Router to replace D-Link DGL-4300

7earitup

Senior member
Sep 22, 2004
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I am looking at new routers on NewEgg to replace my aging DGL-4300. Here are some of the ones I have been looking at the most:

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16833124190

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16833320023

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...tem=33-127-215

I would like to know if these are decent routers that will be a substantial upgrade over my DGL-4300. I am still on the fence on whether or not I want to run DD-WRT or Tomato, but if it means better performance and rock solid stability, then I am definitely interested.

As far as usage scenarios - at the peak times, which is most of the time, the router needs to be able to handle 4 wired computers and 2 wireless computers, all of which are gaming (playing World of Warcraft or something similar).

It seems that the DGL-4300 is getting worn out these days and I need something to better handle all of the traffic going through the modem.


Any help and suggestions are appreciated. Thanks!
 

ImDonly1

Platinum Member
Dec 17, 2004
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The DGL 4300 is a really reliable router. Unless it is breaking, I don't see why you would be replacing it.

In my opinion, while the WRT54GL and the Asus router are always recommended, they are a step below the DGL 4300. It would be a downgrade. They are only popular because of DD-WRT. Compared to the DGL-4300, they lack gigabit ethernet. They WRT54GL has the same amount of RAM and a slower processor than the DGL 4300.

The DIR-655 is good, it has gigabit ethernet, wireless N, etc. But it does not do DD-WRT, the firmware is sometimes a bit flaky or was when it first came out. Not sure how it is now. Haven't really been keeping up with it. Overall, it is a stable router and popular.

I would just keep the DGL 4300 if I was you. I also have one. The only reason I would consider upgrading would be if I could get a better router for cheap. Say $40 and it had gigabit LAN, WAN, wireless N. Dd wrt would be a plus.
 

7earitup

Senior member
Sep 22, 2004
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The main reason I was looking at upgrading was to get something faster and more capable of handling lots of network traffic. I was unaware however that routers were still so behind in terms of features when compared to the DGL-4300.
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,587
10,225
126
I installed a trendnet tew-652brp v1.0 at a friends house. they have 5 wired desktops and one wireless.
lots of gaming, online streaming video, etc. not much in the way of torrents. anyways, it has a 400mhz cpu and 32MB of ram, seems to hold up just fine.

same hardware as dlink dir-615 rev c1.

(I have one of those running dd-wrt, as a wireless repeater. it sometimes goes down for a few minutes, have no idea why exactly. it could be because the router it's repeating goes down, or perhaps because it got overheated and damaged.)
 

ImDonly1

Platinum Member
Dec 17, 2004
2,357
0
76
Well the WRT54G and Asus routers are wireless G routers and were released around the time the DGL 4300 was. They are not new routers.

I think everyone was going crazy over this router a few days ago
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16833320038

It was on sale for $77. It has like 128MB RAM (compared to 16MB of the WRT54G and most routers) and a 480Mhz cpu (compared to the wrt54g's 200 Mhz or so). It can also run the mega version of dd-wrt, or tomato I think.

I don't have the rt-n16, so can't comment, but from the hardware it seems like a really good router that can handle a lot of connections. Read some reviews on it from google.

Again, I would stay with the dgl-4300, unless you have money to waste and want wireless N, or gigabit WAN (the dgl-4300 already has gigabit LAN, but not WAN which most people don't need), or the router is breaking, or you want dd-wrt.
 

7earitup

Senior member
Sep 22, 2004
391
0
76
That ASUS router looks very nice. I may have to look into it if my current network setup continues pestering me. ~$100 does not look bad considering I paid around $150 for the DGL-4300 back in the day.
 

sxr7171

Diamond Member
Jun 21, 2002
5,079
40
91
IMHO why get a router with all those features if you don't need it? The print server is unnecessary if you have a wireless printer (~$100) and a media server is unnecessary if you have a NAS or any computer running WMP 12 on the network.

I think the more features they tack on the more chances that the FW chokes on something or another.

I am looking towards maybe a SOHO router that hopefully handles the basics more reliably than consumer routers.
 

AMDZen

Lifer
Apr 15, 2004
12,589
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76
I know this is an old thread but I'm bumping it because: I have a DGL-4300 router and I was looking into using some kind of WRT setup. DD-WRT and Tomato don't seem to be compatible with this router, is there any firmware that is compatible, that would support VPN over my whole network?
 

7earitup

Senior member
Sep 22, 2004
391
0
76
I know this is an old thread but I'm bumping it because: I have a DGL-4300 router and I was looking into using some kind of WRT setup. DD-WRT and Tomato don't seem to be compatible with this router, is there any firmware that is compatible, that would support VPN over my whole network?

Not that I know of. There is no flashable ROM on the DGL-4300.

I ended up buying a Netgear WNDR3700 which can run DD-WRT, OPEN WRT, and Gargoyle.
 

AMDZen

Lifer
Apr 15, 2004
12,589
0
76
Not that I know of. There is no flashable ROM on the DGL-4300.

I ended up buying a Netgear WNDR3700 which can run DD-WRT, OPEN WRT, and Gargoyle.

OK, a couple more questions for you since I don't know that I'm entirely sure what I'm doing.

If I get a VPN account like at strongvpn.com, can I not run my whole network through that VPN via my router? Just one machine routing my single computer through that VPN?

And if I get an IP in lets say, the Netherlands. And I want to remote in to my computer from an outside computer, will there be any complications if I can only route the single computer as opposed to the router?