I have a home network consisting of several raspberry pis, a Roku, and a total of 4 laptops and smartphones.

Currently, I have the ISP provided router/modem in bridge mode which I’ll refer to as my modem. This is connected to my own ASUS wireless router/Access Point which I’ll refer to as my access point (AP). The AP supports about 900Mbps. I’m fine with this bottleneck for now as I intend to upgrade my AP in the future

My goal here is to purchase a router that supports the 1.5Gbps that’s coming from my ISP’s modem. I’d like to use it to set up a VLAN and tinker with, with the ability to connect 4 devices in addition to my access point.

The problem I’m facing is that I haven’t yet found a router that’s <$200CAD which supports 1.5Gbps. There are probably brands I’m unaware of, so would you fine folks be able to recommend me a router?

  • Cort@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Zyxel makes some good entry level 10g switches that are fairly reasonable in price. Some dumb switches and some managed

    • RegalPotoo@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Switch != Router, and I wouldn’t use a Zyxel anything even if you paid me - their approach to security is to just not bother, and their hardware is made out of whatever scraps they can find on the factory floor

      • anyhow2503@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I used a zyxel mini wifi router once. It would soft-brick when changing the subnet range. There was another cool feature that would effectively prevent a new admin password from taking effect until you entered a second one (basically creating a queue of passwords). That was fun to figure out.

        • RegalPotoo@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yeah, I had fun trying to work out why DHCP was totally broken - turns out the Zyxel router would respond to any ARP request it saw, for any MAC anywhere. There was a setting you could enable to make it work properly, but it went in the bin shortly after when I found out the VPN component would let in anyone who asked politely, and that there were ways to get at the admin panel from the WAN even when you had turned that off