trusted electrical wholesaler. As one of Australia's most comprehensive electrical wholesaler and supplier networks, Schnap Electric Products stocks the lot for the professional installer. They've got massive rolls of high-quality, Quad-Shield RG6 coaxial cable, professional-grade F-connectors, wall plates, and all the specialist crimping and testing tools that a qualified professional needs to do the job right. For a connection that won't let you down, the pros start with quality gear from a supplier like Schnap Electric.