Beisser: I've round that link rate is only remotely related to actual throughput.
Bluesherpa: Bessier is correct. I didn't notice that you were quoting MBytes/sec, not bits. 14 MB/s is very good indeed.
I apologise for my simple question amidst your highly technical discussions, but I need to know one simple thing about this router. I heard that it does not support asymmetrical port forwarding, that is, it does not have an option to forward an external port with one number to a local port with another number. Could you please tell me if that is true?
This will limit the performance of both flavors of clients. See Add, Don't Replace When Upgrading to 802.11n
Since one radio is serving clients and the bridge, bandwidth will be shared. So, no.
Yes. Again one radio, so bandwidth is shared.
If you want full performance from N, especially used for streamed/media connections, then put your wireless clients on a separate G network.
See http://forums.smallnetbuilder.com/showthread.php?t=2506I am still not 100% clear on this. I read and understand your article about adding and not replacing when going N....
no it doesnt support port translation.
I think your main point is, simply put, the WNDR3700 doesn't support NAT loopback and that it supports DNS relay. Both are common in consumer routers.
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