Welcome to the FlexRadio Community! Please review the new Community Rules and other important new Community information on the Message Board.
Need the latest SmartSDR or 4O3A Genius Product Software?
SmartSDR v4.0.1 and the SmartSDR v4.0.1 Release Notes
SmartSDR v3.10.15 and the SmartSDR v3.10.15 Release Notes
The latest 4O3A Genius Product Software and Firmware
SmartSDR v4.0.1 and the SmartSDR v4.0.1 Release Notes
SmartSDR v3.10.15 and the SmartSDR v3.10.15 Release Notes
The latest 4O3A Genius Product Software and Firmware
If you are having a problem, please refer to the product documentation or check the Help Center for known solutions.
Need technical support from FlexRadio? It's as simple as Creating a HelpDesk ticket.
Need technical support from FlexRadio? It's as simple as Creating a HelpDesk ticket.
Direct Ethernet vs LAN Connection
Steve N4LQ
Member ✭✭
Anybody tried to measure the difference?
0
Answers
-
Do mean in speed? I have tried direct / though a switch / through a hub and also WiFi without any noticeable difference to be honest. I only TX from my main station, but I do listen all around the house with WiFi on a Surface Pro 2.
The Flex 6500 is now connected to a switch in my office - which is also connected to 2 WiFi AP's (one up and one down) - not suffered any perceivable latency with this config. My main operating PC is connected to the Switch.0 -
You will never notice the difference unless you are operating CW with zero delay, QSK and on a noisy band. When the key is pressed, the background noise continues for a number of milliseconds and mixes with the sidetone. With a direct connection to another ethernet card in the PC the noise time is shorter and the sidetone sounds much cleaner. You can also hear the noise when using any amount of delay but only upon first closing the key. It is muted until the end of the delay cycle. SSB ops can ignore this entire discussion. It doesn't apply to that mode. Steve N4LQ0
-
In that case I shall pull up a chair and sit in the corner and listen to the conversation. No CW here, so nothing to add.
0 -
I don't understand the question. Ethernet is a LAN protocol, the very protocol that the 6000 series requires to communicate (other than the RF in and out and a few controls and audio). You can't talk with the 6000 series without using a LAN based on Ethernet.0
-
I guess I'm not explaining myself. Let's try again. You take a Flex 6300....Plug a cat5 cable into its jack. Then run it to your router / gateway or switch...whatever.. Now it's on the LAN. Now..... Install another ethernet card in your PC that is setting next to your 6300. Now that PC has 2 ethernet cards. One hooks to the LAN and the other to your 6300. The 6300 is no longer on your home LAN. Yes it may be in its own little network but there is no router now. It is no longer part of a shared network. So here is what I noticed: Quieter QSK. A decrease in band noise that accompanies the leading edge of each CW character or shall I say faster turnaround? Try this..... What you hear out of your speakers must travel through your network. If you eliminate components in the network i.e. router, cable, switches etc etc. then the signal delay is less and it reaches the speaker sooner. Yes it's only a matter of milliseconds but the difference is audible when keying high speed CW or even slow CW. All I can say is ...Try it. According to Windows Task Manager I've taken 4 mbs of data off my home network by segregating the 6300 to a dedicated NIC. Steve N4LQ0
-
Steve. I see what you're asking now. The issue here is the latency introduced by a hub, switch, or router in a network. I suspect that the less expensive home and small business devices will have a greater latency than those built for larger commercial systems. Your solution has worked for you and may work for others. Those who need a larger network environment would be well advised to check the latency specifications of the devices involved.0
-
Steve,
Taking your set-up a step further, is it possible to access your 6300 direct from the shack PC -- and also via the LAN from another LAN connected PC? (not at the same time of course). I guess that would require making the shack PC a gateway device.
Paul, W9AC
0
Leave a Comment
Categories
- All Categories
- 361 Community Topics
- 2.1K New Ideas
- 620 The Flea Market
- 8K Software
- 34 SmartSDR+
- 6.3K SmartSDR for Windows
- 177 SmartSDR for Maestro and M models
- 416 SmartSDR for Mac
- 267 SmartSDR for iOS
- 252 SmartSDR CAT
- 188 DAX
- 378 SmartSDR API
- 9.2K Radios and Accessories
- 27 Aurora
- 223 FLEX-8000 Signature Series
- 7.1K FLEX-6000 Signature Series
- 929 Maestro
- 53 FlexControl
- 863 FLEX Series (Legacy) Radios
- 903 Genius Products
- 459 Power Genius XL Amplifier
- 326 Tuner Genius XL
- 118 Antenna Genius
- 288 Shack Infrastructure
- 202 Networking
- 445 Remote Operation (SmartLink)
- 141 Contesting
- 762 Peripherals & Station Integration
- 139 Amateur Radio Interests
- 982 Third-Party Software

