Hi,
This is a home router, and we had a severe storm the other day and the router stopped working (temporarily). It must've been a lightning surge--but it didn't destroy the router--it destroyed the power supply. So I got a new power adapter of the same rating and the router booted and everything was fine...sort of.
I noticed that copying files from one machine to another was much slower (both Windows 7 machines, wired with Cat 6). I used to be able to move large files and see Window's file-copy dialog show speeds in the 40-50 MB/second range, which is reasonably good. Now it is consistently around 11 MB/second--basically a 100 Mbps connection. What happened? Can a router step down like that and lose it's gigabit ability while still workable at 100? I would think if the storm hurt it--it's either toast or it's not.
So does anyone have any ideas of what could be happening here? First, here are a few things I tried:
--- I plugged the cables of each PC in question to another known-good Gigabit router and the speeds were immediately back in the 40-50 MB/second range.
--- On the original router, I unplugged all other device cables--I thought maybe I had unknowingly plugged in a pc with a 100 speed card and that may have brought the whole thing down to the 100 Mbps. (I'm not a router expert but I recall years ago hearing that any router will transmit at the lowest-speed device that's plugged into any port)
--- I upgraded to the latest firmware (2.1.41.162351)
Thanks for any help or ideas to try.
--Jim
This is a home router, and we had a severe storm the other day and the router stopped working (temporarily). It must've been a lightning surge--but it didn't destroy the router--it destroyed the power supply. So I got a new power adapter of the same rating and the router booted and everything was fine...sort of.
I noticed that copying files from one machine to another was much slower (both Windows 7 machines, wired with Cat 6). I used to be able to move large files and see Window's file-copy dialog show speeds in the 40-50 MB/second range, which is reasonably good. Now it is consistently around 11 MB/second--basically a 100 Mbps connection. What happened? Can a router step down like that and lose it's gigabit ability while still workable at 100? I would think if the storm hurt it--it's either toast or it's not.
So does anyone have any ideas of what could be happening here? First, here are a few things I tried:
--- I plugged the cables of each PC in question to another known-good Gigabit router and the speeds were immediately back in the 40-50 MB/second range.
--- On the original router, I unplugged all other device cables--I thought maybe I had unknowingly plugged in a pc with a 100 speed card and that may have brought the whole thing down to the 100 Mbps. (I'm not a router expert but I recall years ago hearing that any router will transmit at the lowest-speed device that's plugged into any port)
--- I upgraded to the latest firmware (2.1.41.162351)
Thanks for any help or ideas to try.
--Jim