- Aug 25, 2001
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Let me give you a run-down on my current LAN setup. I have a Gigabit FIOS connection, and a gigabit wired LAN. I have a FIOS G1100 router, and a secondary LAN router that's an Asus, that handles my Wifi. I generally run 3rd-party firmware. I may want to upgrade that router, especially if FIOS deploys a faster than 1Gbit internet connection speed. Exploring my options there, there doesn't appear to be many consumer routers, with an emphasis on forward-looking wired ports, as well as "Wifi 6" (AX). The Netgear AX12 router, is $400, and has a single 5GbE-T port, which I would like to have two, for both WAN and LAN. It does support teaming a couple of included 1GbE-T ports too.
Secondarily, I have several NAS units, none with faster than 1GbE ports on them (yet), but some of them have multiple 1GbE ports for teaming or LAG. I only use unmanaged switches currently, so I can't do LAG groups (yet).
I have some Ryzen AM4-based rigs, none with faster than 1GbE ports on them, either.
I would like to upgrade the home LAN to either 2.5GbE, or 5GbE. Both my client PCs, as well as my NAS units, and eventually, the WAN connection, once FIOS upgrades their offerings.
Currently, I can purchase, either now, or in the very near future:
ASRock TaiChi Ultimate X470 board, with a 10GbE-T AQ chipset onboard, like almost $300.
There are a number of X570 boards, now showing up on mfg's web sites, like the ASUS ROG STRIX X570-E and -F. The -E has 2.5GbE-T (RealTek) onboard + 1GbE Intel, as well as 2x2 AX Wifi 6 (Intel). Looks like a real option, if I want to upgrade my mobos, but that would cost me to purchase new CPUs, as my 1st-Gen Ryzen CPUs aren't supported on X570, according to a certain slide.
Alternatively, and cheaper, would be to get either:
TrendNet PCI-E 3.0 x1 2.5GbE card (RealTek) for $50 (Avail. starting in June)
TrendNet USB3.2 Gen 1 Type-C 2.5GbE (RealTek) for $50 (Avail. now)
QNAP QNA-QC5G1T (IIRC), which is a USB3 AQ chipset that does 5/2.5/1GbE-T. Unknown price, only one third-party seller on Amazon for $212, should be $70-80 once QNAP gets them in their US Store site. (*This will work with my two 4-bay QNAP NAS units, to upgrade them to 5GbE-T capability.)
AQ 5GbE (5/2.5/1GbE) PCI-E 3.0 x1 for $80 on ebay, or $70 on Amazon.
AQ 10GbE PCI-E 3.0 x4 for $100-110 on Amazon
Club3D 2.5GbE (RealTek) USB3 Type-C or Type-A (two different models), the Type-A model is on ProV for $37 right now.
Those appear to be my client options. There's also an Intel and a Killer AX Wifi 6 mPCI-E card for roughly $30 from third-party sellers on Newegg. (Though, I prefer PCI-E for wired NICs, and USB 3.x for Wifi.)
For switches, I splurged one night when someone on here sent me an Amazon GC anonymously for a few bucks. (Thanks, whomever you are!!!), and bought a GM110X or something like that. It's a Netgear switch, with 8x 1GbE ports, and 2x 10GbE-T (multi-Gig, I hope). I should have spent more, and gotten the managed one,. to take advantage of the LAG groups on the managed one. It's possible that this one may still support "Passive LAG / LACP" through my NAS configurations, with my NAS units.
There's also some 10GbE-T 8-port with 2x SFP+ uplink ports, a TrendNet for $550, and a 2.5GbE-T 8-port with the same for $330 right now on sale from BeachCamera on Amazon, and from BuyDig on ebay.
I'm not sure, if I get those QNAP USB3 Type-C 5GbE dongles with the AQ chipset, and then go through with getting AQ-chipset PCI-E 3.0 x1 cards for my client PCs, if it would even be worth spending money on the 8-port TrendNet 2.5GbE switches, if that would cut my performance down to 2.5GbE after spending all of this money, or if I should spend slightly MORE money, and get 8-port 10GbE-T (multi-gig) switches for $550.
Part of the problem is, due my physical layout of my apt., I may need TWO 8-port multi-gig switches. If I go with the TrendNet 2.5GbE ones, they are "Web managed", so I could run TWO ethernet CAT6 cables between them, and get sort-of 5Gbit/sec throughput, IF I had two clients on the side of the switch hitting the NAS units connected to the other switch.
So, it looks like it will be prohibitive to go full 10GbE-T (w/multi-Gig) on the client side, due to needing either expensive ($300+) mobo replacements, or PCI-E x4 slots for the cards, which I don't have free in all of my PCs, since I current have dual GPUs for mining in them. If I were to stop mining, and pull one GPU and keep one GPU in each box, I could go full 10GbE-T on PCI-E x4 cards. In that case, I would get the Intel dual 10GbE-T cards, for reliability, and maybe LAG to the switch on each of my machines. That seems like crazy overkill right now for me, though.
Really, my goals, other than to say that I've done it, and eventually down the road, provide for a 2.5Gbit/sec or faster internet connection, is to speed up things like bulk ISO transfers, bulk transfers between NAS units, and backups and restores from the NAS units.
I would be happy with an increase from 1GbE-T to 2.5GbE-T, but I wonder, if I'm spending that much on a switch, and the 5GbE-T client NICs, both PCI-E 3.0 x1 and USB3.x, aren't much more expensive, and I'll have to buy the QNAP 5GbE-T AQ-chipset NICs anyways to upgrade their capabilities (because they are supported in their NAS OS), then I could conceivably buy the two 10GbE-T 8-port switches (w/multi-gig), and then have a 5GbE-T LAN throughout, and then just when FIOS deploys something faster, upgrade the primary LAN router then. (May not be for a year or so more.)
Comments? I know that this was a bit long.
Secondarily, I have several NAS units, none with faster than 1GbE ports on them (yet), but some of them have multiple 1GbE ports for teaming or LAG. I only use unmanaged switches currently, so I can't do LAG groups (yet).
I have some Ryzen AM4-based rigs, none with faster than 1GbE ports on them, either.
I would like to upgrade the home LAN to either 2.5GbE, or 5GbE. Both my client PCs, as well as my NAS units, and eventually, the WAN connection, once FIOS upgrades their offerings.
Currently, I can purchase, either now, or in the very near future:
ASRock TaiChi Ultimate X470 board, with a 10GbE-T AQ chipset onboard, like almost $300.
There are a number of X570 boards, now showing up on mfg's web sites, like the ASUS ROG STRIX X570-E and -F. The -E has 2.5GbE-T (RealTek) onboard + 1GbE Intel, as well as 2x2 AX Wifi 6 (Intel). Looks like a real option, if I want to upgrade my mobos, but that would cost me to purchase new CPUs, as my 1st-Gen Ryzen CPUs aren't supported on X570, according to a certain slide.
Alternatively, and cheaper, would be to get either:
TrendNet PCI-E 3.0 x1 2.5GbE card (RealTek) for $50 (Avail. starting in June)
TrendNet USB3.2 Gen 1 Type-C 2.5GbE (RealTek) for $50 (Avail. now)
QNAP QNA-QC5G1T (IIRC), which is a USB3 AQ chipset that does 5/2.5/1GbE-T. Unknown price, only one third-party seller on Amazon for $212, should be $70-80 once QNAP gets them in their US Store site. (*This will work with my two 4-bay QNAP NAS units, to upgrade them to 5GbE-T capability.)
AQ 5GbE (5/2.5/1GbE) PCI-E 3.0 x1 for $80 on ebay, or $70 on Amazon.
AQ 10GbE PCI-E 3.0 x4 for $100-110 on Amazon
Club3D 2.5GbE (RealTek) USB3 Type-C or Type-A (two different models), the Type-A model is on ProV for $37 right now.
Those appear to be my client options. There's also an Intel and a Killer AX Wifi 6 mPCI-E card for roughly $30 from third-party sellers on Newegg. (Though, I prefer PCI-E for wired NICs, and USB 3.x for Wifi.)
For switches, I splurged one night when someone on here sent me an Amazon GC anonymously for a few bucks. (Thanks, whomever you are!!!), and bought a GM110X or something like that. It's a Netgear switch, with 8x 1GbE ports, and 2x 10GbE-T (multi-Gig, I hope). I should have spent more, and gotten the managed one,. to take advantage of the LAG groups on the managed one. It's possible that this one may still support "Passive LAG / LACP" through my NAS configurations, with my NAS units.
There's also some 10GbE-T 8-port with 2x SFP+ uplink ports, a TrendNet for $550, and a 2.5GbE-T 8-port with the same for $330 right now on sale from BeachCamera on Amazon, and from BuyDig on ebay.
I'm not sure, if I get those QNAP USB3 Type-C 5GbE dongles with the AQ chipset, and then go through with getting AQ-chipset PCI-E 3.0 x1 cards for my client PCs, if it would even be worth spending money on the 8-port TrendNet 2.5GbE switches, if that would cut my performance down to 2.5GbE after spending all of this money, or if I should spend slightly MORE money, and get 8-port 10GbE-T (multi-gig) switches for $550.
Part of the problem is, due my physical layout of my apt., I may need TWO 8-port multi-gig switches. If I go with the TrendNet 2.5GbE ones, they are "Web managed", so I could run TWO ethernet CAT6 cables between them, and get sort-of 5Gbit/sec throughput, IF I had two clients on the side of the switch hitting the NAS units connected to the other switch.
So, it looks like it will be prohibitive to go full 10GbE-T (w/multi-Gig) on the client side, due to needing either expensive ($300+) mobo replacements, or PCI-E x4 slots for the cards, which I don't have free in all of my PCs, since I current have dual GPUs for mining in them. If I were to stop mining, and pull one GPU and keep one GPU in each box, I could go full 10GbE-T on PCI-E x4 cards. In that case, I would get the Intel dual 10GbE-T cards, for reliability, and maybe LAG to the switch on each of my machines. That seems like crazy overkill right now for me, though.
Really, my goals, other than to say that I've done it, and eventually down the road, provide for a 2.5Gbit/sec or faster internet connection, is to speed up things like bulk ISO transfers, bulk transfers between NAS units, and backups and restores from the NAS units.
I would be happy with an increase from 1GbE-T to 2.5GbE-T, but I wonder, if I'm spending that much on a switch, and the 5GbE-T client NICs, both PCI-E 3.0 x1 and USB3.x, aren't much more expensive, and I'll have to buy the QNAP 5GbE-T AQ-chipset NICs anyways to upgrade their capabilities (because they are supported in their NAS OS), then I could conceivably buy the two 10GbE-T 8-port switches (w/multi-gig), and then have a 5GbE-T LAN throughout, and then just when FIOS deploys something faster, upgrade the primary LAN router then. (May not be for a year or so more.)
Comments? I know that this was a bit long.