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Forum Discussion
goss1000
Jul 12, 2016Aspirant
Powerline 1000 and 1200 serie
Hi Is there realy a speed difference between PL1200 and PL1000? Can someboby explain me the difference? accordind to the spec sheet, they are both identical. One more question, Can we buy only th...
clithes
Jul 17, 2016Prodigy
I doubt if there's much 'real world' difference between a 1000 and a 1200. To answer your second point, Netgear don't seem to offer solo units for purchase. You may be able to pick one up second hand on it's own, but thats probably your best option.
Hope this helps
RexB
Nov 27, 2016Aspirant
I think I have the same issue as the OP, which is still unanswered:
I have a 1200 set, and I want to add a Wifi+RJ45 remote outlet. If I buy the PLW1010 kit can I use EITHER the 1000 or 1200 base with BOTH the 1200 at one remote device AND the PLW1010 wifi on a separate remote plug.
In other words, I want either base/sender unit using just one router connection. On the remote end, I want to use the 1200 ethernet unit on a PC, then use the PLW1000 remote to connect a TV via ethernet, plus provide a wifi hotspot.
Will that work?
- michaelkenwardNov 29, 2016Guru - Experienced User
RexB wrote:I think I have the same issue as the OP, which is still unanswered:
Which question? clithes answered both.
- No real speed difference
- Netgear doesn't sell singletons
RexB wrote:If I buy the PLW1010 kit can I use EITHER the 1000 or 1200 base with BOTH the 1200 at one remote device AND the PLW1010 wifi on a separate remote plug.
You can use these plugs in any way that you like. The AV standard means that they will all talk to each other, but usually at the speed of the slowest device. You can even mix different brands.
This may be useful:
Adding a powerline adapter to an existing powerline network | Answer | NETGEAR Support
One plug connected to the router, the rest wherever you want them on the same mains circuit.