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 Netgear WPNT834 RangeMax 240 Wireless Router
Netgear WPNT834 RangeMax 240 Wireless Router Print E-mail
Tim Higgins   
January 17, 2006

Introduction

NOTE: This product has been discontinued.

Netgear RangeMax 240 Wireless Router
Summary 802.11b/g enhanced-wireless router based on 3rd gen Airgo chipset. Reaches peak aggregate throughput over 100Mbps.
Update 3/13/2006 - Added information on original RangeMax and 108 Mbps client interoperability
2/2/2006 - Added note to clarify Table 1 and 2
1/26/2006 - Revised WQS calculation method and posted new charts
Pros • Can achieve > 100Mbps aggregate throughput
• 100Mbps wire-speed routing
Cons • Non-MIMO clients take big throughput hit in mixed WLANs
• Not a good wireless neighbor
• Uncompetitive routing features
• Expensive

NETGEAR WPNT834 RangeMax 240 Wireless Router

Airgo Networks rocked the MIMO world last fall with the announcement of its third generation "True MIMO" chipset that boasts a top raw speed of 240Mbps. The new speed is achieved using Airgo's Adaptive Channel Expansion technology (ACE) that the company says uses a "neighbor friendly" 40 MHz channel.

Netgear wasted no time in getting its WPNT834 RangeMax 240 (RM240) router and WPNT511 CardBus card on store shelves, but also managed to save a copy of each to send to the TomsNetworking labs. We found that the product's maximum speed was indeed impressive, topping 100Mbps under the right conditions. But we also saw behavior that does not bode well for use with mixed WLANs and, contrary to Airgo's claims, that won't be particularly welcome by wireless neighbors.

Basic Features

The RM240 comes in the same-sized white plastic enclosure as its first RangeMax router. But the frosted plastic dome that houses the annoyingly bright blue LEDs on the Gen 1 RangeMax router (that is based on antenna technology from Ruckus Wireless and a chipset from Atheros) has been replaced by a sold silver disk embossed with the Netgear logo. Instead, there are three dipole antennas that sprout from the rear panel of the RM240. All three are movable, but only one is attached via an RP-SMA connector - a combination that seemed to be an odd choice.

The backlit front panel icons are bright enough and include link/activity for the four 10/100 LAN ports and one 10/100 Internet (WAN) port. Power, WLAN activity and Test icons round out the indicators. Connectors on the rear panel include four 10/100 LAN ports, one 10/100 WAN port and a power jack. All ports are auto MDI / MDI-X which means they'll figure out how to connect to whatever you plug into them. There's also a reset-to-factory-defaults switch on the back panel in case you need it.

Ever since wireless products started specifying speeds above 100Mbps, I've been asking manufacturers as to the whereabouts of their gigabit Ethernet ports. Netgear's reply was something along the lines that the RM240 isn't intended to supply its super-speedy bit goodness on an individual port basis. Instead, the pitch is that aggregate 100Mbps+ throughput, i.e. across a number of ports, is what Netgear's intending to supply. More on this later when we walk through the Throughput testing.



Tags: MIMO, Netgear, Router reviews, WiFi, Wireless Reviews,

Related Articles:

Draft 802.11n Revealed: Part 2 - Interoperable? Not So Much
Slideshow: Netgear WNDR3300 RangeMax Dual-Band Wireless N Router
Slideshow: D-Link DIR-628 RangeBooster N Dual Band Router
Video Streaming Need To Know: Part 2 - The Real World
Draft 802.11n Revealed: Part 1 - The Real Story on Throughput vs. Rang
 

Most Read

 
 

Over At The Forums

HELP! How to salvage data from a failed RAID1 setup (Hammer MyShare)
Hello all, Situation: I purchased a 1 TB Hammer MyShare NAS *almost* a year ago and for some reason, the unit refuses to power on as of...

Sphere Widget Mambot
At sphere.com you can find a link to a Sphere Widget implementation for Joomla sites. That link leads here, but even with an account I...

Small office equipment suggestions.
We recently had our inefficient and barely functional network gear blow up in a thunderstorm and now my boss is asking me for a proposal...

home network shared with neighbor
I have a crazy networking idea that I have no idea how to implement. I currently have a few boxes behind a switch attached...

What do I need for office router/switch
I don't know where to put this so I will start here. I have a host computer running XP that we keep Quickbooks Pro/Premier on...

Slideshows

QNAP TS-509 Pro D-Link DNS-343 4-Bay Network Storage Enclosure Thecus N3200 RAID 5 NAS D-Link DIR-628 RangeBooster N Dual Band Router Adtran NetVanta 3120 Buffalo LinkStation Mini More

Win This!

Enter to Win!

You could win a Trendnet TE100-MP2U 2-Port Multi-Function Print Server and IOGEAR GUIP201 USB Net ShareStation

Learn How!

 

Ldr:0.00158190727234, Rct:0.00552296638489, Sky:0.00755095481873, Tlink:1.05372786522, TopPG:1.05381989479, GQV:1.05397081375 seconds to load.