I'm going to kinda ramble here, sorry.
I kinda leaped without looking into a fios gigabit connection. I'm a fairly heavy gamer. And I only stick my head up into the networking realm every 8 or so years it seems like. So I'm always behind the times in what is new. I'd consider myself intermediate experienced, I've flashed my share of Linksys WRT54G/S/L with dd-wrt and bridged them with WDS 15+ years ago to cheaply connect several computers over a network. But I yanked the routers out a couple of years ago for a straight up wifi usb dongle to just my main computer.
Basically I blindly upgraded into gigabit speed without thinking about the network.
My main desktop computer is upstairs right now connected with a Roswell RNX-N150HG - USB N150 Wi-Fi Adapter. It provides a very satisfactory experience with my old 50/50mbs connection maxing around 45/45mbs.
But yeah, it obviously isn't doing the trick with the gigabit speed now.
I have the standard fios quantum gateway router G1100 located downstairs next to a very crappy computer (think 10 year old budget dell)... I think it is literally sitting on an unplugged Linksys WRT54G. I guess I should throw that away... but I loved it.
My brother occasionally streams hulu/cbs/netflix downstairs in HD on his PS4, but he is plugged right into the router down there in the main (new) fios box.
I am a much more heavily an internet user with youtube/downloading 80gb steam games/streaming HD over wifi. Obviously with my old connection speed I maxed it out pretty efficiently. I might be planning to stream gaming to twitch/youtube in the future. My eyesight isn't the best so I don't really see 4k or anything like that in the future.
What would be the best way to get the fastest connection upstairs if wired isn't an option? We aren't a big wifi device house, I occasionally use a laptop, a smartphone, and my brother use a smartphone but no computer at all. Heathen.
So my research has gotten me confused. It seems like 500-600ish is the maximum theoretical for 802.11AC? It seems like faster rated routers are all for multiple device wifi houses that are much bigger than mine with lots of streaming devices. I am upstairs from the router (through the floor), but only offset by a few feet at most. So I would estimate it is only 20-25ft diagonally away from me.
What would be the best way to get the most speed through wifi upstairs on a small network?
I almost pulled the trigger on a NETGEAR Nighthawk X6 AC3200 with a ASUS 4x4 802.11AC Wireless-AC3100 PCIe Adapter (PCE-AC88) but when I realized I was almost in for 400 dollars I should research this a bit more.
So I guess my question is, what is the fastest way to saturate my new gigabit connection through wifi without pretending I'm serving wifi for a whole neighborhood of people?
Or should I just bit the bullet, pretend I know what I am doing and drill a hole into my floor and string cat6 through it. (I have no idea what I am doing here and drilling scares me, I grew up without a Dad okay)
Was my almost purchase foolhardy?
Why do I feel like Jeremy Clarkson?
I kinda leaped without looking into a fios gigabit connection. I'm a fairly heavy gamer. And I only stick my head up into the networking realm every 8 or so years it seems like. So I'm always behind the times in what is new. I'd consider myself intermediate experienced, I've flashed my share of Linksys WRT54G/S/L with dd-wrt and bridged them with WDS 15+ years ago to cheaply connect several computers over a network. But I yanked the routers out a couple of years ago for a straight up wifi usb dongle to just my main computer.
Basically I blindly upgraded into gigabit speed without thinking about the network.
My main desktop computer is upstairs right now connected with a Roswell RNX-N150HG - USB N150 Wi-Fi Adapter. It provides a very satisfactory experience with my old 50/50mbs connection maxing around 45/45mbs.
But yeah, it obviously isn't doing the trick with the gigabit speed now.
I have the standard fios quantum gateway router G1100 located downstairs next to a very crappy computer (think 10 year old budget dell)... I think it is literally sitting on an unplugged Linksys WRT54G. I guess I should throw that away... but I loved it.
My brother occasionally streams hulu/cbs/netflix downstairs in HD on his PS4, but he is plugged right into the router down there in the main (new) fios box.
I am a much more heavily an internet user with youtube/downloading 80gb steam games/streaming HD over wifi. Obviously with my old connection speed I maxed it out pretty efficiently. I might be planning to stream gaming to twitch/youtube in the future. My eyesight isn't the best so I don't really see 4k or anything like that in the future.
What would be the best way to get the fastest connection upstairs if wired isn't an option? We aren't a big wifi device house, I occasionally use a laptop, a smartphone, and my brother use a smartphone but no computer at all. Heathen.
So my research has gotten me confused. It seems like 500-600ish is the maximum theoretical for 802.11AC? It seems like faster rated routers are all for multiple device wifi houses that are much bigger than mine with lots of streaming devices. I am upstairs from the router (through the floor), but only offset by a few feet at most. So I would estimate it is only 20-25ft diagonally away from me.
What would be the best way to get the most speed through wifi upstairs on a small network?
I almost pulled the trigger on a NETGEAR Nighthawk X6 AC3200 with a ASUS 4x4 802.11AC Wireless-AC3100 PCIe Adapter (PCE-AC88) but when I realized I was almost in for 400 dollars I should research this a bit more.
So I guess my question is, what is the fastest way to saturate my new gigabit connection through wifi without pretending I'm serving wifi for a whole neighborhood of people?
Or should I just bit the bullet, pretend I know what I am doing and drill a hole into my floor and string cat6 through it. (I have no idea what I am doing here and drilling scares me, I grew up without a Dad okay)
Was my almost purchase foolhardy?
Why do I feel like Jeremy Clarkson?

Last edited: