Most 3.1 modems can only lock to 2 OFDM downstream blocks and no modem locks more than 8 SC-QAM 3.0 upstream channels.
The downstream OFDM blocks go from 24 to 192 MHz wide. At 14 bits per Hz 2 of those will be just fine for 2 Gbit to a single customer even without the 32 3.0 downstream QAMs the modems lock to.
3.1 upstream is way more efficient: it'll go up to 2k QAM if the plant is clean enough and can drop individual carriers if there's narrowband noise instead of the entire channel. It comes in channel sizes between 6.4 MHz, the current SC-QAM size, and 96 MHz - equivalent to 15 3.0 channels but with modulation orders way higher.
One OFDMA block upstream should be good for the foreseeable. The plan will be, in coaxial areas, to turn off the 3.0 carriers and enlarge the 3.1 block as customers move off 3.0.
There isn't enough spectrum to have 12 * 3.0 channels regardless. Would need 76.8 MHz of clean upstream which isn't there. The spectrum is flaky below 20 MHz and ends at 85. 5 or 6 SC-QAM and the 3.1 OFDMA should be fine for new speeds. Usage hasn't gone up much with folks going to Gig1 it's mostly the same stuff faster.
The RFoG areas are a different story. They can't have 3.1 upstream so will have to be packed with 3.0. 8 of them ideally.
out of curiosity why cant us RFoG customers get it



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