Hey Fuzzynutz, Iv been thinking on the thing you said about eliminate the routing process with an switch.
How would that work on wireless? If you for an example have 2 routers on a network. One main one with DHCP, and one secondary connected with cable to the first.
If you connect wireles connections on both these routers, will all the strain still be on the DHCP one since all items need to connect to that to get to internet? Or wil the second router ease the strain so the main router can give a higher output to the IP`s directly connected to it on wifi?
Offcource the load of signal wil be devided since you have 2 signals(almost like a dualband router), but im unsure if the second router wil take some of the processing/load from the first?
Reason Im asking is because I want to setup 2 networks. Where the Main router have DHCP and only 2-3 high speed N computers, while the second router takes everything else. Just want to know if its worth the bother or if the strain goes to the DHCP nomather what I do.
And BTW. If what you say is correct that even with Giagabit network you "only" wil get 50-80Mbps wired normaly, is there realy any reason to use more then Cat 5 100Mbps cable?