Faster switch?

badspell68

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I think the weak link in my network is the speed of my current switch. What speeds are out there and what would a good speed-range be for a home network?

Thanks!
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7
What speed is your current switch? What speed NICs are in your computers?

There are essentially 2 speed classes for switches/routers. There's 10/100 which has been around for many years and there is the newer 10/100/1000, also known as gigabit. If I was going to buy a switch today I would make sure it was a gigabit switch. However, simply adding a gigabit switch won't necessarily speed things up. In order for your network to take advantage of the faster switch, you need to also have gigabit NICs in your machines. In addition, low quality cables or long cable runs may defeat adding gigabit hardware.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built desktop, Dell G15 5511 Gaming laptop,MS Surface Pro 7 tablet
OS
W10 Pro desktop, W11 laptop, W11 Pro tablet (all 64-bit)
CPU
3.7Ghz 8700K i7, i7-11800H, i7-1065G7
Motherboard
ASUS TUF Z370-Pro Gaming in desktop
Memory
16G desktop, 16G laptop, 4G tablet
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon RX580, RTX 3060, Intel Iris Plus
Sound Card
High Definition Audio (Built-in to mobo)
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung U32J59 32" (2x), 15.6", 12"
Screen Resolution
3840x2160, 3840x2160, 1920x1080, 2160x1440
Hard Drives
500G SSD for OS; 2T, 10T & 15T HDDs for Data on Desktop, 1TB SSD laptop, 128G SSD tablet.
PSU
Corsair CX 750M
Case
Antec 100
Cooling
CM 212+
Keyboard
IBM Model M - used continuously since 1986
Mouse
Microsoft Pro IntelliMouse
Internet Speed
400M down 8M up
Antivirus
Windows Defender
Browser
FireFox
Other Info
Built my first computer (8Mhz 8088cpu, 640K RAM, 20MB HDD, 2 360K floppy drives) in 1985 and have been building them for myself, relatives and friends ever since.
Some have old and some have new NICs.

I'm going to get a Netgear 10/100/1000, but are there other features I should be looking for on the switch?
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7
Some have old and some have new NICs.

I'm going to get a Netgear 10/100/1000, but are there other features I should be looking for on the switch?
If your home LAN devices are "wired", there's really no need to spend any more money than for say a standard "unmanaged" normal minimalist gigabit switch like a GS105. I have three of them around my house, providing basic "wired" connectivity to assorted devices located at each of those "nodes". These switches are like "power strips for ethernet", simply port-multiplying the four LAN ports normally found on home routers (like my Netgear WNDR4000 gigabit router) to provide more than four "wired" ports at locations around your home which cannot reach an available "wired" router port.

However I also have CAT6 cable running from my router to each of these GS105 gigabit switches. CAT5 cabling will not support gigabit speeds... you need CAT6 for that. CAT5e cabling is better than CAT5, but is still not CAT6 in performance. But remember, unless you are doing true PC-to-PC transfers there is pretty much ZERO need for these types of LAN speeds through either a router or a switch. Normal access to the Internet will be limited by your ISP service tier, not the capability of your router or switch or cabling. And normal LAN inter-device speed requirements are also relatively slow, including such things as HDTV delivered from HTPC to extenders through a home LAN.

Also, remember that each switch has not only "downstream" wired connections (to wired devices, connecting to the switch) but also has one "upstream" wired connection (either directly to a wired port on the router, or perhaps to some other "downstream" port on another switch, if that's your network topology). Each of these "upstream" connections defines the total simultaneous bandwidth which might be available among any wired devices you have connecting to the "downstream" ports on that switch.

So if you have a gigabit switch connected "upstream" to one port of your gigabit router, then that switch can only provide at most one gigabit of "downstream" bandwidth to any individual one of its ports or to all ports simultaneously in total. If two or more of the "downstream" ports on the switch are in use simultaneously, the sum of their in-use data transfer speeds will of course cannot possibly exceed a gigabit in total, since the "upstream" connection from the switch to the router is itself only one gigabit in speed. Of course it's very rare for multiple high-speed "downstream" connections to be in use simultaneously, just as it is very rare for most inter-device and device->switch->router->Internet needs to typically exceed modest 10/100 speed requirements (as most people's home cable/DSL ISP service levels are typically in the 5Mbps-100Mbps download speed range).

And finally, realize that the NIC speed on your PC's also sets the upper-limit on any LAN transfer speed which can be reached to/from that PC. If you have an older machine with a 10/100 NIC, that's the maximum you will be able to use that PC at on your LAN. Only machines with a gigabit NIC can even possibly take advantage of gigabit LAN capability, either through a gigabit router and/or a gigabit switch. And most "smart" home devices (e.g. BluRay players, TV's, game consoles, etc.) do NOT have gigabit NIC's built into them. They are almost always 10/100 NIC's, since they don't need higher than that to support the "streaming" services they can provide or use.

Bottom line: buy a GS105 or similar. But you should also invest in a modestly priced gigabit router (e.g. WNDR4000) if you don't already have one. And if you don't have better than CAT5 cabling in your house, don't expect performance above the capability of that cabling. Otherwise, if you want to and can upgrade to CAT5e or CAT6, this will "future-proof" you while also potentially providing very high-speed transfers between your home devices as well as to the Internet.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC
Great and helpful info!

My mail objective is to stream Netflix HD to my computers and HD video files from a NAS. My place is wired with CAT-5 and I have wifi with some new computers and some old...the older computers have 10/100 and not sure what the new ones have. Will I be able to do HD in my environment?

And...what is considered to long of a run for cat 5 and 6? I'm running 50 feet.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built desktop, Dell G15 5511 Gaming laptop,MS Surface Pro 7 tablet
OS
W10 Pro desktop, W11 laptop, W11 Pro tablet (all 64-bit)
CPU
3.7Ghz 8700K i7, i7-11800H, i7-1065G7
Motherboard
ASUS TUF Z370-Pro Gaming in desktop
Memory
16G desktop, 16G laptop, 4G tablet
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon RX580, RTX 3060, Intel Iris Plus
Sound Card
High Definition Audio (Built-in to mobo)
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung U32J59 32" (2x), 15.6", 12"
Screen Resolution
3840x2160, 3840x2160, 1920x1080, 2160x1440
Hard Drives
500G SSD for OS; 2T, 10T & 15T HDDs for Data on Desktop, 1TB SSD laptop, 128G SSD tablet.
PSU
Corsair CX 750M
Case
Antec 100
Cooling
CM 212+
Keyboard
IBM Model M - used continuously since 1986
Mouse
Microsoft Pro IntelliMouse
Internet Speed
400M down 8M up
Antivirus
Windows Defender
Browser
FireFox
Other Info
Built my first computer (8Mhz 8088cpu, 640K RAM, 20MB HDD, 2 360K floppy drives) in 1985 and have been building them for myself, relatives and friends ever since.
Meters?
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7
My mail objective is to stream Netflix HD to my computers and HD video files from a NAS.
Netflix is a very touchy beast. The apps provided by Netflix for various "smart" devices vary widely in their performance capabilities, and some of them are "throttled" to not provide higher quality than a certain upper-limit despite the fact that you believe your Internet speed (from your ISP) should justify better quality from Netflix on your HDTV.

In theory, the Netflix app responds to what it detects as your Internet bandwidth speed in getting to the Netflix servers, which is determined after a relatively short startup period and running of the app in order for it to make its decision. But this is further influenced by your ISP, and whether or not there's a "deal" between your provider and Netflix for "preferential treatment" (e.g. the infamous Comcast/Netflix deal).

Even more influence is whether you are using wireless or wired connection from the "smart" device to get to your switch/router/Internet, and the reliability and speed of such connection. Typically wireless speeds are much less than wired speeds, but this depends on distance from the device to the nearest WiFi access point or wireless router. Also, 5GHz wireless speeds are typically MUCH FASTER than conventional 2.4Ghz speeds (both 811.n), but not many wireless-enabled devices support 5G yet. In other words, there are lots of factors involved trying to stream through wireless, which are all eliminated entirely if you go wired... if that's an option. That's certainly my recommendation, if it's possible.

But again, the performance of Netflix apps on "smart" devices is also a function of the hardware vendor and relationship with Netflix. For example, my sister's setup (Comcast in Chicago, using a Sony BDP-S5100 player) has dreadful Netflix streaming performance (despite it being Comcast with 15Mbps service, and despite the wired connection from the S5100 to the router), whereas my own Oppo BDP-103 with latest firmware and very latest Netflix app provides STUNNING 1080p HD streaming (with TWC, formerly at 30Mbps and now 100Mbps, again wired connection from the 103 to the router).

In other words, YMMV.


My place is wired with CAT-5 and I have wifi with some new computers and some old...the older computers have 10/100 and not sure what the new ones have. Will I be able to do HD in my environment?
What are you using or planning to use to stream your HD videos from the NAS? Windows Media Center? Some other NAS-based server software?

Depending on whether HDTV is 720p or 1080i (or maybe 1080p for videos and movies coming from NAS), your LAN bitrate bandwidth requirements will vary. But 1080i HDTV shouldn't exceed maybe 12Mbps in whatever direction its being sent. That's what I meant when I said "relatively slow", compared to what we think of when using the word "gigabit" to describe hardware or cabling capability.

Now if you are simultaneously streaming multiple HDTV programs to multiple devices around your house through your switches and routers, well now you have clearly increased your bandwidth requirements. And it is here that wireless may well reach or exceed overall performance limits that would simply not be an issue at all for wired connections.

So, you may just have to try things out for yourself and see how it all performs. Just be prepared for some surprises (or not), and be able to react accordingly. You might just try wireless to start, and not feel any motivation to convert to wired unless your wireless performance is unacceptable or spotty or intermittent (e.g. depending on whether multiple streams to different TV's are happening simultaneously, etc.).


And...what is considered to long of a run for cat 5 and 6? I'm running 50 feet.
Absolutely not a problem for CAT5. And Cat6 can be used over several hundred feet.

Incidentally, if you can't run new ethernet cable to a location to provide "wired" there, there are two other alternative methods which can be considered:

(1) ethernet over powerline (using device gizmos something like these) plugged into the AC power sockets around your home. This uses the copper wiring in your walls as if it were CAT5 cable delivering 10/100 speed, and provides ethernet connector ports on the gizmos so that you can connect devices "wired" through them.

Note that the performance of these varies, largely dependent on the copper in your walls, whether or not they pass through circuit breaker boxes or are a "straight line" between wall sockets into which the gizmos are plugged, whether there is proper grounding on the wall sockets, how far apart the gizmos are from each other which describes how much copper wire is involved, etc.

Also, these gizmos should NEVER be plugged into power-strips or surge protectors. They MUST be plugged directly into a wall socket, in order to get to the copper wiring directly.

(2) ethernet over coax (using device gizmos like these), using existing 75ohm coax cable runs in your house (say from the old days of analog cable TV, when we had coax connectors on the walls in many rooms for connection to our "cable box" or possibly directly to the TV with its antenna switch set to "cable"). These gizmos connect to either end of the coax run, and like the powerline adapters use that coax cable as if it were ethernet. Again, they provide wired ethernet connector ports on the gizmos.

Performance of these gizmos is SUPERB, and actually provides the equivalent of 4x100 ethernet cables across a single run of coax which can be up to 1000ft in length. So this approach works well for "estates", where there might be a long coax run to a guest house and where you now want to provide wired ethernet to your home LAN capability as well.


And for improving wireless performance around your house, there are two additional approaches which might be considered:

(1) wireless range extender (like one of these device gizmos) which you plug into wall power sockets at some intermediate distance between the router and the far end location you want to reach with improved WiFi. This is kind of like an extension cord for your router's WiFi network, kind of like an amplifier or booster.

(2) wireless access point (like one of these device gizmos) which you plug into a wired ethernet port somewhere on your home LAN, either say a port on your router or some switch, or even on an ethernet port on one of the earlier mentioned special gizmos which has provided wired ethernet capability through either powerline or coax. The wireless access point (WAP) in turn generates a SECOND UNIQUE (and locally strong) WIFI NETWORK around itself, for wireless devices to connect to when they don't have acceptable wireless connectivity to the far distant primary wired/wireless router elsewhere on the LAN.

The WAP communicates to the primary router via wired for all wireless devices connecting through it, and all of the wireless devices connecting through the WAP are actually assigned IP address and managed by the primary router as part of the primary home LAN. So they show up as "attached devices" on the primary router, even though they're really connected to the second WiFi network of the WAP.

As with all wireless networks, connection speed and performance varies with distance from the WAP and it second WiFi network, same as it does with distance from the primary router's WiFi network.


Lots of ways to build your LAN.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC
I'm using VLC to view everything off a Synology NAS with WD Red drives to computers only, most have 10/100 NICs. CAT 5 cabling and all the runs are no-longer then 40 feet. I only download or view 720p video.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7
I'm using VLC to view everything off a Synology NAS with WD Red drives to computers only, most have 10/100 NICs. CAT 5 cabling and all the runs are no-longer then 40 feet. I only download or view 720p video.
Then I'd say you don't have to worry about upgrading to gigabit capability as something "mandatory", either in hardware devices or in cabling. CAT5 cabling and 10/100 NIC's on the computers you're running VLC on should have no problem at all handling 720p streams.

You've obviously been using your setup for a while, and you've just said it's wired. So where does any WiFi capability come into play, if it does, where a question of adequate bandwidth might come up? In fact, why is there a question about "slower switch" or "faster switch"? Where does that come in to your current setup?

In other words, why do you say your setup has a "weak link"? What is the performance degradation symptom you feel you're experiencing, and when?

Also, adding a switch (of either 10/100 or 10/100/1000 capability) would simply be to "port-multiply" and provide more "wired" ports to a location at which you already have one wired port available, if you needed them. So, do you need more wired ports? If so, that's what a switch can buy you and for the nominal price you might as well go with a 10/100/1000 GS105 or equivalent as well as anything limited to 10/100.

But upgrading to a gigabit switch that's fed by a CAT5 cable isn't going to "speed things up" when the PC's connected to as well as the NAS supplying the streams have 10/100 NIC's in them, since everything else is limited to 10/100 network interfaces. In fact, even having gigabit interfaces won't buy you anything if your cabling is still CAT5. So if you're looking to improve over what you currently have, I'd say the CAT5 cabling is the first thing to upgrade.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC
I was streaming video files from a wifi laptop (10/100) to the wired computer using VLC and I had lots of lag. Additionally, the wired computer cannot play Netflix in HD...so, I thought it might be my network. I have Xfinity/comcast and one Netgear 4 port 10/100 switch.

Thanks again for all the detailed info...its really educational and helpful!
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7
dsperber said:
But remember, unless you are doing true PC-to-PC transfers there is pretty much ZERO need for these types of LAN speeds through either a router or a switch. Normal access to the Internet will be limited by your ISP service tier, not the capability of your router or switch or cabling.
This is the key point to remember. Since you have stated your goal is local streaming, you do want a fast local network, but understand a 100Mb/s network is still very fast. At least twice as fast as most ISP connections and folks stream from the Internet all the time.

Check your house Ethernet cable again. CAT-5e replaced CAT-5 almost 15 years ago and CAT-5e will support 1Gigibit networks too. Unless your house was wired before 2001, you may have CAT5-e already.

Is this standard CAT6?
It is the latest so if wiring your house or making your own Ethernet cables (highly recommended), then you should get CAT6.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
BrightWorks Systems B4
OS
Windows 7 Profession 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-860 Quad
Motherboard
Gigabyte P55-UD4P
Memory
Mushkin 4x2Gb PC12800
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GTX260 896Mb
Sound Card
Integrated 7.1 HD Dolby
Monitor(s) Displays
2 Samsung 2220wm-HAS 22"
Screen Resolution
1680 x 1050 | 1680 x 1050
Hard Drives
WD HE 1Tb
PSU
Corsair TX-750W
Case
Ultra M998
Cooling
OEM
Keyboard
MS Wireless Comfort 5000
Mouse
MS Wireless 5000
Internet Speed
Cable and pretty darn fast
FYI - UPDATE

I upgraded to a Netgear FS108 from a 100/100 switch and my network speeds have noticeably increased even with CAT 5 (my cable is newer, I may be using the gigabit CAT 5) The switch is regestering all connects as running Gigabit speeds except for the printer connections.
 

My Computer My Computer

OS
Windows 7
(my cable is newer, I may be using the gigabit CAT 5)
Inspect the cable labeling. It will be printed on the cable itself if CAT-5 or CAT-5e (if like me, you may need a bright light and good glasses).
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
BrightWorks Systems B4
OS
Windows 7 Profession 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-860 Quad
Motherboard
Gigabyte P55-UD4P
Memory
Mushkin 4x2Gb PC12800
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GTX260 896Mb
Sound Card
Integrated 7.1 HD Dolby
Monitor(s) Displays
2 Samsung 2220wm-HAS 22"
Screen Resolution
1680 x 1050 | 1680 x 1050
Hard Drives
WD HE 1Tb
PSU
Corsair TX-750W
Case
Ultra M998
Cooling
OEM
Keyboard
MS Wireless Comfort 5000
Mouse
MS Wireless 5000
Internet Speed
Cable and pretty darn fast
FYI - UPDATE

I upgraded to a Netgear FS108 from a 100/100 switch and my network speeds have noticeably increased even with CAT 5 (my cable is newer, I may be using the gigabit CAT 5) The switch is regestering all connects as running Gigabit speeds except for the printer connections.
Hard to believe you're getting anything faster than 100Mbps from a Netgear FS108 which is a 10/100 "fast ethernet" switch. I don't know what you were using previously, but the FS108 connections are limited to 100Mbps. That's the product spec.

The FS108 is not a gigabit switch, which is some member of the GSxxx family of products. Only these GSxxx switches can provide potentially gigabit speeds to connected devices.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home-built, two systems (1) and (2)
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
CPU
i5-3350p 3.1Ghz/6MB-cache (1); E8400 3.0Ghz/6MB-cache (2)
Motherboard
ASUS P8Z77-V Pro (1); ASUS P5Q3 (2)
Memory
8GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (1); 4GB PC3-10600 DDR3 (2)
Graphics Card(s)
ATI HD7750 (1), (see TV cards); ATI R7 250 (2)
Sound Card
Realtek ALC892 HD Audio (1); Realtek ALC1200 HD Audio (2)
Monitor(s) Displays
Eizo HD2441W LCD, Eizo S2433W (1); Eizo 24" S2433W (2)
Screen Resolution
1920x1200, 1920x1200 (1); 1920x1200 (2)
Hard Drives
(1) 1TB SATA-II (7200RPM), 2x2TB SATA-III (7200RPM), 250GB SATA-III (10000RPM) for OS; 2x2TB external USB 3.0

(2) 320GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 750GB SATA-II (7200RPM), 150GB SATA-II (10000RPM) for OS; 2TB external USB 3.0
PSU
Nesteq ECS-6001 600W (1); Nesteq ECS-5001 500W (2)
Case
Acousti-Case 360 (1) and (2)
Cooling
Noctua NH-U12P SE2 for CPU, 2x120mm case fans (1) and (2)
Keyboard
IBM PS/2 (1) and (2)
Mouse
Logitech MX Revolution wireless (1); Microsoft wired (2)
Internet Speed
100mbps down / 10mbps up
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials; Malwarebyte Anti-Malware Pro
Browser
Firefox
Other Info
Ceton InfiniTV 4-tuner cablecard-enabled TV card as well as Hauppauge HVR-2250 OTA/ATSC 2-tuner TV card in (1), running under Win7 WMC
Hard to believe you're getting anything faster than 100Mbps from a Netgear FS108 which is a 10/100 "fast ethernet" switch.
Not sure if I understand exactly what you are saying, but you won't get faster than 100Mbps from the FS108. As you note, it is a 10/100Mbps switch.

But 100Mbps is truly very fast. Much faster than your Internet connection - unless you have fiber to the home.

"Fast Ethernet", btw, is a term that came about to differentiate 100Mbps Ethernet from the slower, 10Mbps previous "standard".

And while a switch can move packets about to various nodes much faster than a hub, the number of devices connected, sharing the streaming bandwidth can certainly impact performance too.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
BrightWorks Systems B4
OS
Windows 7 Profession 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i7-860 Quad
Motherboard
Gigabyte P55-UD4P
Memory
Mushkin 4x2Gb PC12800
Graphics Card(s)
Gigabyte GTX260 896Mb
Sound Card
Integrated 7.1 HD Dolby
Monitor(s) Displays
2 Samsung 2220wm-HAS 22"
Screen Resolution
1680 x 1050 | 1680 x 1050
Hard Drives
WD HE 1Tb
PSU
Corsair TX-750W
Case
Ultra M998
Cooling
OEM
Keyboard
MS Wireless Comfort 5000
Mouse
MS Wireless 5000
Internet Speed
Cable and pretty darn fast
But 100Mbps is truly very fast. Much faster than your Internet connection - unless you have fiber to the home.

People use gigabit switches for fast data transfer between various computers, NAS etc on their home network. For example my internet is 60mbps and the router is 100mbps. If I connect my pcs via the router the max data rate between pc's is 100mbps (even if the pc's have gigabit LAN).

However if I use a switch -

www - [100mbps router] - [gigabit switch] - [all pc's, other switches, NAS etc]

the pc's can connect to other pc's at 1000mbps via the switch
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self build
OS
Windows 7 Pro x64 sp1
CPU
i7 4770K
Motherboard
MSI B85M-E45
Memory
8GB Corsair Vengeance 1600MHz
Graphics Card(s)
onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
LG 27MP35
Screen Resolution
1920-1080
Hard Drives
Seagate 2TB
PSU
Cooler Master GX 750
Case
Antec 300
Cooling
Seidon 120V
Internet Speed
60/18
Antivirus
MSE
Browser
Firefox
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