Hi!
New to the site/forum, which is a treasure trove of information, but I can't seem to pick up the solution to my problem, it's probably here somewhere though! I'm not sure this is the best forum to post this...but it's a bit of a hodge-podge!
I've been a fairly generic home networking type, with connectivity problems from time to time, but recently I decided to buy a NAS to share files. I had hoped more easily and faster, but this has been a mixed bag. It all works, but where I wanted/expected the most speed, I get the slowest.
I'm in a tri-level with a cable provider as my ISP. The cable modem is on the main floor as this is where the first split occurs. I have a Belkin N+ wireless router connected to the cable modem and apart from a variety of laptops; some g, some b, I have a desktop on the lower level connected to the router by a Netgear Powerline AV200 pair. I originally thought that the powerline adapter was the problem, as I have a red led signaling the worst/quality connection. After reading here for the last few days, I pulled the adapter from downstairs, connected to a laptop (and got green led's) and had pretty much the same transfer speeds, which hover around 2MBps. I actually get worse than this downstairs with the red led, but it's in the ballpark.
I have tried a number of other solutions....bought a PCIe wireless adapter for the desktop, very poor signal down there with similar transfer speeds. Next, I bought an ASUS EA-N66 and used it in the direct connect mode, where it plugs directly into the Ethernet port. Good signal according to the LED's, but poor transfer rate; around 2-2.5 MBps. I even brought it upstairs to the same room as the router and am using it right now on a laptop....same results.
If I connect my laptops straight to the router using an ethernet cable, I get anywhere from 8MBps to 11MBps....different machines/filetypes I guess or some other reason...they are similar numbers and something I would like to get to on the machine downstairs.
If it weren't for the powerline adapter still getting poor results even with the apparent good connection, I'd say it had something to do with wireless. But now I don't know.
I upgraded the firmware on the router, my adapter drivers are up to date according to Windows (Win7 Home Premium x64).....it doesn't make sense!!!!
Steve
New to the site/forum, which is a treasure trove of information, but I can't seem to pick up the solution to my problem, it's probably here somewhere though! I'm not sure this is the best forum to post this...but it's a bit of a hodge-podge!
I've been a fairly generic home networking type, with connectivity problems from time to time, but recently I decided to buy a NAS to share files. I had hoped more easily and faster, but this has been a mixed bag. It all works, but where I wanted/expected the most speed, I get the slowest.
I'm in a tri-level with a cable provider as my ISP. The cable modem is on the main floor as this is where the first split occurs. I have a Belkin N+ wireless router connected to the cable modem and apart from a variety of laptops; some g, some b, I have a desktop on the lower level connected to the router by a Netgear Powerline AV200 pair. I originally thought that the powerline adapter was the problem, as I have a red led signaling the worst/quality connection. After reading here for the last few days, I pulled the adapter from downstairs, connected to a laptop (and got green led's) and had pretty much the same transfer speeds, which hover around 2MBps. I actually get worse than this downstairs with the red led, but it's in the ballpark.
I have tried a number of other solutions....bought a PCIe wireless adapter for the desktop, very poor signal down there with similar transfer speeds. Next, I bought an ASUS EA-N66 and used it in the direct connect mode, where it plugs directly into the Ethernet port. Good signal according to the LED's, but poor transfer rate; around 2-2.5 MBps. I even brought it upstairs to the same room as the router and am using it right now on a laptop....same results.
If I connect my laptops straight to the router using an ethernet cable, I get anywhere from 8MBps to 11MBps....different machines/filetypes I guess or some other reason...they are similar numbers and something I would like to get to on the machine downstairs.
If it weren't for the powerline adapter still getting poor results even with the apparent good connection, I'd say it had something to do with wireless. But now I don't know.
I upgraded the firmware on the router, my adapter drivers are up to date according to Windows (Win7 Home Premium x64).....it doesn't make sense!!!!
Steve