D-Link's latest Draft-N router, the DIR-655, improves on the previous DIR-635
by adding four Gigabit Lan ports.
Theoretically, using standard 10/100Mbits/sec Lan ports on a Draft-N router
capable of up to 300Mbits/sec creates a bottleneck.
However, in practice you'd be very lucky to exceed 100Mbits/sec using
Draft-N.
Of course, should you have other Gigabit Lan kit the DIR-655 will certainly
make full use of them.
Externally the DIR-655 could have looked identical to the slower DIR-635, but
that was clearly unacceptable so
D-Link has given it a styling job with a case that is
mainly white with a black band around the middle.
The three Mimo antennae are also white, and the overall result is highly
questionable: we fear the nausea-inducing bright blue activity LEDs won't be
appreciated by all.
Hopefully you can ignore the looks and concentrate on the speed of this
router. The Atheros Xspan chip is certainly very fast, but there’s a chance that
it will be overwhelmed by heavy use so D-Link, for the first time, uses Ubicom
Streamengine technology to prioritise certain types of data.
This ensures that VoIP, video streaming and online gaming get a steady
stream of data packets, while web browsing and downloads may take a back seat if
necessary to ensure quality of service is maintained.
Setting up the router is quick and simple thanks to D-Link’s Click ‘n Connect
setup – this uses a wizard in the configuration screen. However, this screen
isn’t especially well laid out so simple tasks, such as disabling wireless, take
longer than necessary and any changes require the router to be restarted.
You get the same Click ‘n Connect software with the matching DWA-645
Rangebooster N 650 PC Card, which costs a princely £54.
There’s a USB2 port on the back of the router that accepts a memory key to
speed up the configuration with Windows Connect Now. Previously this required
Windows XP SP2, however the DIR-655 sports a ‘Works with Window Vista’ logo so
it’s safe to say XP SP2 or later.
At short range with no encryption enabled, we managed to get TCP transfer
speeds of 47.1Mbits/sec, which is pretty impressive. This dropped to
40.8Mbits/sec with encryption turned on and fell further to 26.2Mbits/sec when
the signal had to travel through two walls.
It's important to stress that wireless speeds vary wildly, depending on the
environment, so what you end up achieving may be very different to what we
experienced.
Despite the dubious styling and annoying blue LEDs, D-Link's latest router is
a cinch to set up, includes Gigabit Lan and, in our tests, achieved some
impressive wireless speeds.
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