[AusNOG] "Business grade" ADSL bare-modem or media converter.
Joseph Goldman
joe at apcs.com.au
Thu Feb 26 16:19:46 EST 2015
We've been pushing out the 8960N's for a little while now - very easy to
use interface and great quality for the price - decent wifi, ADSL and
EWAN support, and we configure them to allow remote access from our
office IP ranges so we can actually login and make changes for customers
- we do this even for residential that purchase from us, as it just
makes life easier.
In terms of bridge mode modems - we are about to start using the 8817's
with Mikrotik's. Hoping to use UBS OTG with Optus 3G broadband as OOB
management + basic backup for those pesky TADSL faults.
On 26/02/15 15:51, Beeson, Ayden wrote:
> +1 to this.
>
> Only "home grade" gear I have seen that genuinely works well, it's my current recommendation for all people who ask me.
>
> Thanks,
> Ayden Beeson
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: AusNOG [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of Paul Jones
> Sent: Thursday, 26 February 2015 3:31 PM
> To: Karl Auer; ausnog at lists.ausnog.net
> Subject: Re: [AusNOG] "Business grade" ADSL bare-modem or media converter.
>
> I have been quite surprised at TP-Link gear. Despite usually being the cheapest I have so far not had any trouble with any of their devices, either firmware or hardware. Admittedly my sample size is < 50 so far, but I'd rate them SOHO for sure. Like you say, keep a spare on hand just incase.
>
> Paul.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: AusNOG [mailto:ausnog-bounces at lists.ausnog.net] On Behalf Of Karl Auer
> Sent: Thursday, 26 February 2015 3:13 PM
> To: ausnog at lists.ausnog.net
> Subject: Re: [AusNOG] "Business grade" ADSL bare-modem or media converter.
>
> On Thu, 2015-02-26 at 10:56 +1100, Ross Wheeler wrote:
>> Looking for a semi-decent, bare-bones, ADSL (ideally capable of SHDSL
>> or BDSL etc if the provider can do it) modem.
> For bang for buck, I always recommend the TP-Link 8817. One ethernet, one ADSL, one USB, you pay for nothing extra, comes in bridge mode by default. Pretty much perfect. Cheap enough to self-insure, and so far I've never had a dud (touch wood). They run pretty cool, and they remain addressable on their LAN IP address even in bridge mode. You can "tap"
> them by attaching to the USB port. I use them with MikroTiks and have had no problems. Anecdotally they are middle-of-the road as far as performance is concerned. One very slight downside is they take longer to train/retrain than some modems I've seen.
>
> I would anti-recommend NetGear because their support for bridging mode is patchy through non-existent in my experience, though I don't have an encyclopaedic knowledge of all their models.
>
> Regards, K.
>
> --
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Karl Auer (kauer at biplane.com.au)
> http://www.biplane.com.au/kauer
> http://twitter.com/kauer389
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