I have a question about whether upgrading to a gigabit switch makes sense for 
my situation; googling indicates that while at least in theory 802.11n is 
faster than 100 MB ethernet it's not likely true in real use, other arguments 
say that upgrading the switch makes sense from a throughput standpoint. 
Unfortunately, I'm in the middle of moving from our house into our RV for full 
time living, hence my network is in disarray and I can't really do any testing 
to figure it out myself.

Here's the setup as it will be in the RV.

Router will be a WiFiRanger Pro (required since I need multiple WAN inputs, 
wifi, cellular card, cable from campground, ethernet from campground, etc). The 
router has 10/100 ethernet ports. I'm not concerned with increasing internet 
bandwidth as this is fixed by whatever connection method I happen to be using; 
but I am concerned about internal RV LAN throughput, hence the question.

On the LAN I have a Mac Mini file server (gigabit capable) connected via RJ-45. 

Daily drivers are iPad 1's, iPhone 4's, and two MacBook Pros. All will normally 
connect via 802.11n provided by the WiFiRanger Pro. I do have an Airport 
Extreme base station that I can toss into the mix if need be but it's the older 
non-gigabit one so it's only got 10/100 network ports.

I was planning on using the router's 802.11n for everything wireless and my 
existing 10/100 switch…but then I got to thinking about ways to improve 
performance between the two laptops and the file server which serves data files 
and is also the Time Machine backup destination for the laptops.

Options I have considered:

-have two wireless points, using the 2.4 GHz only WiFi for the i devices and 
using the Airport Extreme in 5 GHz mode for the laptops
-upgrading to the new Airport Express in bridge mode to get simultaneous dual 
band
-using the existing switch 10/100 off of the router and plugging the server, 
10/100 capable TV, 10/100 printer, and possibly the Airport Extreme or new 
Express off of the 10/100 switch
-buying a new gigabit switch and hooking everything else up as above.

Which of these upgrades make sense? I hate to buy either the gigabit capable 
dual band Airport Express or the gigabit switch if there won't be a noticeable 
improvement but am willing to do so if there will be. Since I have to use the 
WiFiRanger Pro as the router for multiple WAN purposes…although I guess I could 
get the new dual band gigabit Airport Extreme instead and go with a dual router 
configuration where the WiFi Ranger only feeds the input to the Airport Extreme 
and it serves as the router for the LAN…my best judgement without actually 
doing anything is that the gigabit switch and/or Airport Express won't result 
in much improvement at all and that my best approach would be the dual 802.11n 
wifi networks; the 2.4 GHz from the WiFiRanger Pro for iDevices and the Airport 
Extreme in 5 GHz mode for the laptops.

Have I correctly muddled my way through this or would any of the possible 
upgrades make an appreciable difference in LAN performance?

Thanks.

-----------------------------------------------
There are only three kinds of stress; your basic nuclear stress, cooking 
stress, and A$$hole stress. The key to their relationship is Jello.

neil



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