Build Your Own Arcade Controls Forum
Main => Everything Else => Topic started by: shponglefan on December 06, 2016, 09:18:09 pm
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I have a wired home network. In includes a Gigabit Netgear router w/ 4 LAN ports, plus a gigabit switch for extra ports. The Router had connections to my existing NAS, the switch, and then two cables to different locations in my house.
I recently added a second NAS to my setup; I only had a free port on the switch, so I just plugged it in there. Speed, however, seemed a bit slow as I was barely getting 10 MB/s in transfer speed. I tried plugging the new NAS directly into the router, and I can now hit speeds of roughly 100 MB/s.
So clearly something was bottlenecking with the switch. I checked the cables and I'm using either Cat 5e or Cat 6 across the board.
Is it normal to have a speed bottleneck when going through a switch? Or possibly some of my so-called Cat5e cables might not be performing as Cat 5e?
edited to add: Solved it. I noticed my switch had LED indicators for speed (10/100 vs gigabit) and was indicating only 10/100 for the connection to the router. Swapped the cable for a different Cat 5e one and it now indicates gigabit speed. I guess that other cable isn't a real Cat 5e after all...
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Just had the same problem at work. Our company controller had numerous problems posting batches in her accounting software. I looked at her network settings and sure enough it read 100 megabits. I asked her what she changed in the last couple of days. After several attempts to cover her butt she finally admitted that she brought a longer cable from home so she could move her computer. The cable was garbage. Problem solved.