Netgear HDXB101 Powerline HD Ethernet Kit
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1 new or used available from $336.31
Average customer review:Product Description
" NETGEAR’s Powerline HD Ethernet Adapter and Kit with Video QoS for high quality video and gaming is an ideal solution for connecting a PC, DVR, X-Box 360™ or other game console to the home network. Simply plug one HDX101 into an AC outlet near your router and the other HDX101 near the device you wish to network. Built-in Quality of Service (QoS) ensures a high-quality, consistent performance for things like real-time HD video and audio streaming as with the NETGEAR Digital Entertainer (EVA700), Internet gaming and VoIP calls. With data rates up to 200 Mbps* large file transfers to networked storage devices like NETGEAR’s Storage Central (SC101) can be up to 12 times faster than previous Powerline networking products, all with encrypted security. * HDX101 may coexist on the same network with Home Plug 1.0 products, bit it is not compatible or interoperable with NETGEAR’s XE102, XE104, XE103 and WGXB102 products "
Product Details
- Brand: Netgear
- Model: HDXB101-100NAS
- Original language: English
- Dimensions: 3.10" h x 8.40" w x 9.40" l, 1.75 pounds
Features
- Delivers up to 200 Mbps* to any power outlet
- Uses existing electrical wiring
- Built-in Quality of Service for video streaming, gaming and VoIP
- Simple plug and play installation
- Configurable Quality of Service for advanced users
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Product Description
Amazon.com Product Description
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![]() Creating network connections is as easy as plugging these adapters into the wall. View larger. |
This is an ideal solution for connecting PCs, game consoles, digital media adapters such as NETGEAR's EVA8000 to your home network. Here's how it works: plug one HDX101 into your router and a nearby electrical socket, then plug the second HDX101 into any electrical socket that is conveniently located near the device you want to network. Each HDX101 has a built-in Quality of Service (QoS) that enables smooth streaming, awesome gaming performance, and uninterrupted VoIP telephone calls. The bottom line is, you get a powerful, seamless home network that runs on your existing wiring.
The Powerline HD Network Kit makes it a breeze to transfer large files to a network storage device, such as the NETGEAR Storage Central Turbo SC101 or the ReadyNAS NV+ RND4250. It supports up to 16 HDX101 units on one home network; and it easily coexists with a host of NETGEAR's HomePlug compatible products. Additional HDX101 units are available and can be purchased separately.
System requirements include a device for connection, e.g. an available RJ-45 Ethernet port, and Microsoft Windows Vista, XP or 2000 to modify encryption and settings. Microsoft Vista drivers are available at www.netgear.com/vista.
Note: Although the HDXB101 may coexist with HomePlug 1.0 products, it is not compatible or interoperable with NETGEAR's XE104, XEPS103, XE103, XE102, or WGXB102 Powerline products.
In addition, this device can deliver up to 200 Mbps of throughput. The actual data throughput will vary depending on network conditions and environmental factors, such as network traffic volume, building material and construction, and network overhead.
What's in the Box
Two NETGEAR HDX101 Powerline HD Ethernet Adapter, Ethernet cable, installation guide, setup CD, warranty card, and support and information card.
From the Manufacturer
Netgear's Powerline HD Ethernet Adapter (HDX101) is an ideal solution for connecting a PC, DVR, Xbox 360, PS3, or other Internet game consoles to your home network. It uses existing household electrical wiring as part of an Ethernet LAN. Simply plug one HDX101 into an AC outlet near your router and the other HDX101 near the device you wish to network. You can use up to 16 HDX101 units on one home network.
Built-in Quality of Service (QoS) ensures a high-quality, consistent performance for things like Internet gaming, VoIP calls, and real-time HD video and audio streaming to a digital media adapter (DMA) like the Netgear Digital Entertainer (EVA700). With data rates up to 200 Mbps, large file transfers to networked storage devices like Netgear's Storage Central (SC101) can be up to 12 times faster than previous power line networking products, all with encrypted security.
What's in the Box
Two Powerline HD Ethernet Adapters (HDXB101), six-foot Ethernet cable, installation guide, setup CD, warranty card, support and information card
Customer Reviews
Completely unacceptable performance
I bought a pair of HDXB101 boxes in the hope that they might offer a reliable replacement for the 802.11g boxes I'm currently using. Boy was I disappointed.
I live in a recently refurbished apartment, with all new electrical wiring. In principle, this should offer an optimal environment for powerline networking.
While setup was as easy as the box claimed - it was literally a matter of plugging the two boxes into the wall, and everything worked immediately - it quickly became clear that the performance was not going to work out.
A quick word of caution before I continue: please read most of the positive reviews of this device, and notice that they are doing very unchallenging things, like streaming music. Music streaming is extremely tolerant of both poor bandwidth (bytes per second) and high latency (time it takes data to get from A to B). If all you want to do is stream MP3s and browse the web, this hardware is perfectly decent.
However, for even the most slightly challenging application, the performance is horrifying. I measured the latency between my two HDXB101 boxes, and it was consistently atrocious, even when the two were plugged into two sockets of a paired wallmount.
To give you an idea of "atrocious", my 802.11g network consistently gives a latency of 1.2 milliseconds. My gigabit ethernet network is more like 0.1 milliseconds. The *best* number I got out of the Netgear hardware was 3.5 milliseconds, and the *average* was 55 milliseconds. Holy cow! That means my bedroom and living room are as far apart, in terms of latency, as California and Germany! This is an amazingly bad number.
But what's much worse is that the number is extremely jittery. There were constant stalls of up to one second in duration, with delays of 150 milliseconds or more happening several times a second. This is the sort of thing you won't notice at all if you're playing music or viewing web pages, but it makes gaming incredibly frustrating.
The unpredictable latency has a strong negative effect on bandwidth, too. The box advertises 200 megabits per second. At no time have I measured more than 3.3 megabits per second, slightly over 1.5% of the advertised peak performance. This isn't even enough to saturate my DSL line, and is perhaps 50% slower than my wireless network. Needless to say, there's no way you're going to stream anything more than Youtube-quality video (i.e. really cheesy low bitrate) over a link like this.
In case you're interested in tinkering with configuration options to improve performance, forget about it: there are no tunable options to tweak.
In summary, the bandwidth and latency on this hardware are just shockingly bad. Unless you live in a house with lead-lined rooms and have literally no other option for getting a network signal from one place to another, you should avoid this hardware like the plague.
Worked well once it was correctly configured
Working with this device has been an emotional roller coaster. The setup couldn't have been easier. You literally plug in each box, they find each other and everything starts working. I had powerline network between my PC and XBox running in just minutes.
The problems started when I tried to stream high definition content across the network. It simply wasn't fast enough. I was extremely dissapointed since this was my main motivator for purchasing the HDX101.
After a lot of back and forth with Netgear support, who were very helpful, I went through the setup process for the devices and configured them to not be compatible with any other powerline devices. Once I made this change the situation immediately resolved itself and since then I have had no issues streaming high-def content.
Even though I hit some setup issues with these devices I am impressed. I would definitely consider purchasing another one.
Great if you have no other solution to a problem...
I wanted to bridge two apartments on opposite sides and different floors of a building for the purpose of internet access, telephone extension over voip, and live tv streaming via xp mediacenter. There were too many walls and floors for wireless to even dream of working (tested with 2.4GHz, 5.8GHz, and 900MHz phones and only the 900MHz signals got through). I couldn't run cat5 so all my bets were on this technology working.
And they work. The two apartments are on different meters in the basement and it still works. For the best performance, I put each adapter on its own circuit in each apartment (just use the air conditioning outlets) to minimize interference from other local electrical devices. It may also help to use surge-protectors on everything else. I did have to lower the bitrate of my TV recordings to hide the delays that occasionally occur, but I may try bumping it back up since newer firmwares and other settings tweaks seem to have improved things (see the netgear forums).
HomeplugAV came out way too late for me to try, but I hear that it's performance is close if not slightly less. I think HomeplugAV does not network bridge to their older standards much like Netgear's DS2-based technology, so no benefits there.
Granted, the highest speed the Netgear utility gave me for the connection is 25Mbps, which is probably much lower if I actually measured it, but it gives me a solution that no other technology can. 802.11n runs on 2.4Ghz as well so I doubt that will do anything for me with all these walls and floors. If you're looking at these to drastically improve your existing connection speed, then you may be disappointed. But if you're deciding between no connection and a connection, then you may be pleasantly surprised.
Update: as of 4/2007, there has been two firmware/software updates, so Netgear is still providing support, with the latest adding vista compatibility. I have no experience contacting Netgear for support, but I always have low expectations of that from most companies.









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