[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.701961)]Hi,
I'm a student at UC Berkeley currently living in a fraternity house with about 30 others. We recently set up a new network here but it's not performing well and was hoping that someone would be able to point me in the right direction. I think our biggest problem is the router we currently use but I'm not sure.
Comcast is our ISP and I think we are on a plan right now that's 100 Mbps. We have a Motorola SB 6141 modem and a
TP-LINK TL-R600VPN router. We have 2 Ubiquiti Unifi APs connected to the router and a TP-LINK TL-SG1008PE switch with an additional 6 Unifi APs connected to it (for a total of 8 APs). The house is 3 stories with the majority of people living on the 2nd and 3rd floors. Because of that, there are 2 APs on the first floor and 3 each on the 2nd and 3rd. Everything is connected via CAT6 cables that were put in place less than a year ago.
The network performs well during off hours when not many people are on it. However, with around 30 people living here and each person having multiple devices connected to the network, it slows down to a pretty much unusable speed during peak hours. The network used to have a total of 6 APs (each floor had 2) and we thought that maybe they were becoming congested so we added 1 more to each of the top 2 floors. That didn't solve the problem or really even make it slightly better, which is why I believe that the router is the main source of the problem (although now that I think about it, the switch could be a problem too). Am I correct, or is there something that I've overlooked?
If the router is the main culprit, which router do you recommend we buy? I was looking at the tables on SmallNetBuilder and was thinking that we should go with the Netgear FVS336G-300 (assuming that replacing the router would make a significant difference). However, we are on a budget so I was wondering if the Ubiquiti Edgerouter Lite would suffice for our situation.
Thank you all for your help,
Riley[/COLOR]
I'm a student at UC Berkeley currently living in a fraternity house with about 30 others. We recently set up a new network here but it's not performing well and was hoping that someone would be able to point me in the right direction. I think our biggest problem is the router we currently use but I'm not sure.
Comcast is our ISP and I think we are on a plan right now that's 100 Mbps. We have a Motorola SB 6141 modem and a
TP-LINK TL-R600VPN router. We have 2 Ubiquiti Unifi APs connected to the router and a TP-LINK TL-SG1008PE switch with an additional 6 Unifi APs connected to it (for a total of 8 APs). The house is 3 stories with the majority of people living on the 2nd and 3rd floors. Because of that, there are 2 APs on the first floor and 3 each on the 2nd and 3rd. Everything is connected via CAT6 cables that were put in place less than a year ago.
The network performs well during off hours when not many people are on it. However, with around 30 people living here and each person having multiple devices connected to the network, it slows down to a pretty much unusable speed during peak hours. The network used to have a total of 6 APs (each floor had 2) and we thought that maybe they were becoming congested so we added 1 more to each of the top 2 floors. That didn't solve the problem or really even make it slightly better, which is why I believe that the router is the main source of the problem (although now that I think about it, the switch could be a problem too). Am I correct, or is there something that I've overlooked?
If the router is the main culprit, which router do you recommend we buy? I was looking at the tables on SmallNetBuilder and was thinking that we should go with the Netgear FVS336G-300 (assuming that replacing the router would make a significant difference). However, we are on a budget so I was wondering if the Ubiquiti Edgerouter Lite would suffice for our situation.
Thank you all for your help,
Riley[/COLOR]