found this on web:
What are my pluses and cons?
So it appears to be academic as opposed to practical.
That sounds pretty good. Mostly pictures, word documents, some videos when we were all young.It depends on what do you need as storage solution. Many options to choose from for every budget. I wanted fast x86 hardware, standard hardware allowing other uses, standard file systems readable on every PC, readily available and easily replaceable drives, small physical size, fast enough for my needs and relatively power efficient. About $400 hardware is covering all my requirements, including the drives.
@william13, you're jumping all over the place without learning or solving anything so far.
You can still check if you have over 1Gbps aggregate ISP speeds. You should still be able to downgrade (at cost-savings) to the speed your equipment supports (if that is what you'll need to do, see below). You should test not only your ISP but your ER-4 to see it works as designed (by trying the link you found in post #23 above.
If the ISP gave you new equipment (they should have) to get the speeds they're promising you, you may be able to put it into Bridge mode and have the best of all worlds. I'm not sure if it's possible, but we were on that road until you got sidetracked.
Lastly, I suggest you act slowly on opinions from users that (pretend) to only read one side of the threads here with a grain of salt or two (by 'ignoring' who they don't agree with).
Your call to do the above (or not), but if you're here to learn your equipment and about networking in general, roll up your sleeves and find out conclusively for yourself if something is worth it to you or not. You may want to start from post #17 if you're still curious.
BTW right now my backup is a Dell Power Edge T310 that I have had for over 5 years I think. 2 TB drives.
What modem do you have then? That may be your bottleneck right there? If the modem only outputs 1Gbps, there is nothing to further test.
Can you give us a quick diagram of how everything you have is connected? Bridge mode is never slower (afaik).
No, I'm not referring to LAG (or LAGG?). I'm trying to verify that the equipment in front of your router is capable of providing greater than 1Gbps speeds.
I'll be looking for your testing and hopefully a diagram too when you're able to share.
No I am overflowing. I need more than 2 TB.Oh, wow... if all your data fits on 2TB, you perhaps don't need $700 5-bay NAS diskless.
No I am overflowing. I need more than 2 TB.
I will ask for that but I don't know what your isp is like but mine never does anything for free. I appreciate your advice. Thank youA quick search states that your modem is the bottleneck then for your 1.2Gbps connection.
Call them back and tell them you want a cheaper rate because you can't ever achieve those speeds. You'll still be tied to the 2-year commitment you made, but you shouldn't have to pay for something you don't/can't use.
If they offer their 1.2Gbps modem (for free), ask them to put it in bridge mode and sell your Arris SB8200 when you have it working as expected. Before accepting it, ask them if the 1.2Gbps speeds will be achievable with a single device (I'm guessing not), this is for your information so you're not chasing wild geese for no reason.
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