Combine two Ethernet ports into a single unit.
Combine two Ethernet ports into a single unit.
You have a 1Gbps connection and used an Ethernet cable throughout your home. You're wondering if connecting that single cable to two router ports would help stability, especially since you don’t have many devices using it. The cables are Cat 7 and support 10Gbps. It might not be necessary, but testing could confirm if it improves performance.
Several ports are there for backup purposes and won't improve your performance. They only let you maintain your connection if a single port fails.
You're looking for a reason behind the instability when aiming for 2gbit/s. It might be due to the network setup. Trying another port on your router could help with both reliability and performance.
Linking one cable to two unused ports on your router won't influence performance at all.
Your router has ports that each provide 1 gbps of speed. You mentioned running an Ethernet cable throughout the house, assuming it connects into a computer or a network switch. From there, cables can go to different devices. However, you can't link one Ethernet cable to two ports on your router at once. You might connect two separate cables to two separate ports, but this won’t improve stability or performance beyond what’s offered by the ISP. In short, you’ll only receive the bandwidth the ISP provides, not more than 1 gbps or whatever is available.
@BrokenGodOfSleep I think what you're aiming for is link aggregation, linking several Ethernet cables together into a single logical connection for increased speed. There are methods to arrange this, but you'll need a router that supports it and possibly a switch—something you can look up online.