Hi there, first post here so be gentle
I've been noticing some speed issues recently whereby the full 75Mbps of my broadband connection was being throttled by the above router, to around 61Mbps. A quick test plugging a PC into the VDSL modem, bypassing the Asus proved this.
A little digging on here made me think that enabling HW acceleration might be worth a try. After enabling this by disabling per-IP monitoring and QoS the full bandwidth is available again.
This left me wondering whether in the real practical world, when multiple devices are using bandwidth, as opposed to just one, is this difference an overall limitation to the network, i.e. if I had two devices, demanding let's say 35Mbps each, would the router deliver this, or would the above cap apply due to internal hardware performance issues?
I realise I could do an experiment but I thought someone one here might have the answer; internally within the router where is the limitation, is it just a CPU / processing limitation, or is it a per-port limitation?
I suppose this is all leading to questions about max speeds vs. enabling QoS to prioritise bandwidth for certain services. I'm toying with the idea of upgrading to a newer Asus, particularly after setting up a friend's RT-AC87 recently, but this elderly device is still amazingly good and by far the best router I've used (particularly with Merlin's awesome firmware).
Thoughts?
Andy.
I've been noticing some speed issues recently whereby the full 75Mbps of my broadband connection was being throttled by the above router, to around 61Mbps. A quick test plugging a PC into the VDSL modem, bypassing the Asus proved this.
A little digging on here made me think that enabling HW acceleration might be worth a try. After enabling this by disabling per-IP monitoring and QoS the full bandwidth is available again.
This left me wondering whether in the real practical world, when multiple devices are using bandwidth, as opposed to just one, is this difference an overall limitation to the network, i.e. if I had two devices, demanding let's say 35Mbps each, would the router deliver this, or would the above cap apply due to internal hardware performance issues?
I realise I could do an experiment but I thought someone one here might have the answer; internally within the router where is the limitation, is it just a CPU / processing limitation, or is it a per-port limitation?
I suppose this is all leading to questions about max speeds vs. enabling QoS to prioritise bandwidth for certain services. I'm toying with the idea of upgrading to a newer Asus, particularly after setting up a friend's RT-AC87 recently, but this elderly device is still amazingly good and by far the best router I've used (particularly with Merlin's awesome firmware).
Thoughts?
Andy.