Wednesday, May 31st 2023

Realtek's 5 Gbps Ethernet Solutions Will Reduce Cost and Power Draw Significantly

Realtek has decided to take consumer Ethernet speeds to a new level later this year with a family of 5 Gbps parts that are unlike anything its competitors have announced so far. The RTL8126-CG PCIe 3.0 x1 controller is a tiny QFN56 chip that measures 8 by 8 millimetres and consumes up to 1.7 Watt in use. This is unheard of when it comes to 5 Gbps solutions today, most of which are based on cut-down 10 Gbps chips. Realtek has verified the RTL8126-CG with stacked connectors for motherboards, as this was a requirement from the motherboard vendors. This solution should be available on most of the boards that were announced at Computex with 2.5 Gbps Ethernet support.

The company also has the RTL8251B-CG single port PHY which comes in the same packaging and same size as the PCIe controller. It's intended for use in 5 Gbps switches and should help bring down the cost, power consumption and thermals. Finally Realtek was showing off the RTL8157-CG, which is a USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) based 5 Gbps Ethernet bridge, which comes in a slightly different QFN68 package, but still apparently measures 8 by 8 millimetres. This one is expected to launch sometime in Q4 of this year. All three solutions are capable of delivering 5 Gbps Ethernet over Cat 5e cables of up to a 100 meter in length. We weren't given an exact price point of these solutions, but it sounded like the RTL8126-CG should end up at US$5 or less, which should be compared to at least US$20-30 for most similar solutions in the market today. It looks like the market for faster Ethernet is really getting interesting and Realtek is apparently planning a 10 Gbps solution for next year.
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59 Comments on Realtek's 5 Gbps Ethernet Solutions Will Reduce Cost and Power Draw Significantly

#51
RegaeRevaeb
Makavelilol I know everyone is on the hate Asus bandwagon these days but I still have 10-year-old motherboards from them that work :)

This recent hiccup won't stop me from going back to asus been using their products for 20+ years. And in that timeframe, I haven't had to RMA anything.
The emoticon was supposed to show me being so extreme the joke was obvious. Yeah, I agree many of its products have been good. And with the NIC it's really just a chipset AIB with a custom colour heatsink.
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#52
trsttte
TheLostSwedeThe USB ports aren't functional
<nitpick> You sure? Don't they need them to be functional to validate the thing is working as intended with the noise between the different ports? </nitpick>
Posted on Reply
#53
TheLostSwede
News Editor
trsttte<nitpick> You sure? Don't they need them to be functional to validate the thing is working as intended with the noise between the different ports? </nitpick>
110%, as it's just the elevation from the PCB that's being tested, so there is no signal degradation. There's nothing USB on that card.
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#54
boomheadshot8
reduce cost why not but saying recuce power draw, yes for the chip itself but more speed = more performance for data centers :kookoo:
Posted on Reply
#55
Brad
MakaveliYou know it they will deploy docsis 4.0 to the rich area's first and everyone else will be waiting years for it.
That's not how anything works.
Posted on Reply
#56
Makaveli
BradThat's not how anything works.
uh huh sure it is.

The cable providers in my area have been talking about Docsis 4.0 for years now even before I ditched cable for fiber. Max connection speed for them still only has 50 Mbps uploads on Docsis 3.1 and no one has seen 4.0 in the wild. Its to the point now that same Cable ISP is rolling out fiber in New Area's that guess what have money. Fiber is the future and the cable isp's still trying to milk Coaxial cable.
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#57
Brad
Makaveliuh huh sure it is.

The cable providers in my area have been talking about Docsis 4.0 for years now even before I ditched cable for fiber. Max connection speed for them still only has 50 Mbps uploads on Docsis 3.1 and no one has seen 4.0 in the wild. Its to the point now that same Cable ISP is rolling out fiber in New Area's that guess what have money. Fiber is the future and the cable isp's still trying to milk Coaxial cable.
Never is. Rambling but no clue.
Posted on Reply
#58
Makaveli
BradNever is. Rambling but no clue.
Then explain it to us brad educate everyone reading this thread how it works!
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