Ok, how about a little geekery on this gorgeous Friday. First, let me say that I am very thankful for this summer’s weather here in SF, last year was poop. Anyway, I have been noticing some issues with our 6Mb/768Kb DSL line in the past couple of days. The biggest reason I have not called them yet is that I don’t want to have to tear into all of the network cabling, switches and router to plug a box directly into the DSL modem…because I know that is what the techs are going to want. But, this brought me to investigate my Xincom Twin WAN DPG502 router. Pretty fancy name huh? Well, the reason I bought it was because it allows you to do some pretty slick load balancing and aggregation of two internet connections for not a lot of money. At first I was a bit skeptical about the deal working very well because the router was less than $200 when I bought it. I have the 6Mb down Speakeasy DSL line (which I have seen a little over 5Mb on the whole time I have had it) and a Comcast cable modem. Comcast’s crap DNS problems from last year is what really prompted me to look into a solution like this in the first place.
Anyway, I started poking around inside the very nice and robust Xincom web based GUI to see where my current load balancing settings were at. I then decided I would actually do a little reading and see if there was a firmware update for the 502. No, firmware update, but I did come across a little PDF on setting up load balancing on the DPG502. I changed my settings from IP basded load balancing to Packet Based, hit update and decided to take a look at what kind of download speeds I would see with the change. Well, I was blown away.
I clicked on the San Francisco link on the Speakeasy broadband speed test and got the following numbers:
10534kbs / 508kbs
Jesus. Today must be my lucky day I thought. Well, it turns out that there is some kind of issue around here (with all of the construction I am sure) with the DSL line. If I run the test out on the Speakeasy line only, I am seeing about 2500kbps down and 250kbps up. But, if I run it on the Comcast cable line, I see anywhere from 8500kbps down to 10000+kbps down and 250+ up. Jesus. I guess Comcast got their act together around here. Anyway, Speakeasy is on the case and I will hear something back from Steve in the next 5 hours. Speakeasy is an awesome company and this is the first time I have had to call their support line for anything. Their DSL has been rock solid and fast since the day I set it up. But, this Xincom 502 router is pretty darn cool. It works like a champ day in and day out. If there is a problem with one of the lines, it emails me. I can see real time stats on each line, send traffic based on specific ports and/or local IP addresses over a specific interface…it is really sweet. My Vonage line has never sounded as good as it has since I specified all traffic to and from that thing goes out over the DSL line.
So, if you are a geek, you have two internet connections (or you want two) and you are looking for a new gadget, the Xincom DPG502 should get some serious consideration.
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Leave A Reply (6 comments So Far)
Erik Shunn
2078 days ago
Hello Jason-
I wanted to thank you for your article on our router. We are glad to be able to offer a quality product at a very low price.
Thanks again,
Erik Shunn
President
XiNCOM
Clive Flint
1922 days ago
I have just got one of these and it appears to work well using two adsl lines.
I have one issue that it appears to reset after a few minutes. Will see how it goes.
Marcellino Tirtajasa
1735 days ago
Can we use it to loadbalance/failover INTRANET connection (without NAT) ?
Thx
Xincom Customer
1723 days ago
So, whatever happened to the aggregation firmware that was promised?
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,8852659
Tech guy
1702 days ago
I found a brand new company with similar products, more features at a lesser cost. They are brand new but are supposed to have their products available in October or November.
Roger
1425 days ago
I have both cable and DSL. Thought Xincom will help. Instead it slows down download speed from 20MB to 1.5 Mb. Tried different settings and no improvement. Went back to my Dlink router and speed is back. Xincom is good only for switching from inactive wan to active wan seamless, but due to their problem with poor networking hardware (updated to current firmware) speed suffers a lot. Now I have to connect DSL to dlink router when cable goes down(fairly common in south florida) and reboot router (takes extra 17 seconds). Will send back the xincom.