I currently have a NetGear N600 'wireless dual band router' (although I dont use the wireless because it literally gives me headaches its so powerful) and recently switched to a VOIP phone. Despite turning QoS on I noticed that VOIP completely goes to crap whenever another computer is hammering the ISP link (which is 25mbit down 3meg up) despite to my knowledge turning on the QoS option. I'm not even sure how to test if the QoS is properly working though which mostly seems to claim to filter by type of traffic. (where i'm more interested in filtering by IP either in addition to or instead of - to just plug a hardware VOIP box into a 'priority port')
My question is wondering if there is a significant difference in QoS implementations... whether I should look at things like older Linksys WRT54G's and their ability to be flashed to Tomato/DD-WRT (something I know mostly by name/i've never used them and dont know - I probably have one sitting in an old box somewhere but wont go dig if it's no better than what I have now) or whether newer routers are better performing at this job.
I would like to be able to limit traffic possibly with additional overhead if it's a contributing factor, like a call on LAN port 1 just drops everything else to 80% speed if it has to, or 70% speed. Perhaps I dont need to and that's not the problem though.. Or to also have one 'priority' computer for web browsing which would come 2nd priority, and would slow down whomever is on netflix because if i'm browsing it's for work more important than someone's streaming HD. FWIW I don't need gigabit on the 'top tier' router since the internet link is only 25mbit, it's only between important LAN stations, so 100mbit cheap routers can be recommended that are hackable and testable for a pittance as well. (since I wasn't looking to go spend another $100 on something new anyway)
I guess i'm just curious whats out there and whats worth comparing against. I got VOIP to save money but if I cant netflix, browse, torrent, and be on a call at the same time it defeats the purpose. I just want calls to take 1st and browsing to take 2nd priority above all other traffic.
My question is wondering if there is a significant difference in QoS implementations... whether I should look at things like older Linksys WRT54G's and their ability to be flashed to Tomato/DD-WRT (something I know mostly by name/i've never used them and dont know - I probably have one sitting in an old box somewhere but wont go dig if it's no better than what I have now) or whether newer routers are better performing at this job.
I would like to be able to limit traffic possibly with additional overhead if it's a contributing factor, like a call on LAN port 1 just drops everything else to 80% speed if it has to, or 70% speed. Perhaps I dont need to and that's not the problem though.. Or to also have one 'priority' computer for web browsing which would come 2nd priority, and would slow down whomever is on netflix because if i'm browsing it's for work more important than someone's streaming HD. FWIW I don't need gigabit on the 'top tier' router since the internet link is only 25mbit, it's only between important LAN stations, so 100mbit cheap routers can be recommended that are hackable and testable for a pittance as well. (since I wasn't looking to go spend another $100 on something new anyway)
I guess i'm just curious whats out there and whats worth comparing against. I got VOIP to save money but if I cant netflix, browse, torrent, and be on a call at the same time it defeats the purpose. I just want calls to take 1st and browsing to take 2nd priority above all other traffic.