miamicanes
Active Member
I'm still mulling over the best way to get rock-solid ethernet connectivity between my computer room (upstairs, front of house) and laundry room (downstairs, rear of house, with composite steel-pan + concrete suspended slab in between). Here are the options I've come up with so far:
* HomePlug AV. Appealing in theory, but everything I've read says its performance is grossly exaggerated, and that I'd be lucky to sustain 40-50mbit/sec under even the most flawlessly-ideal artificial conditions (that's what one reviewer got by plugging both modules into the same 3-way outlet adapter as an experiment), with ~20-25mbit/sec from all but the worst 2 or 3 outlets in the house (apparently, there's ALWAYS one or two outlets that just don't play nicely, though nobody has ever really figured out why). HomePlug 1.0 apparently has an abyssmal ~1.0mbit/sec real-world throughput, and its "85mbit/sec" extension apparently gets 5-6mbit/sec from the best 90% of the outlets, and might see 10-12mbit from the best 25% on a good day.
* 802.11G, via Linksys WRT54G and WAP54G (maybe WET200) and aftermarket +6db or better antennas
* 802.11G, with Linksys WRT54G router + aftermarket antenna, and 802.11N(draft) wireless-to-wired bridge/access point (stock antennas), on the theory that it wouldn't cost much more than the WET200, and might be able to use its diversity-tuning capabilities to do a better job with 'G'. On the other hand, it might do a totally crap job with 'G', the way modern radios do with AM (on the theory that nobody really cares, so it's the first thing that gets value-engineered away).
* 802.11N (draft) router AND wireless bridge, with ONE aftermarket antenna on the router (if I have to buy a 'N router AND bridge, I'm going to be bleeding pretty badly, and blowing another $100-200 on antennas would just be out of the question).
I suspect I'm not the first person who's faced this dilemma (best of breed G, vs potentially-flaky N or powerline networking), and I'd love to get others' opinions
* HomePlug AV. Appealing in theory, but everything I've read says its performance is grossly exaggerated, and that I'd be lucky to sustain 40-50mbit/sec under even the most flawlessly-ideal artificial conditions (that's what one reviewer got by plugging both modules into the same 3-way outlet adapter as an experiment), with ~20-25mbit/sec from all but the worst 2 or 3 outlets in the house (apparently, there's ALWAYS one or two outlets that just don't play nicely, though nobody has ever really figured out why). HomePlug 1.0 apparently has an abyssmal ~1.0mbit/sec real-world throughput, and its "85mbit/sec" extension apparently gets 5-6mbit/sec from the best 90% of the outlets, and might see 10-12mbit from the best 25% on a good day.
* 802.11G, via Linksys WRT54G and WAP54G (maybe WET200) and aftermarket +6db or better antennas
* 802.11G, with Linksys WRT54G router + aftermarket antenna, and 802.11N(draft) wireless-to-wired bridge/access point (stock antennas), on the theory that it wouldn't cost much more than the WET200, and might be able to use its diversity-tuning capabilities to do a better job with 'G'. On the other hand, it might do a totally crap job with 'G', the way modern radios do with AM (on the theory that nobody really cares, so it's the first thing that gets value-engineered away).
* 802.11N (draft) router AND wireless bridge, with ONE aftermarket antenna on the router (if I have to buy a 'N router AND bridge, I'm going to be bleeding pretty badly, and blowing another $100-200 on antennas would just be out of the question).
I suspect I'm not the first person who's faced this dilemma (best of breed G, vs potentially-flaky N or powerline networking), and I'd love to get others' opinions
