Discussing home network speed negotiation involves finding a balance between performance and cost.
Discussing home network speed negotiation involves finding a balance between performance and cost.
I had a big irritating issue in my home network since I moved into my new apartment earlier this summer. The installment in the walls of cables are all thick CAT6A cables and so are the keystones in my hallway *redirector* box which consists of room port numbers 1-12 (each room has 2 RJ-45 ports) and 1-7 wich consists of the other keystones of which I can choose to cable whatever so to say. I must say that i've had one bottleneck earlier which I corrected and that was that I had CAT5e cables to my router and to my PC so of course I went ahead and bought CAT7 cables to match up with the same level as my wall cables have more or less. My router is a Linksys WRT1900ACS V2 , my PC motherboard is ASRock 990FX Extreme9 which has the Intel 82583V nic. My broadband is 250/250 Mbit/s. Now that everything in the apartment in general seems clear of faults I just wonder what's causing my router to CAP my speed to the "10/100 Mbit/s" limitation. What is the cause and how can this be fixed? Is it perhaps a common problem with that routers model?
Verify the arrangement of colored wires within cables. These can typically be observed via connectors.
I captured images of the white internet cable and the grey CAT7 cable for you.
Energy conservation has remained consistently active, with speed duplex configured at 1.0 Gbps full duplex.
It seems there might be some confusion. Could you clarify what you're referring to? I'm here to help with any questions or tasks you have.