Dual-band vs tri-band deco with cable

This thread has been locked for further replies. You can start a new thread to share your ideas or ask questions.

Dual-band vs tri-band deco with cable

This thread has been locked for further replies. You can start a new thread to share your ideas or ask questions.
Dual-band vs tri-band deco with cable
Dual-band vs tri-band deco with cable
2021-09-11 15:32:22 - last edited 2021-09-11 20:08:10
Model: Deco X90  
Hardware Version:
Firmware Version:

Hello everyone.

 

If I understand correctly the second 5GHz band is used as a dedicated connection between deco devices. But we can use a Ethernet cable for better results.

If I use a star topology between all my X90, will the second 5GHz band be unused? If so, it will turn into something very similar to a X60 right?

  0      
  0      
#1
Options
1 Accepted Solution
Re:Dual-band vs tri-band deco with cable-Solution
2021-09-11 18:11:57 - last edited 2021-09-11 21:26:46

@DanielPereira 

 

This is true: if you wire all X90s with Ethernet cable, and wire them correctly so that they can use Ethernet backhaul, there is not much difference in their performance comparing to X60s. 

 

----------

Except one special case, based on the fact X60 has two gigabit Ethernet ports, but X90 has one gigabit and one 2.5Gbps Ethernet ports. 

 

If all your X90s run in Access Point mode, all have their 2.5Gbps port connected to Multi-Gig switch (see https://www.netgear.com/business/wired/switches/multi-gig/) which in turn connects to ISP router with 2.5Gbps or faster Ethernet port - then such setup should perform better than X60s under heavy load.

 

Note that connecting 2.5Gbps Ethernet port to just "regular" 10 gigabit switch won't give you anything better than 1 gigabit speed. A switch that understands 2.5Gbps and ISP router that has at least one 2.5Gbps or better port are required.

-----------

 

For the rest of us, mere mortals, if you can wire all your Deco X** units, you could save few dollars by downgrading from X90s to X60s or even to X20s, depending on what coverage you need. In fact, if Ethernet wires are plenty everywhere, having more X20s in strategic places instead of fewer X90s here and there would be better for WiFi coverage. For the same hardware price.

Recommended Solution
  0  
  0  
#2
Options
2 Reply
Re:Dual-band vs tri-band deco with cable-Solution
2021-09-11 18:11:57 - last edited 2021-09-11 21:26:46

@DanielPereira 

 

This is true: if you wire all X90s with Ethernet cable, and wire them correctly so that they can use Ethernet backhaul, there is not much difference in their performance comparing to X60s. 

 

----------

Except one special case, based on the fact X60 has two gigabit Ethernet ports, but X90 has one gigabit and one 2.5Gbps Ethernet ports. 

 

If all your X90s run in Access Point mode, all have their 2.5Gbps port connected to Multi-Gig switch (see https://www.netgear.com/business/wired/switches/multi-gig/) which in turn connects to ISP router with 2.5Gbps or faster Ethernet port - then such setup should perform better than X60s under heavy load.

 

Note that connecting 2.5Gbps Ethernet port to just "regular" 10 gigabit switch won't give you anything better than 1 gigabit speed. A switch that understands 2.5Gbps and ISP router that has at least one 2.5Gbps or better port are required.

-----------

 

For the rest of us, mere mortals, if you can wire all your Deco X** units, you could save few dollars by downgrading from X90s to X60s or even to X20s, depending on what coverage you need. In fact, if Ethernet wires are plenty everywhere, having more X20s in strategic places instead of fewer X90s here and there would be better for WiFi coverage. For the same hardware price.

Recommended Solution
  0  
  0  
#2
Options
Re:Dual-band vs tri-band deco with cable
2021-09-11 20:07:59
Thank you very much, your answers helped me a lot. I didn't understand the coverage part, in the spec sheet all 3 (X20, x60 and x90) have the same transmission power. Every device that can be connected via cable is being run on cable. So probably only phones and laptops will use wi-fi. I'm thinking that in this case a bunch of X20 covering the whole house will be more that enough.
  0  
  0  
#3
Options

Information

Helpful: 0

Views: 813

Replies: 2

Related Articles