Damn, well i guess ill just use a single gigabit link to the router. It would have been cool to be have been able to aggregate this link with an additional cable but i guess its not possible and not really necessary with my current hardware. Although i think my router can do link aggregation to lan clients but im not sure.
Through DD-WRT I believe it can, but there is zero point. At best you are probably looking at a combined 400-450Mbps between both 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands on the WNDR3700 for VERY good connections. That isn't even enough to saturate half of a half-duplex gigabit link, let alone an entire full duplex link.
Once you start getting in to AC1900 routers with AC1900 clients, then you might run in to a fully saturated half-duplex link (if the clients are all receiving or all sending). I have seen some AC1750 clients on 5GHz hit up around mid 80MB/sec...that plus a 2.4GHz client at 40MB/sec or so would be more than the capacity of a 1GbE link if they were both sending or receiving at the same time. But maybe just barely.
Where you might run in to it more is if you have clients wired in to the router or if you have something like an AC2350+ router with AC2350+ clients to go with, or maybe once MU:MIMO hits in a substantial way, with something >AC2350/2400 router (because MU:MIMO you lose one of the radio links in being able to provide it, so effectively an AC2350, 1.7Gbps 5GHz and 600Mbps 2.4GHz actually can only provide 1.3Gbps 5GHz and 400Mbps 2.4GHz spread between multiple clients, though it can hit the 1.7Gbps or 600Mbps for a single client if the client has enough spatial streams).
Keep in mind with Wifi in an IDEAL setup, you can get about 75% of the advertised speed on an AWESOME connection due to error correction and 802.11__ overhead. A typical is lower.
As an example, my Archer C8 I have the best 2.4GHz connection I have ever seen, 28.5MB/sec, or 228Mbps out of 300Mbps (just a 2:2 client) 76% of the link rate. On 5GHz though (11ac, so 867Mbps link rate for the same 2:2 client) I can only manage 62MB/sec absolute max and that is much dicier to get (typical even same room is more in the 55-57MB/sec range, but sometimes I can hit 62MB/sec steady state transfers). That is 496Mbps out of a possible 867Mbps, or only 57% of the link rate.
I think as 802.11ac matures, as well as the silicon, drivers, and all other components I think we'll see utilization bump up. Afterall, with 802.11n it has slowly increased over the years. Just looking at a few year old Intel 2230 combined with a Netgear WNDR3500l, which was pretty fast when it was brand new compared to other N300 routers (no, it wasn't top of the food chain ever, but it was good at the time), I could max at best 21MB/sec and that was with a serious tailwind. 168Mbps or 56% of link rate. My TP-Link WDR3600 is a couple of years newer (2? 3?), better overall everything as near as I can tell and just that change improved things to around 24MB/sec, or 192Mbps, or 64%. Swapping the 2230 in my laptop out for an Intel 7260ac saw my 2.4GHz and 5Ghz speeds improve to about 25MB/sec on 2.4GHz and 25.5MB/sec on 5GHz using the same WDR3600, now 200 and 204Mbps respectively and 66.6% and 68% respectively.
Then my Archer C8 which ups the game even more, pushing speeds to 28.5MB/sec, or 228Mbps and 76%. It can't really get any better without moving off standard 802.11n as regular forward error correction takes almost exactly 24% of the overall bandwidth. You can do low density parity checking, but that is NOT an 802.11n standard/requirement.
Looking at the performance of most 802.11ac routers, I'd bet as the years progress, we'll see them taking better and better advantage of what there is now. I'd almost bet that in 3-4 years we'll see routers being able to hit more like 60+% or even in to the 70% range for realizable link rate utilization.
Anyway, I digress. Long rambling diatribe.
No reason to use LAG/LACP on your router for any reason, unfortunately.