Soldato
- Joined
- 20 Oct 2008
- Posts
- 12,082
It'll only make a difference if the adapters manage to sync at over 100Mbps. It's possible, but even AV500 adapters rarely manage it over any distance.
I was just about to post about how reliable are home plugs but this thread answers it.
I was going to buy the TP powerline ones also since they have been going on special offers for £15-20 various places ie hotukdeals etc.
But I am hearing around the net how unreliable they are... it gets worse I hear power-line adapters in general are very poor and unreliable and disconnections are a common occurrence.
I checked even the top/most highest rated ones made by Zyxel that are costly even the best models £50-60 per plug can also disconnect randomly.
I think its down to your electrical wiring and electricity load and connection but also the technology is not quite 100% reliable.
Not to mention most of these plugs are half duplex so a 200meg adaptor gets you 100meg and even then you may only hit 20meg once the washing machine goes on !
I see some silly plugs also 500meg adaptors yet they use 10/100meg ports !
I think as many net working gurus said it before stick with Cat5/6 cabling around the house and a switch or more cables. Sure you may not hit gigabit performance but its down to broadband speeds but it will have far greater speeds and reliability and not drain electricity further and its cheaper... its just headache and hassle to lay cables around the house !
Not my experience at all.
Like I said, previous to this pair I've had a pair that worked flawlessly for best part of two years without a single reset needed, the pair of Netgear ones I've just bought to replace the dodgy pair have so far been flawless.
It's just a bad model from the looks of it, for me powerlines are a god send and complete fit and forget.
Just for balance, I don't think tp-link adapters are inherently bad. I have four of them running in my house across three floors, and I've never experienced a single drop-out. One of them has a four-port switch plugged into it, and hanging off the switch is a PS3 used constantly for streaming Netflix. Never seen any pauses, bufferings, drop-outs or loss of quality. All in all, I've found the units incredibly reliable (including the tp-link homeplug wi-fi extender that I use to push the wi-fi coverage out into the garden).I am getting disconnects again randomly but nowhere near as much as with the tp-link ones.
Just for balance, I don't think tp-link adapters are inherently bad. I have four of them running in my house across three floors, and I've never experienced a single drop-out. One of them has a four-port switch plugged into it, and hanging off the switch is a PS3 used constantly for streaming Netflix. Never seen any pauses, bufferings, drop-outs or loss of quality. All in all, I've found the units incredibly reliable (including the tp-link homeplug wi-fi extender that I use to push the wi-fi coverage out into the garden).
Which model was it, out of curiosity?The model I had, I researched and the tp-link official forums had a thread full of people having the exact same issues with that model so its safe to assume there was an issue.
Which model was it, out of curiosity?