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How to Add a Gigabit Switch to Your Network

How to Add a Gigabit Switch to Your Network

#Add #Gigabit #Switch #Network

“Gary Explains”

If the router from your Internet Service Provider only has a few ports then to upgrade your wired network you need to add a Gigabit Ethernet switch. Here is how to do it, plus a few tips and tricks.

** Amazon Links **
– TP-Link 5 Port Gigabit Switch –
– NETGEAR 8-Port…

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19 Comments

  1. Connecting a switch is the easy part, my problem is even with file sharing turned on, passwords turned off and users set to everyone my household computers still ask for user IDs and won't share my movies. Half my computers don't even show up under network. I've tried just about everything in the past few years and just can't get them to communicate with each other. When I do get one working it loses connection a day or so later.

  2. Can you connect a switch to an Ethernet port in your wall? My router is downstairs and I have two Ethernet ports in my room, but they’re both currently being used by my cable and television. I’d like to add an unmanaged switch so I have more LAN ports accessible in my room, but don’t know if this is possible.

  3. I've made up several CAT 5&6 cables which means you only need to drill a small hole to run the cable through. The weak point is the quality of the crimper you use, so a LAN tester is essential. In the UK cable, plugs, crimpers and testers can be bought at a local Toolstation or Screwfix.

  4. Also, the brilliant people who design networking products have made it so that slower devices can still connect at their maximum speed to faster devices. A 100 Mb PC will connect to a 1 Gb (1000 Mb) switch port at 100 Mb, so you can update devices over time.

  5. Careful over minimum cable length:

    International standards – ISO 11801 and EN 50173 / 50174 are your friend. Typically 1m is the minimum for a direct link, but if you’re connecting to patch panels (i.e. the end to end cabling has 3 or more connections) the minimum patch cable length is 2 metres, with a minimum length of 15m for structured cabling, and an extra 5 metres for any structured cable run from an intermediate point, such as area distribution.

  6. I use a TP-Link SG-105 switch for my desk since I have several Raspberry Pi:s and my desktop machine. One Ethernet cable that comes out of the SG-105 goes into another smaller switch for a few more Pi:s.

  7. Excellent introduction…it describes the operation and setup of an "unmanaged" switch which needs no manual configuration. If you are buying a switch, the cheaper unmanaged switch will usually be fine.
    No need to buy a more expensive managed switch unless you require features like VLAN, quaility of service management, or power over ethernet. FWIW a managed switch in its default configuration will usually work just like an unmananged switch.

  8. Useful for not just newbies. It’s made me take a look at a switch I have ‘in the middle’ in the office a bit and can’t see on it anywhere about its speed. I have a feeling it’s reducing the speed of everything in the office!

  9. Readers should note that this will NOT affect the speed of facebook, netflix, google, or any other www presence. This will only affect the speed of the local network — between two computers, a computer and a file server (NAS), or between a computer and a printer.

  10. Nice tips. Does people still use hubs? How about PoE ports for security cameras? Perhaps another episode on cables would be cool e.g. cat5,6, fibre, shielding, pin outs?

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