Input on New Network with DSL

Discussion in 'Hardware' started by DeltaSpread, Jul 2, 2010.

  1. Thanks for the WiFi input, as that will be something I deal with very soon. Since my provider tacks on another $5 or $10 per month, if you want to run it from their equipment, I am just going to buy my own access point and run with that most likely. I don't want to hook up a wireless router to the DSL modem/router, because sometimes in my experiences I have see where hardware does not play nice together and it potentially negatively impacts the overall speed quality of the network.
     
    #11     Jul 4, 2010
  2. Not sure. Need to refer to the user manual. What make/model do you have?

    Is it indeed a RJ45 but not RJ11? RJ11 is narrower. Phone cords use RJ11. That's where the DSL hook up should go.


    Not sure what you were asking. The DSL service provider divides their throughput into some 0.75Mbps chunks. The more chunks you have, the higher the speed (and you pay more). Their equipment will know to multiplex all the signals for the subscriber.
     
    #12     Jul 6, 2010
  3. LeeD

    LeeD

    I understand you connect to the internet via the phone line, not a dedicated cable. Then you need ADSL modem.

    Double-check that your "modem" actually says "modem" on the box. A device with a "WAN" connector is usually a router which you are supposed to plug into a separate modem, it doesn't have a built-in modem.
     
    #13     Jul 6, 2010
  4. DannoXYZ

    DannoXYZ

    The 2701HG-B has two WAN input ports to go to the phone-line. One RJ-11 and one RJ-45. Both are for ADSL connection, but only one can be used at a time. Some DSL providers have a phone-line converter/filter/splitter box that outputs an RJ-45 socket. Not sure why.

    Here's a simple set-up guide: http://www.server-servers.com/att-dsl-2wire-2700hg-b-router-setup

    And setting up the wireless: http://support.2wire.com/?page=view&article=60

    As others mentioned, don't bother with the WiFi as speeds achieved are seldom over 40% of the maximum bandwidth (due to duplexing, errors and re-transmits). This unit has numerous complaints about the bad WiFi performance. So if you really want to use WiFi, set it up as a modem-only and disable the built-in router and use your own wireless router.

    The Linksys router, depending upon model, will have QoS that you can configure so that bandwidth-hungry apps like streaming-video and bittorents are allocated lower-priority than your data-feeds and VoIP. It may also be upgradable to much better firmware: http://www.dd-wrt.com . Which has QoS settings based upon IP, MAC or L7-applications (best).
     
    #14     Jul 8, 2010
  5. While I don't use all of the features I use Paracloud Tomato on Lynksis and am very happy with it.
     
    #15     Jul 8, 2010