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 Features arrow Are You Playing the Draft 802.11n Shell Game?
Are You Playing the Draft 802.11n Shell Game? Print E-mail
Tim Higgins   
November 27, 2007

Introduction

What are you really buying?

One of the games that many consumer networking product manufacturers play is changing the hardware design of products while keeping the model number the same. And we're not talking about minor component changes, either. More and more frequently, manufacturers are changing entire chipsets with no change to the model number.

Having spent 20+ years designing electronic gear, I can personally attest to the need to make component substitutions. Sometimes it's because a product keeps selling long beyond its intended product life—and the life of some of its components.

Other times, large production runs reveal designs that didn't include enough margin to handle normal component variation. And sometimes the cost savings afforded by the switch to a lower-cost alternative are just too good to resist.

It's one thing to tweak a product based on a well-worn standard like Ethernet. But it's quite another to change entire chipsets in still-not-fully-baked products like draft 802.11n wireless routers and cards. But that's what vendors are doing. Let's look at some examples.

Linksys

Linksys has long been a major customer of Broadcom for its wireless chipset needs. But with the transition to 802.11n, the company seems to be taking a multi-vendor strategy, based on a recent perusal of the FCC ID document database.

Figures 1-3 show the innards of the WRT350N "V1" (or original) Wireless-N Gigabit Router with Storage Link. Keep in mind that these pictures are from the FCC ID database and reflect pre-production product.

Linksys WRT350N V1 internal view
Click to enlarge image

Figure 1: Linksys WRT350N V1 internal view

Figure 1 doesn't provide any component detail, but the processor detail in Figure 2 shows the Broadcom BCM4705 processor—the same used in the dual-band WRT600N [reviewed]

Linksys WRT350N V1 - Processor detail

Figure 2: Linksys WRT350N V1 - Processor detail

Figure 3 shows the Cardbus-based radio board, which uses the Broadcom Intensi-fi draft 11n chipset.

Linksys WRT350N V1 - Radio board
Click to enlarge image

Figure 3: Linksys WRT350N V1 - Radio board


Tags: 802.11n, Belkin, Linksys, WiFi,

Related Articles:

Ralink announces "long range" draft 11n chip
Atheros intros dual-band draft 11n chipset and wireless network proces
Intel announces draft 11n chipset
Inside Story: Linksys WRT54G2 and WRT110
The Inside Story on Netgear's New Draft 802.11n Routers
 

Most Read

 
 

Over At The Forums

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...

802.11g LAN-ready speakers?
Is there such a thing as wireless 802.11g LAN-ready speakers? I'm looking to be able to listen to music (from my networked media library), in...

I'm going to upgrade my wireless router which one should I buy?
I've been considering the Linksys WRT600N or D-Link Xtreme N Gigabit Router DIR-655? The storage option is not a must, but will be a nice to...

Help bridge wired clients with Trendnet TEW-633GR
Hello, I am using this wireless router in bridge mode, by connecting the WAN port to the lan port of my main router. The wireless clients connect...

Qnap TS-509 New Firmware fixes performance
Well, evidently the Qnap folks were on the ball. The 2.0.1 code update for the just-released TS-509 apparently addresses the very slow writes to RAID5...

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:0.00157999992371, Rct:0.00562620162964, Sky:0.00770211219788, Tlink:0.108252048492, TopPG:0.108319044113, GQV:0.108460187912 seconds to load.