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ZyXEL PLA4205kit HomePlug AV 500 Mbps Powerline Wall-plug Adapter (Starter Kit – 2 units)
Zyxel – click on the image below for more information.
- Plug-and-play for easy installation
- Data transfer rates of up to 500 Mbps* for video streaming and gaming
- Gigabit Ethernet port provides faster wired connection
- QoS enhances media streaming quality
- Power-saving mode reduces energy waste
- Compliant with IEEE 1901 and compatible with Home Plug AV
- Encrypt button for easy security setup
- Multi-colored LED identifies power line network quality
Zyxel
Powered by the latest IEEE 1901 technology and a Gigabit Ethernet port, ZyXEL’s 500 Mbps Powerline Gigabit Ethernet Adapter can provide a stable high-performance network for you to enjoy multiple HD streams, multiplayer gaming and Web surfing simultaneously. With a pair of plug-and-play PLA4205 installed, you can easily extend your home network through any electrical outlet for Internet access by HDTVs, Blu-ray players, DVRs, PCs and game consoles. The advanced Quality of Service (QoS) features
ZyXEL PLA4205kit HomePlug AV 500 Mbps Powerline Wall-plug Adapter (Starter Kit – 2 units)
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Zyxel ZyWall 70 Firewall back

Image by jackthegag

This is a little Tutorial to open a port on a ZyXel (Arcor) router. First open a Browser and write the url: 192.168.1.1 wirte you user and pw go to NAT 1 and tip your port and your intern ip, go to save Linux4ever have fun
Video Rating: 3 / 5


Streams uncompressed Blu-rays to my WDTV Live Plus,
OVERVIEW: I bought these in hopes that I could stream my Blu-ray collection (uncompressed) to my WDTV Live Plus from a NAS drive (more details at end of review). A lot of information out there on the Interwebs said this was nearly impossible, but I was tired of having to compress all of my Blu-rays with Handbrake in order to stream them over wireless (and I still had stuttering). I saw them for a good price on another site, so I decided to give them a try anyway. To my surprise, they actually worked!
INSTALLATION: This kit ships with two powerline adapters, two (too short) ethernet cables, a setup CD, and some “light” documentation. There is a utility that installs from the CD that can report the transmit and receive speeds of your adapters, which are dead easy to install–just plug both into a wall outlet, then an ethernet cable into each one and your router/internet-enabled device. They find each other automatically and start talking almost instantly. There is also a button on the side of each adapter labeled “ENCRYPT” that you can use to form a secure connection between them so your neighbors can’t get on to your network. (Because this would require them sharing your electrical wiring AND having powerline adapters, the possibility is remote so I didn’t fool with it.) When I fired up the utility (installs from the CD), it reported that I was only getting about 50 Mbps throughput. Unfortunately I did not have any spare electrical outlets, so I had to plug the router-end adapter into a wall tap. I moved the other one (connected to the WDTV) to a bare outlet and the utility then reported about 123 TX and 111 RX throughput. Although this is a fraction of the rated speed of 500 Mbps (which you’ll never come close to in real life), I fired up some test 1080p MKVs with constant bitrates (the “Birds test files,” which you can Google to find) to check the actual throughput. I was pleasantly surprised to be able to stream up to 70 Mbps without issue, and then a couple of m2ts files straight from a Blu-ray folder structure as well. Since the maximum spec’d bitrate of Blu-ray is 54 Mbps, I am in the clear. And considering that I’m not even following the instructions (since I’m not plugging both adapters directly into the wall), that’s pretty amazing! As a point of reference, I also have a pair of MoCA adapters (these: NETGEAR MCAB1001 MoCA Coax-Ethernet Adapter Kit (Black) connected to a Boxee Box in the living room, and they provide about the same throughput.
A COUPLE OF CAVEATS: Powerline performance is highly dependent on your home’s electric wiring. Apparently if you have each adapter on a different phase (i.e. on switches on opposite sides of your breaker box) then that can significantly reduce throughput. I am lucky, because although my router and WDTV are in separate rooms, they are not only on the same phase, but even the same breaker switch. This means that there is less wiring between the adapters and therefore less attenuation in the signal.
FIRMWARE INFO: I have an old pair of 1st-gen powerline adapters (Netgear 85Mbps Powerline Network Adapter XET1001) that can’t get anywhere near to streaming even compressed movies, so obviously powerline has come a long way. These Zyxels ship with firmware v5.2.0, which seems to be newer firmware than the Trendnet 500 Mbps adapters that smallnetbuilder gave mixed reviews to. In fact, I believe it is newer than the Netgear 500 Mbps that got more positive reviews. I’m pretty sure that all the currently available 500 Mbps adapters are based on the same Atheros chipset, which means that the only variable among them would be the firmware version.
Here are a few relevant details about my network setup:
ROUTER: D-Link DIR-655, gigabit (D-Link DIR-655 Extreme N Gigabit Wireless Router)
MEDIA SERVER: WD MyBook Live 3TB NAS (Western Digital My Book Live 3 TB Personal Cloud Storage Drive), connected w/gigabit ethernet to router
MEDIA RECEIVER: WDTV Live Plus (Western Digital WD TV Live Plus 1080p HD Media Player), running aftermarket WDLXTV firmware (v5.0.0)
STREAMING PROTOCOL: NFS (not the more common SMB, also known as Windows Sharing. With SMB I can only…
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|Solid Powerline Adapter,
I bought the PLA4205K from [...] a week ago because it was $15 cheaper that Amazon.com. The kit came in last night. I plugged 1 unit in the upstair den where I have my router/Internet connection and plugged the other unit in the downstair kitchen where I have a VoIP phone. I was able to dial out and receive VoIP phone calls with no problem. Then, I unplugged the VoIP device and plugged in my Macbook Pro to test the effective file transfer speed. I was able to get around 6-7 MB/sec, which is much faster than what I can get from wireless connection through my 5GHz 802.11n Airport Extreme. With the Airport Extreme, I can only get about 1.2MB/sec. Consider the fact that the power outlets are not on the same circuit and signals have to go through the main power panel, it is pretty solid performance to get 6-7MB/sec. Most of the other Powerline adapters can only deliver 1-2MB/sec.
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