1-5 of 5 Answers
It will handle whatever you pay for from your ISP. If your plan only supports 30 down 5 up and your ISP actually supplies what you pay for then thats what you'll get. No device can get you faster speeds over what your ISP supplies and you pay for. A lot of people still dont understand this. I can say with my Netgear X8 and my plan from comcast, 130 up and 35 down, I get the best home network ive ever had and it handles multiple devices at any given time with extreme ease. We have 5-10+ devices connected at any given time. But if you dont have as many devices running. 30/5 plan would most likely suffice. I also have the new Netgear 600 modem as well. You want your equipment to work well together and is supported by your ISP.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.That is highly dependable on your ISP's ability to perform at the quoted speed and your method of connected to the router. The WAN port that would connect to your cable modem though is 1Gbps, along with all the LAN ports. You connection over WiFi would be dependent on which WiFi standard and frequency range you are able to connect with, along with distance from the router. 2.4Ghz will let you run up to 800Mbps but 5Ghz would let you connect up to 1.733Gbps on the 11ac standard.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.We're with Xfinity ... We get 80+ MBps download, and about 8+ upload
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Usually this will be dependent on your service provider. While the most modern routers can handle much faster speeds than 100Mbps, you will most likely be bottlenecked by your service provider. I consider speeds of 20-40 Mbps down and 4-7 Mbps up to be middle of the road speeds. Unless you are downloading/uploading gigs and gigs of video files then these speeds should be sufficient for most. Hope this helps!
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I am getting about 180 down/12 up with comcast.
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