What wireless router would you recommend for maximum speed?
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Browse All TopicsI just installed D-Link wireless router. My download spreed is half that of my broken Linksys WRT56GS. Are there any settings within D-Link firmware (192.168.0.1) I can change to increase the speed?
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That depends on what adapter you have... if you can wait just a few more months, 802.11n should become finalized by then (at least it's scheduled to be voted on in 3rd quarter)... if you need one before then, I would say about any dual-band draft-n router. Apple, Cisco, Linksys, D-Link, Netgear, would be my order of preference. Apple and Cisco get the first 2 spots just on the basis that they don't support 40MHz-wide (which uses 2 out of the 3 available) channels in the 2.4GHz band, which helps prevent interference with legacy 11g devices. For wireless adapters, I'm partial to Intel, even though the laptop I'm typing on right now has an Atheros a/b/g card in it.
If you want to use 3rd party firmware, a Linksys router/AP would probably be the best bet... I'm not even sure what their current dual-band offerings are; they've been coming and going pretty fast. When they switched over to linksysbycisco.com about half their products never got moved to the new site, so it's hard to tell what's still made or not. If that's what you want to do, let me know and I'll do some research. (or maybe others can chime in here.) I'm just chugging along on my WRTSL54GS that's sharing a 150GB USB drive plugged into it, waiting for the new spec to be finished.
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by: Darr247Posted on 2009-08-20 at 11:49:27ID: 25145836
I know of no firmware (such as DD-WRT or OpenWRT) that works on that model.
aspx?id=22 067 (D-Link uses RP-SMA connectors on their consumer grade models) may improve coverage, though it might not increase the overall download speed at all.
In the Wireless Settings page you could Enable the 802.11g Only Mode option.
For wireless security, use WPA2 / AES, which adds no overhead to the payload.
A better antenna, such as http://www.l-com.com/item.