Charter came out to my house to service my connection two times last month and gave me a new two way spliter and then gave me new coaxial patch cables to use from the wall to the cable modem. The tech said it was a signal issue inside the home. Nothing has been changed for a signal issue to take place though.
This weekend my internet was 100% down all day Saturday and all day Sunday. Late Sunday night I called Charter and they again said they need to send a tech out to find where my signal issue it coming from.
Fed up on waiting for Charter I tried to do my own signal fixing... First I logged into teh cable modem and pulled up the numbers.
The first place I checked with the log and found it full of errors:

I did a search on Google and found out what the ideal cable modem numbers should look like and I found that one of my numbers was off.
My upstream transmit power level was at 63.8 dBmV! I then removed my spliter and the Linksys router and the upstream transmit power level decreased to 45.0 and I was back on the internet.The upstream transmit power will lie within the range +8 to +58 dBmV, with many ISPs specifying a target commissioning level below +55 dBmV. Values in the forties are the most common. Many cable modems are unable to transmit any more powerfully than +58 dBmV. One cannot tell how far this is below the figure that the UBR would need to see a strong enough signal at its end to maintain satisfactory performance, so a figure as high as +58 dBmV is normally a sign of an unacceptable return path. If other problem symptoms are also present, an upstream transmit power of +58 dBmV would constitute valid supporting evidence for requesting technical support from a cable ISP.
After Removing the Spliter and Linksys Router:

If I try using the router or the spliter I can't get the cable modem to work and the net is down due to the upstream transmit power level... Last week I changed out my cable modem for a brand new one and tried a different Linksys router with no luck...
Someone told me that some cable companies are over selling the cable/internet packages in certain areas and that my local coverage area may have too many users to support them all and that is why people are getting dropped...
Does any of this make sense to anyone?