Lost Password? No account yet? Sign up! Why bother?
  • Narrow screen resolution
  • Wide screen resolution
  • Auto width resolution
  • Increase font size
  • Decrease font size
  • Default font size

SmallNetBuilder - Small Network Help

  
Home arrow Wireless arrow Wireless Reviews arrow Belkin 802.11g Wireless Access Point reviewed
Belkin 802.11g Wireless Access Point reviewed Print E-mail
Tim Higgins   
July 18, 2003

Basic Features and Internal details

The 7130 comes in an attractive grey-on-grey plastic enclosure about the size of a 300 page hardcover novel. It has mounting slots on the bottom and ships with a plastic stand that snaps on either end of the box to stand it vertically on your desktop.

All indicator lights are on the top front of the box on a panel that's slightly sloped. They would be viewable in typical desktop mounting situations, but could be difficult to see if the 7130 were mounted high on a wall. The indicators include: Power, WLAN Link/Activity, and LAN Link/Activity. Both Link/Activity LEDs operate as you'd expect, steady for Link and flashing when there is activity.

The Ethernet 10/100 port and power jack are on the rear panel, along with a reset switch that does double duty as a reset-to-factory-defaults-switch.

The 7130's design sticks pretty close to Broadcom's AP reference design, using their BCM94306MP mini-PCI radio, Broadcom BCM4702 Wireless Network Processor for the processing chores, and RAM, Flash memory, and an Altima AC101 10/100 Ethernet chip for the LAN connection. Figure 1 shows the radio board with RF shielding removed.

Broadcom mini-PCI radio

Figure 1: Broadcom BCM94306MP mini-PCI '54g' radio

My internal exam also revealed that the Ethernet connector is wired for Power Over Ethernet operation, although Belkin is not specing or supporting the feature. I was disappointed, however, to find that the dual dipole antennas are not removable, so upgrading to higher gain antennas will be possible only for those willing to do some hacking... and kiss their warranty goodbye.

The last construction feature of note is an RF shield between the radio board and the processor that sits directly below it - probably a wise choice on Belkin's part!



Tags: access point, Belkin, F5D7130, WiFi,

Related Articles:

Buffalo Tech WLA2-G54 Repeater Bridge reviewed
U.S. Robotics 802.11g Wireless Turbo Multi-function Access Point revie
NETGEAR WG602 54Mbps Wireless Access Point Review
Linksys WAP54G Instant Wireless-G Access Point reviewed
SMC's EZ Connect g 2.4GHz 54Mbps Wireless Ethernet Adapter reviewed
 

Most Read

 
 

Over At The Forums

NAS box build
So I'm building a Media Storage NAS box. Eventually I will be building a MythTV back end & front end, and running media -...

Making NAS accessible remotely?
I would like to be able to login and mount my NAS network drive from anywhere with an internet connection. What do I need to...

A DIY SSL VPN with SSL-Explorer - Part 1
Complete waste of time and needs to be removed. I went through and instaled the JRE, compiled ant, got the latest SSLExplorer and started...

Question about changing ISPs and the Equipment
I am changing from AT&T to Comcast so I need a new modem. Based on my reading of various fora, the Moto SB5100 seems...

Will I have to reformat to create a RAID-1 mirror?
I am using Ubuntu 8.10 + webmin for Samba file sharing server. I currently have 1x1.5tb HDD, NTFS formatted. I would like to add a...

Slideshows

Linksys Media Hub LaCie 5big Network Jazinga IP PBX NETGEAR ReadyNAS Pro Western Digital ShareSpace QNAP TS-509 Pro More
Go Shopping with PriceGrabber

Get Email Updates

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner once a day

 
 

Ldr:0.00176501274109, Rct:0.00607204437256, Sky:0.00784516334534, Tlink:0.184718132019, TopPG:0.184797048569, GQV:0.184933185577 seconds to load.