Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
16-03-2009, 22:48
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#1
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Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Ladies and gentlemen,
I am looking for a home router with a WAN-LAN and LAN-WAN throughput as close to 1Gbps each way as possible.
About the best I've found so far has a throughput of both combined around 570Mbps.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated, I'd rather avoid the expense of a commercial Gigabit router if at all possible and I'm really not that up on home hardware.
Cheers.
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16-03-2009, 22:51
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#2
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Just out of interest, where did you manage to get WAN link at 1Gbps?
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16-03-2009, 22:53
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#3
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Quote:
Originally Posted by kpanchev
Just out of interest, where did you manage to get WAN link at 1Gbps?
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Amsterdam, Netherlands.
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16-03-2009, 22:55
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#4
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Virgin Media Staff
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
How about this http://www.netgear.co.uk/rangemaxnex...rs_wnr854t.php
Apparently has both 1Gbit LAN and WAN ports so I assume it can pass that much data through
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16-03-2009, 23:00
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#5
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Quote:
Originally Posted by Broadbandings
Amsterdam, Netherlands.
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I'm not clear, do you live in the Netherlands and the public infrastructure supports 1Gbps?
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16-03-2009, 23:01
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#6
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Sadly not, while it can switch at something like Gigabit it'll cry like a little girl who just had her Barbie decapitated by a drug addled Ken when asked to route at that speed.
---------- Post added at 23:01 ---------- Previous post was at 23:01 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by mischievious
I'm not clear, do you live in the Netherlands and the public infrastructure supports 1Gbps?
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Soon, and no it supports well above that to some homes but past GigE it starts getting expensive.
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16-03-2009, 23:02
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#7
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Then what on earth is the point of having the WAN and LAN as Gigabit?
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16-03-2009, 23:02
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#8
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
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16-03-2009, 23:08
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#9
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
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16-03-2009, 23:10
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#10
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
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17-03-2009, 00:19
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#11
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Quote:
Originally Posted by Broadbandings
Sadly not, while it can switch at something like Gigabit it'll cry like a little girl who just had her Barbie decapitated by a drug addled Ken when asked to route at that speed.
---------- Post added at 23:01 ---------- Previous post was at 23:01 ----------
Soon, and no it supports well above that to some homes but past GigE it starts getting expensive.
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depanding on where you are going to live in Holland afaik the fastest connection you can get is 120mbps with a 10mbps upload ( http://www.upc.nl/internet/fiber_power_120/ dutch link) cant find anything yet which is privately obtainable that supports gig connections.
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17-03-2009, 03:13
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#12
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Quote:
Originally Posted by Broadbandings
Ladies and gentlemen,
I am looking for a home router with a WAN-LAN and LAN-WAN throughput as close to 1Gbps each way as possible.
About the best I've found so far has a throughput of both combined around 570Mbps.
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated, I'd rather avoid the expense of a commercial Gigabit router if at all possible and I'm really not that up on home hardware.
Cheers.
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BB, by far your best option is to check out
http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/compo...rt/Itemid,189/
it covers more than your low/mid end home/SOHO kit OC ,it happens to be the best source of real data including cpus you will find anywere ,and its about the only place to get any real indepth feedback too.
so no single recomendation from me, as you already know its all about the chipset SOC speeds regarding max throughput per port etc......
the good old build your own is always a good option too ,if you can ballance the costs of parts against the power usage, and the low power micro motherboards are getting cheaper by the day, assuming you can find enough slots and (dual+) ethernet gigE cards to populate to your needs or a good external cheap gigE switch to plug into a single port OC but power useage increases that way.......
---------- Post added at 03:02 ---------- Previous post was at 02:40 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by kpanchev
Just out of interest, where did you manage to get WAN link at 1Gbps?
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it appears broadbanding is on the move
but you dont have to assume the WAN port is going to connect directly to some ISP somewere, you can just as easly make your own WAN (wide area network) and mutiport it through any and all ISPs/Co-Location sites that the WAN connects to for your web connections.
bonding was and is again very popular in private WAN circles...
---------- Post added at 03:13 ---------- Previous post was at 03:02 ----------
Quote:
Originally Posted by BenMcr
Then what on earth is the point of having the WAN and LAN as Gigabit?
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Ben we have been through this before, remember its all well and good to asume things based on PR and sales information, but as proven by the 11g and its 22 Mbit/s max REAL throughput its the same for most lower/mid range 11n too.
put simply they cut costs by using lower rated/slower cpus cores inside the SOC (SystemOn a Chip) that runs the device and so the units cant sustain the advertised top speeds when all the bells and wistles are turned on and sent to the internal CPU to process etc....it basicly runs out of steam as it were....
on many 11n routers you will find there are lots of 10/100 fast ethernet switches and gigE models , the only main difference is the core SOC speed and a gig chipset between the lower and higher models , higher clockspeed is better in the same cpu family just like x86 ,the best cpu for routers oc being PPC but thats for your industral lines as the companies dont make SOHO PPC based routers cheap or not that i know of at least?
infact i was amazed to see that the http://www.additionsdirect.co.uk/rf/...dband%20Router referenced router actually finally hints in the pr at the need for better internal cpu/soc speeds as it states "It features the fastest processor in the D-Link Wireless N range, achieving the best throughput results ever between WAN and LAN networks...."
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17-03-2009, 03:18
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#13
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Virgin Media Staff
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Quote:
Originally Posted by popper
Ben we have been through this before, remember its all well and good to asume things based on PR and sales information, but as proven by the 11g and its 22 Mbit/s max REAL throughput its the same for lmost ower/mid range 11n too.
put simply they cut costs by using lower rated cpus cores inside the SOC (SystemOn a Chip)and so the units cant sustain the advertised top speeds when all the bells and wistles are turned on and sent to the internal CPU to process etc....itbasicly runs out of steam as it were.... 
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Oh no I get all of that I really do
But surely if you having a Gigabit LAN and a Gigabit WAN port - not actually connecting the two with something that can pass data at Gigabit speeds is a load of the proverbial?
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17-03-2009, 11:10
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#14
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Quote:
Originally Posted by DocDutch
depanding on where you are going to live in Holland afaik the fastest connection you can get is 120mbps with a 10mbps upload ( http://www.upc.nl/internet/fiber_power_120/ dutch link) cant find anything yet which is privately obtainable that supports gig connections.
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The Amsterdam FTTO network that is in ongoing construction.
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17-03-2009, 19:33
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#15
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Re: Gigabit Routing Performance Home Routers
Quote:
Originally Posted by popper
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Already checked that out popper before I posted asking. I did love the Linksys unit that does 570Mbit upstream but less than 16Mbit downstream due to a load of security nonsense.
Quote:
the good old build your own is always a good option too ,if you can ballance the costs of parts against the power usage, and the low power micro motherboards are getting cheaper by the day, assuming you can find enough slots and (dual+) ethernet gigE cards to populate to your needs or a good external cheap gigE switch to plug into a single port OC but power useage increases that way.......
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Yeah I'm thinking that as well. I'm hoping that the SP will give me multiple IP addresses though, as it seems futile to hope anything short of a business router or a multiple PCIE NIC PC will be able to do the job. Multiple addresses and a switch probably easier.
Quote:
it appears broadbanding is on the move
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I know, who would ever want to leave the UK? Quality of life is so high here, such low taxes, such great public services, and the people are fantastic, so safe and peaceful even late at night. Why on earth would anyone ever leave?
Feel free to think of me as insane for wanting to leave this wonderful country.
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