How many versions of powerline networking do we need?

Photo of author

Tim Higgins

Panasonic’s adapter is based on its proprietary “HD-PLC” technology that advertises a phyisical layer data rate of 190 Mbps. In an unusually detailed disclosure, the press release contains a footnote stating “Actual data rates are 80 Mbps for UDP (measured using SmartBitsR network performance analyzer) and 55 Mbps for TCP data transmission (achieved on Linux-based FTP server)”.

Of course, no mention is made of HD-PLC’s ability to play nicely with either powerline adapters based on DS2’s 200 Mbps technology or HomePlug 1.0, 1.0 plus Turbo or HomePlug AV. But since there is no mention I think it’s safe to assume that HD-PLD, like DS2, at minimum won’t interoperate with the other technologies, and it probably won’t be able to be plugged into the same home’s wiring without causing serious problems.

The HomePlug alliance could have saved themselves and, more importantly, consumers a whole lot of hassle had they gotten HomePlug AV to market two years ago.

Related posts

Article comments temporarily disabled

I’m still on the learning curve with the software that runs SmallNetBuilder. The good news is that traffic is healthy. ...

We’re baack…

If you've been following along with me on my web adventures, you know I've been here before. The last time that SmallNetBuilder graced the Etherwaves was Dec 31, 2003 and morphed into TomsNetworking the next day to start the new year.

Finally! Someone gets a clue on latest-gen wireless routers

I was browsing the latest issue of PC World this morning and came across an ad for a new wireless ...