I am satisfied with Verizon. Comcast exists but the prices are similar so I don't feel compelled to make a jump.
Not to mention you would take a hit on the upload speeds getting knocked down to 40mbps.
92 MBPS on the computer, my NEST wifi router tests at 508 MBPS.
This makes no sense if you're wired to the router and the router is hitting 500mbps.
That's quite a bit. Do you know how many / percentage are using 2.4 vs 5?
I'd like to have an ethernet backhaul.
That's ideal and you have the wiring to support it.
4000 sq ft. So that would be about 1300 ft per floor.
Well that to me would mean you need 2-3 AP's depending on where you use WIFI the most and the chances of beams or concrete floors for penetration purposes of the signals.
OzarkEdge said:
Presumably it is double-NATed with the Verizon gateway/router.
I'm certain that it is.
If the G1100 is bridged you should be getting a routable IP on the Nest for the WAN.
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Lots of good detailed info here.
Here's what I'm assuming is 2-3 floors for the house including the basement.
Since you have the ONT >> Nest on the 1st floor via Ethernet converting things will be easier.
If you went with enterprise / SMB AP's instead of nodes / mesh / etc. marketing termed devices that are cute white / black boxes you should be able to get good coverage / speed from them.
A switch is optional but I'm thinking you have a central location in the house where all of your Ethernet drops go back to.
The Plus is you typically have room and an AC outlet nearby. I have something similar to this in my closet for the telco / ethernet / cable co / alarm feed into and it's convenient for making changes to wiring pathways. The downside is the patch portion for Ethernet can be flakey. Putting a switch inside the cabinet could be beneficial along with the fiber box unless that's already in the cabinet in the basement or mounted to a plywood backing on the wall.
Either way if things feed into a central location you're able to make some changes w/ very little effort.
I would first make sure the Nest is an issue before replacing it. If it's bad then what I would do is get a wired only router to take the handoff from the ISP and then another port to the switch. These little boxes are ~$50 and take care of the handoff portion from the provider. A switch gets you optimal speeds in the house between devices and feed back to the single cable from the router. From the switch you can feed your TV's and wired locations.
For the AP's you have a couple of options using either AC adapters or POE through the cabling itself. POE switches aren't too bad for pricing and eliminate the AC warts all over the place. I would add a 5-port POE++ giving you room for 4 AP's and a link back to the primary switch.
Ubiquity offers some 3-5 packs of AC AP's at a reasonable price. If you want to take advantage of AX benefits then it's a bit more limited. The best bang for the buck though is Zyxel @ $
130/ea for a 2x2 or $
160 for a 4x4 model. I use the 4x4 option and it covers 1300 sq ft pretty well. I don't see any reduced speeds / dead spots and if I'm in the same room with it I can hit 1.5gbps on the LAN which makes for easy streaming or backups.
In the end though it comes down to budget and time
$50 - small router
$50 - switch for TV / PC
$100 - switch for AP's
$390-$480- for 4 AP's
The other benefit is when you feel like an upgrade is wanted you can selectively swap out things as needed. When the AXE AP's come down in price for instance you could put one of those in the gaming area. It all depends on what the priorities are for each area.
Also, the AP's have 8 SSID's per radio meaning you can tie the lower priority devices to 2.4ghz only SSID's to keep them from consuming more bandwidth / extended reach. Priority devices on 5ghz or combined AX 2.4+5.