hmmmm
When are we going to get a consumer router with 4 lan ports at 5gig? It would be nice to have ssd's in a NAS and be able to transfer over 100MB/s on a cable..............
What year did 1gig come out in consumer space again?
Talk about stagnation...............
If graphics slot development was like that we'd all still be on AGP......................
probably why they changed the name to Ryzen
1999 was when the 1Gbps Base-T standard was ratified. AGP was actually surprisingly short lived at a mere 7 years.
5Gbps is way more expensive compared to 2.5Gbps, as it's closer to 10Gbps when it comes to all the "bad" things involved in making a chip.
Intel's list price for a 2.5Gbps Ethernet controller is $2.40 and their chips have a TDP if less than 2W. Intel doesn't have a 5Gbps product, neither does RealTek, which leaves Marvell/Aquantia. They're not cheap, although I don't know what their third gen chips cost, their previous chips were in the $20 range. They also run hot and require passive cooling. Personally I believe 5Gbps will be a short lived niche, as there are no switches, whereas there are several of 2.5Gbps by now. The price difference between 5 and 10Gbps is also too small in most instances that it doesn't make sense investing in 5Gbps, as you need suitable switches/routers etc.
I have two Aquantia 10Gbps cards, one in my NAS and one in my PC. For large file transfers it's unbeatable.
You can always get a 5 QSFP (10Gig) port CRS305. Many new NAS already have 10Gig port, or a couple of 2.5Gig ones. Then you can use bonding on the 2.5Gig ports.
Bonding doesn't work between a single client and server and requires a managed switch. You need multiple clients to see any benefit from bonding on the "server" side and bonding on clients is pointless.
@Valantar I'm enthusiastic about routers
I understand why most people aren't though, as they barely understand what the box from their ISP does, nor how vital it is. If people did, they'd invest in better gear.
I'm not sure if you got my point. For as long as manufacturers are selling, they will spit out products.
As for this ASUS, I doubt its BOM is more than $35. The rest is just profit margin. Build cheap, sell expensive. Check the fist paragraph, second sentence.
If you truly think that's the BOM cost of a modern router, then you're really clueless.
Yes, your could make a MT7620 based router for $15, but it would be 2.4GHz only and have 100Mbps Ethernet.
The AC1750 router I was involved in making some 7-8 years ago had a BOM cost of around $100, although that was a bit special, as it had a 3.5" touch screen, ZigBee and Z-Wave, as well as a discrete USB 3.0 controller that increased the BOM cost. It was also the first consumer router to a heatpipe for cooling and possibly the first router with a mezzanine board.
My point here though is that now, we have routers with much more expensive SoCs, I know QCA charges $30+ for their higher-end router SoCs, more RAM, more flash, a third 5/6GHz radio and so on. Heatpipe cooling is not rare any more and multiple PCBs are also common. This is impossible to make for $35. Just look up the cost of a good power amplifier or LNA and you'll see that alone accounts for a minimum of $10-15 of the BOM cost in a higher-end router.
So that's $40-45 without the Wi-Fi chips, PCB, ports, housing, antennas, switch IC, etc. and doesn't even take packaging, production or certification costs into account. So yeah, you're way way off the target here.