droomurray 0 Posted ... Hi, Recently I re-used an old Netgear WNR3500 v2 I had lying around and put dd-wrt on.I followed the tutorial on here and got it all working :-) So my network at home is as followed *Cisco 867VAE-K9 as my VDSL router - connects to my ISP and offers DHCP for local devices.*Netgear WNR3500 plugged into Cisco router I use the range 192.168.0.0/24 for my home network such that :- 192.168.0.254 - ISP gateway via my CISCO - so most devices use this192.168.0.251 - VPN tunnel gateway via Netgear - so any devices to use VPN point to this gateway and also change DNS server to be VPN DNS server etc. The Netgear's WAN port is configured to be 192.168.9.250 with its gateway pointing out to the CISCO on 192.168.0.254 My initial test is as below. Down:17.289 Mbit/s Out,6.271 Mbit/s In (36%), 20MB - Up: 6.585 Mbit/s Out,3.183 Mbit/s In (48%), 20MB - Date: Sun, 13 Dec 2015 20:27:45 GMT - Buffers: 20MB/20MB - Laps: 3, Time: 178.81 secs Does this setup seem ok, I think my speed is limited by the CPU in the router or could it be I just need to try a different server etc ? CPU ModelBroadcom BCM4716 chip rev 1 CPU Clock453 MHz Thanks !! Quote Share this post Link to post
SumRndmDude 22 Posted ... Router CPU. I had similar experience with a 4300, which is slightly faster than yours. Using an RT-AC87 now and my speeds nearly doubled. It uses a 1ghz dual-core. So it definitely comes down to hardware limitations with a router running DD-WRT. Remember, it not only has to process the packets, but now its encrypting and decrypting them too. Quote Share this post Link to post
droomurray 0 Posted ... Cool, thanks for confirming.I best get looking for a nice router for dd-wrt or open-wrt. I might just host a pfSense VM as I have a VMhost server I could use for that as well. Quote Share this post Link to post
chuckhammerberry 2 Posted ... i've used an old dual core PC running Pfsense to tunnel all my home traffic through VPN Quote Share this post Link to post