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jp560's avatar
jp560
Aspirant
Apr 17, 2017
Solved

Only getting 94 Mbps WIRED with N300 Wireless Router WNR2000v3

I Only get 94 Mbps WIRED with my N300 Wireless Router WNR2000v3, even though my provider's speed clocks at 230 Mbps when directly connected to my modem. My provider is Xfinity. Does anyone know what the maximum WIRED speed is of this Netgear router? The manual says the max WIFI speed is 145 Mbps, but I'm not even getting that. Is there a way to increase this router's speed? Thanks. -jp

  • The specs for the N300 show that the wired ethernet ports are 10/100, not gigabit, so 94 Mbps wired is to be expected.

8 Replies

  • The specs for the N300 show that the wired ethernet ports are 10/100, not gigabit, so 94 Mbps wired is to be expected.

  • The LAN/WAN ports support 10/100 Mbps only. Either downgrade your ISP Service, or upgrade to a router that supports 1000 Mbps LAN/WAN ports.

    • NutOnABike's avatar
      NutOnABike
      Tutor

      ... another option is OP could get a GS105 or GS108 gigabit switch, then connect the router and his wired connections to it.  That would provide greater than 100 Mbps for both wired and wireless.

      • netwrks's avatar
        netwrks
        Master

        Nothing gained adding a switch into the mix with current hardware setup. The connected speed on the switch to the client would be a gig (if there is a cient NIC card to support it), but the important part is the uplink connection between the router LAN port and the switch, it will only be 100 Mbps (bottleneck), as that is all the router can support. At the end of the day, the router can only support 100 Mbps wired. Wireless does not benefit from a gigabit switch, if the the router, as in this case, supports the client wired and wireless environment..

  • To NutOnABike:

     

    Thanks for the suggestion. I like it because I wouldn't have to mess with setting up a new router.
     
    But ... Don't I need a router - not a switch - directly connected to my modem so I can get the benefits of the router (proper device routing, automatic IP address assignment, and firewall)?  I thought switches should only be connected downstream of a router, not upstream.  I probably should just bite the bullet and buy a gigabyte router to get the higher speeds available by Comcast.
     
    Thanks,
    -jp
    • Doh, <facepalm> -- I'm sorry, I had a brain fade there. Of course you are right, you'll need a new router upstream.