jsmiddleton4
Very Senior Member
Not sure logistics is right word but it gets close.
Now that I have a router with 2.5gbe WAN port and a router with the 2.5gbe port to make the most use of the highest speed tier for our area Xfinity I’ve been thinking about how this actually works for home networks.
Even if I have wired devices with 2.5gbe capability, I have one, I hit a bottle neck in trying to actually use 2.5gbe on my home network.
The 2.5 port is being used as the WAN. Every other port is 1 gb. Which means the wired connections are maxed at 1 gb. If I use the 2.5gb port on the router for my LAN, I lose the 2.5gb for the WAN and its back to the 1gb max. Right?
No matter what I do only one section of my LAN/WAN is 2.5gb.
Doesn’t that defeat the purpose of 2.5gb?
To take full advantage of 2.5gb don’t we need one 2.5gb that we can use for the WAN and at least one 2.5gb we can use for the LAN?
The only avenue that can take advantage of the 2.5gb WAN data flow are wireless 5ghz 6 AX and 6ghz 6E clients. Right?
Now that I have a router with 2.5gbe WAN port and a router with the 2.5gbe port to make the most use of the highest speed tier for our area Xfinity I’ve been thinking about how this actually works for home networks.
Even if I have wired devices with 2.5gbe capability, I have one, I hit a bottle neck in trying to actually use 2.5gbe on my home network.
The 2.5 port is being used as the WAN. Every other port is 1 gb. Which means the wired connections are maxed at 1 gb. If I use the 2.5gb port on the router for my LAN, I lose the 2.5gb for the WAN and its back to the 1gb max. Right?
No matter what I do only one section of my LAN/WAN is 2.5gb.
Doesn’t that defeat the purpose of 2.5gb?
To take full advantage of 2.5gb don’t we need one 2.5gb that we can use for the WAN and at least one 2.5gb we can use for the LAN?
The only avenue that can take advantage of the 2.5gb WAN data flow are wireless 5ghz 6 AX and 6ghz 6E clients. Right?