As I mentioned in a previous post, because of numerous crashes, resyncs and resets, I replaced the router originally supplied by my ISP (a Thomson TG585V7) with a Draytek. I started using Draytek routers back in 2003 when BT’s terms and conditions stated that you could only connect to the ADSL network using their supplied Speedtouch modem. Draytek worked around this by creating the 2200 USB which was essentially a router with a USB port that you plugged your Speedtouch modem into thus working around BT’s pointless restrictions.
Five years later, I’m connected at 20Mb downstream, 2.31Mb upstream with the Draytek’s latest and greatest SOHO offering – the 2820N. I have to say that I’m quite impressed. They’ve completely overhauled the case and black wedge doorstop looks have been replaced with a white rack-mountable chassis (additional accessory) with front mounted Ethernet, USB and RJ11 sockets. There are five Ethernet ports in total, one is a gigabit port for connecting to servers (apparently) and one is designated as a WAN2 port which I’ll discuss later. There are nine LED’s arranged in three rows of three to provide at a glance status information but it looks to me more like a tic-tac-toe game board. Cosmetically at least, this router is going to be a marmite affair – you either love it or hate it.
The 2820’s feature-set builds on that of previous models such as the 2800 and includes LAN2LAN and teleworker VPN support, URL filtering, UPNP, Bandwidth Management, QoS, Web and P2P content filtering and more. One of the new innovative features worth of a mention is the concept of multiple WAN connections. This can be either another router connected to the WAN2 Ethernet port or a 3G modem connected to the USB port and the router can be configured to either switch over to the secondary connection in the event of primary failure or perhaps more impressively, load balance between the ports – something that may come in handy in environments where Internet connectivity is essential. The 2820N features support for the 802.11N draft 2.0 and although I haven’t really played with this yet, it does seem quite impressive support for multiple SSID’s and the ability to rate limit bandwidth with each SSID.
Perhaps the most important thing to me is stability and the 2820 hasn’t let me down yet. It’s only been a week but the connection hasn’t dropped out once and downloads are extremely quick so all in all, a highly recommended product which is slightly more expensive than the competition but rock solid and can be bought for a bargain if you get lucky on eBay (hint hint).
Note for BE* Users
My initial sync rate was 2-3 Mb lower that Be’s own branded router but since they switched my ADSL profile from interleaved to FASTPATH, I’ve had a rock steady and lightning fast connection.