Is there a reason to use a dedicated switch with a home router?
Is there a reason to use a dedicated switch with a home router?
My work gave me a L2 switch because they were going to toss it out. Is there any reason for me to use that over the built-in switch from my ISP's router/modem?
More ports? Faster ports?
More total throughput between pairs of ports that want to talk to each other at the same time maybe?
12 0 ReplyAlso while unlikely, if it's PoE you can power stuff with it
8 0 ReplyIt is PoE but I don't have any PoE-powered devices.
6 0 Reply
The two main benefits I see are:
- A dedicated L2 switch is probably going to be faster when transferring between two connected clients
- You could set up VLANs, if you have a desire to. Not sure if your wifi router has that option.
9 0 ReplyAnd the most obvious one: you can connect more devices! The reason why I have one tbh.
7 0 Replyprobably going to be faster when transferring between two connected clients
Pretty much all switches are wire-speed these days, even the cheap ones.
5 0 ReplyBy "wire-speed" do you mean they're just as fast as if you didn't have a switch in between?
1 0 Reply
Just gonna play devil’s advocate here.
If it is not a fanless switch, it is going to make a hell lot of noise.
Also consider your electricity bill. You will probably be better off buying a small Netgear from Amazon for 30 bucks than having an old Cisco 2960S running 24/7.
So, what switch is it exactly?
8 0 ReplyIt's a D-link DGS-1210-28P. in terms of power, without PoE it's a max of 30W, according to their website.
You're right that it is pretty noisy. If I decide to use it, I'll probably swap out the fans for something quieter.
4 0 ReplyI agree. Unless there’s a definite need, the most tangible difference may be in the electric bill.
3 0 Reply
To make the room louder
8 0 ReplyHaving more than 4 computers wired directly because the ISP provided one only has 4 ports? That's all I got.
2 0 Reply