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Forum Discussion
steve8
Jun 13, 2021Aspirant
Dual WAN aggregation to double WAN throughput - Is it possible?
Hello, I am looking to set up WAN Aggregation for two WAN connections using the Netgear MS510TX switch. I wondered if it was possible, and if someone would be kind to share how I would go about se...
schumaku
Jun 14, 2021Guru - Experienced User
steve8 wrote:I read that the TP-Link TL-ER5120 Gigabit Multi-WAN Load Balance Router can aggregate two WANs and effectively double the WAN throughput.
Leaving alone this device is EoL, and coming with a bunch of Gigabit Ethernet ports ... unless you have two real plain IP connections on Ethernet (probably also some PPPoE or the like on two xDSL links) and your ISP is actively supporting bonding of two or more Internet connection links, there is no magic "doubling" of the throughput. A single connection session (e.g. TCP) does always connect and flow over one Internet connection only.
Depending on the algorithm implemented, typical multi-WAN routers allow to combine multiple Internet connections in this class keep one IP on one WAN and Internet connection. So only a second computer can take an advantage of the second Internet connection.
steve8 wrote:The issue is that I require 5 GbE support as one of the WAN connections uses this standard, hence the need for the MS510TX.
...
The first WAN is the Inseego outdoor 5G CPE device that uses a single 5 GbE port. This modem has routing functionality and has the option for IP Passthrough: https://inseego.com/products/fixed/fw2000/.
Had to check it, this CPE does really come with a 5 GbE port. Again leaving alone of the network this CPE does connect to will ever deliver this kind of performance, to reach the theoretical 4.14 Gb/s down and 660 Mb/s up, you need a device able to deal with these >4Gb/s so a computer with a 5 GbE Ethernet port (or faster). If the aim is sharing this theoretical peak bandwidth to multiple systems, the MS510 Series switches could deal with this.
To make use of this with a MultiWAN router, the device would need to become a pure "modem" only, providing the public WAN IP only.
steve8 wrote:The second WAN is the NetComm NDD-0300 VDSL2 modem. The NetComm is strictly a modem only as far as I know and requires a router for routing.
A multiWAN router which can terminate the xDSL (e.g. PPPoE) and handling the NAT for the LAN could handle this.
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