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Forum Discussion
jasperx
Feb 13, 2019Tutor
Ethernet versus wireless when your wired system is stuck with a 10/100 switch
The system is configured with both satellites and the Router (in AP mode) connected to the ATT Pace Router. It seems to be running great though one day I caught the Orbi Router glowing red. I didn'...
- Feb 13, 2019
jasperx wrote:
Pace Router (isp) to 10/100 switch > House Cat5e > Orbi Satellites is the setup.
Internet comes into the house at gigabit plus speed. First device it hits is a fast Pace Router. Second device it hits is a 10/100 switch. From the 10/100 switch cat5e carries data to the three Orbi devices.
My alternative setup is to connect Orbi router (AP) to the Pace directly. Then connect each Orbi sattellite via wifi back to the Orbi router.
This is the question... is the ethernet backhaul ALWAYS faster than the wifi? Or does the presence of a 10/100 bottleneck in the form of a switch, make ethernet a slower option than the wifi?
I think using a 10/100 switch will limit your network on all interfaces in this setup.
If you have good radio conditions then the wifi backhaul can provide you with 1.7 Gbps interface. So yes, get rid of this switch and connect the ISP router directly to Orbi and use wireless backhaul from the router to the satellites if the Orbi nodes are within reasonable distance from each other.
jasperx
Feb 13, 2019Tutor
with photo
- ekhalilFeb 13, 2019Master
When you talk about wired vs. wireless connectivity, to which interfaces do you refer to:
- Interface between Orbi and the ISP router?
- interface between Orbi router and satellites?
- interface between devices and Orbi network?
- jasperxFeb 13, 2019Tutor
Pace Router (isp) to 10/100 switch > House Cat5e > Orbi Satellites is the setup.
Internet comes into the house at gigabit plus speed. First device it hits is a fast Pace Router. Second device it hits is a 10/100 switch. From the 10/100 switch cat5e carries data to the three Orbi devices.
My alternative setup is to connect Orbi router (AP) to the Pace directly. Then connect each Orbi sattellite via wifi back to the Orbi router.
This is the question... is the ethernet backhaul ALWAYS faster than the wifi? Or does the presence of a 10/100 bottleneck in the form of a switch, make ethernet a slower option than the wifi?
- ekhalilFeb 13, 2019Master
jasperx wrote:
Pace Router (isp) to 10/100 switch > House Cat5e > Orbi Satellites is the setup.
Internet comes into the house at gigabit plus speed. First device it hits is a fast Pace Router. Second device it hits is a 10/100 switch. From the 10/100 switch cat5e carries data to the three Orbi devices.
My alternative setup is to connect Orbi router (AP) to the Pace directly. Then connect each Orbi sattellite via wifi back to the Orbi router.
This is the question... is the ethernet backhaul ALWAYS faster than the wifi? Or does the presence of a 10/100 bottleneck in the form of a switch, make ethernet a slower option than the wifi?
I think using a 10/100 switch will limit your network on all interfaces in this setup.
If you have good radio conditions then the wifi backhaul can provide you with 1.7 Gbps interface. So yes, get rid of this switch and connect the ISP router directly to Orbi and use wireless backhaul from the router to the satellites if the Orbi nodes are within reasonable distance from each other.