I'm really happy with my Asus RT-AC5300 router in functionality, but
can someone understand, that this router beeing configured as "ACCESS POINT" and WiFi switched off, still consumes 150mA, just for keep on working the Gigabit Switch?
manilla
I'm really happy with my Asus RT-AC5300 router in functionality, but
can someone understand, that this router beeing configured as "ACCESS POINT" and WiFi switched off, still consumes 150mA, just for keep on working the Gigabit Switch?
manilla
150mA at what voltage (19V DC output) is less than 3W. You can't expect it to work otherwise?
Some power is still required to operate the switch circuit(s).
sorry for not having mentioned the voltage,
no,
I wouldn't be surprised for a value of 150mA at (19V Output), configured as Access Point and WiFi switched off,
the RT-AC5300 actually consumes in this status 150 mA at (220V AC Output), that is like a 33-Watt light bulb ;-)
...and configured as Access Point and WiFi switched on ---> 200mA = 44 Watt
...and configured as Router and WiFi switched on ---> ??? (didn't measure yet)
@RMerlin,
yeah, I know AC5300 isn't just a Switch, but todays advanced CPU designs would actually allow to handle different Status much better in power consumption!
Think about our modern Notebooks these days beeing able to work for 10 to 15 hours with just one battery Charge.
manilla
sorry for not having mentioned the voltage,
no,
I wouldn't be surprised for a value of 150mA at (19V Output), configured as Access Point and WiFi switched off,
the RT-AC5300 actually consumes in this status 150 mA at (220V AC Output), that is like a 33-Watt light bulb ;-)
...and configured as Access Point and WiFi switched on ---> 200mA = 44 Watt
...and configured as Router and WiFi switched on ---> ??? (didn't measure yet)
@RMerlin,
yeah, I know AC5300 isn't just a Switch, but todays advanced CPU designs would actually allow to handle different Status much better in power consumption!
Think about our modern Notebooks these days beeing able to work for 10 to 15 hours with just one battery Charge.
manilla
yeah, I know AC5300 isn't just a Switch, but todays advanced CPU designs would actually allow to handle different Status much better in power consumption!
Think about our modern Notebooks these days beeing able to work for 10 to 15 hours with just one battery Charge.
There are inefficiencies from converting from AC power to DC. If you are measuring at the wall, you are also measuring how (inefficient) the adaptor is at it's lowest and most inefficient power draw. I highly doubt the RT-AC5300 is using anywhere close to 33W in that usage mode (it may be half or less), even if it is rated for 65W maximum (well, the power adaptor is; 19V @ 3.42A).
Routers and laptops processors are not equivalent. Laptop (and desktop) processors have many features to extend battery life when they're not being actively used (but still 'on'). Speedstep and enhanced speedstep is used along with many other technologies to achieve that goal of very long battery life.
A router though does not use anything like that (today). It is running at full frequency at all times. No power savings enabled at all.
If you want to accurately see what the power consumption of the RT-AC5300 is, you need to monitor the voltage and amperage of the DC input lines on the router. That will take out the inefficiencies of the AC adaptor/converter and give you an actual wattage that the router needs in the configuration you have it in. Of course, you do pay for the AC adaptor and router combination in electricity, but again, at such low loads, the inefficiencies of the power supply 'should' be ignored, imo.
Just one opinion, of course.
If knit picking within the router 19V DC has to be down to 5V DC again using regulators incurring power loss, probably there is need fo 12V DC too, and so on and on.
>>Cortex A9 ain't a very recent design, and Broadcom didn't implement any clock throttling
>>in their design (I assume it's for latency reasons).
that's the point!
It is also true that clamp-on current meters do not account for power factor--either from phase angle or non-sinusoidal waveforms. The true power can be quite a bit less than volts times amps (scalar).150 mA, taking into account what might be around 75% power efficiency (Asus's recent power adapters are much better than the old ones, but I doubt they're in the 80-85% ratio for a 220V user) doesn't seem much to me for a dual core 1.4 GHz CPU.
Cortex A9 ain't a very recent design, and Broadcom didn't implement any clock throttling in their design (I assume it's for latency reasons).
At last count, there's at least four different Cortex-A9 releases across 40nm and 28nm - so it could be any one of them
The information I found was specific to the BCM4709C0, which was labeled as being a 28 nm part.
Nice... and one might be able to discover which ARMv7 (Cortex-A9) minor release is in /proc/cpuinfo perhaps...
Features : swp half thumb fastmult edsp
CPU implementer : 0x41
CPU architecture: 7
CPU variant : 0x3
CPU part : 0xc09
CPU revision : 0
If knit picking within the router 19V DC has to be down to 5V DC again using regulators incurring power loss, probably there is need fo 12V DC too, and so on and on.
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