Forum Discussion
PaulB_
12 months agoOrganizer
What are the options to get upgraded to newer equipment?
I had a problem with my system with T3200M fed by Alcatel white fiber box. Have a few Zyxel 5 port 1Gig switches. The wifi would go down or slow, even the wired devices would only test to 93M wh...
- 12 months ago
If you only have 500mbit fibre, the T3200 is more than sufficient for that. The newer hardware is for the 10Gbit port on it is more typically found with connections over 1gbps. I have the separate ONT and T3200 here and it works fine with my gigabit fibre.
The Wifi6 Boost units are separate from any of the gateways/routers that Telus uses. They can be used with any of them and will typically get the same speed on all. The Wifi 6 unit is more than sufficient for a 500mbps connection as it averages 525mbps down for me through several walls. Wifi 6e hardware would benefit more from faster connections. The battery backup was usually provided if you have a landline though not in all cases.
As for ethernet switches:
- Switches can eventually wear out and Zyxel is rather ancient.
- Yes you can chain switches together without issue. Crossover patch cables haven't been needed in a decade, if not almost two now as modern networking hardware automatically adjusts to both straight and crossover cables.
- Honestly, it's probably better just to get your own gigabit switches as Telus doesn't support them. New ones are actually quite cheap to get and getting well known brands tends to have better quality. Most of them do go on sale fairly frequently on Amazon. I've got quite a few gigabit switches that I purchased in use in my setup which include:
- one ancient Zyxel switch that hasn't died yet and is connected to my Optik PVR
- one 5 port TP-Link switch (often on sale for $15)
- one 8 port TP-Link switch (often on sale but isn't currently)
- one 8 port Dlink switch which is connected to the above 8 port TP-Link
- one much older 8 port Dlink gigabit switch (~20 years) that is no longer available for sale and still gives full gigabit speeds on fibre. It definitely pre-dates the Zyxels Telus was using about a decade ago.
- one 8 port Netgear switch
- one 5 port Netgear switch
- and several older legacy 100mbit switches in use for vintage hardware, printer, and a some IP cameras.
If you like having all the cables that connect to the switch to attach to the same side, the TP-Link switches are the ones to look at. The Dlink and Netgear ones have the cable coming out of the opposide side from the ethernet sockets.
Nighthawk
Community Power User
12 months agoIf you only have 500mbit fibre, the T3200 is more than sufficient for that. The newer hardware is for the 10Gbit port on it is more typically found with connections over 1gbps. I have the separate ONT and T3200 here and it works fine with my gigabit fibre.
The Wifi6 Boost units are separate from any of the gateways/routers that Telus uses. They can be used with any of them and will typically get the same speed on all. The Wifi 6 unit is more than sufficient for a 500mbps connection as it averages 525mbps down for me through several walls. Wifi 6e hardware would benefit more from faster connections. The battery backup was usually provided if you have a landline though not in all cases.
As for ethernet switches:
- Switches can eventually wear out and Zyxel is rather ancient.
- Yes you can chain switches together without issue. Crossover patch cables haven't been needed in a decade, if not almost two now as modern networking hardware automatically adjusts to both straight and crossover cables.
- Honestly, it's probably better just to get your own gigabit switches as Telus doesn't support them. New ones are actually quite cheap to get and getting well known brands tends to have better quality. Most of them do go on sale fairly frequently on Amazon. I've got quite a few gigabit switches that I purchased in use in my setup which include:
- one ancient Zyxel switch that hasn't died yet and is connected to my Optik PVR
- one 5 port TP-Link switch (often on sale for $15)
- one 8 port TP-Link switch (often on sale but isn't currently)
- one 8 port Dlink switch which is connected to the above 8 port TP-Link
- one much older 8 port Dlink gigabit switch (~20 years) that is no longer available for sale and still gives full gigabit speeds on fibre. It definitely pre-dates the Zyxels Telus was using about a decade ago.
- one 8 port Netgear switch
- one 5 port Netgear switch
- and several older legacy 100mbit switches in use for vintage hardware, printer, and a some IP cameras.
If you like having all the cables that connect to the switch to attach to the same side, the TP-Link switches are the ones to look at. The Dlink and Netgear ones have the cable coming out of the opposide side from the ethernet sockets.
PaulB_
12 months agoOrganizer
Was looking at this one. Yes it is 24 ports but I have around 24 wired ethernet jacks, might sound dumb but can match the number on the patch panel. Run 1 to 1, w to 2, etc.
It has smart features, not sure if I will ever need that.
My networking mess.