Networking – How to wireless speed be higher than router’s WAN port

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I was looking at new routers to buy and didn't understand how speed exactly works.
This router has 300 mbps wireless, but wan/lan port only supports 100 mbps. So the ethernet cable that comes from my cable modem into router's WAN port will only support 100 mbps, then how can router provide 300 mbps? I assume if I was to transfer files from 2 wireless devices, I can achieve that speed but for internet speed is it possible?

Second question is I currently have gigabit router and getting around 120 mbps but I have to replace it because it's wireless is unstable, gigabit routers are more expensive so if I buy a 100 mbps router, can I get around 90 mbps internet wired?

*Had another idea: My current router works fine for wired connections, only wireless is problematic. Can I still use my old router directly connected to my main PC wired, and use another ethernet cable from old router to new 100 mbps router and distribute wifi from new one?

Best Answer

The specs for the router state 802.11n is capable "Up to 300Mbps(dynamic)". That doesn't mean it will operate at that speed all the time. Theoretically, two wireless devices may be able to transfer data over the local network faster than wired devices limited to 100Mbps.

Network speed is limited to device capability. The slowest device in the connection path (modem, router, network card) will always be the limiting factor. Your router may be capable of 300Mbps with 802.11n, but an 802.11g device will only be able to connect at a maximum of 54Mbps.

Lastly, whatever your modem's capability is will determine how fast your Internet connection is. You can spend a lot of money on a fast router, but your Internet connection will only be as fast as the modem is capable.

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