VMG1312 Vs VMG3925: Difference between revisions
mNo edit summary |
|||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
|- |
|- |
||
! !! VMG1312-B10D !! VMG3925-B10B |
! !! VMG1312-B10D !! VMG3925-B10B |
||
|- |
|||
| || [[File:Vmg1312-b10d.png|175px]] || [[File:VMG3925-B10B-Large.png|200px]] |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| Dimensions with stand (mm)|| 160Wx115Hx60D || 185Wx147Hx85D |
| Dimensions with stand (mm)|| 160Wx115Hx60D || 185Wx147Hx85D |
Revision as of 11:50, 15 March 2018
Thais page describes the differences between the ZyXEL VMG1312-B10D and the ZyXEL VMG3925-B10B routers.
The main differences are:
- VMG3925 is more expensive
- VMG3925 has 2.4 and 5G WiFi radio, the VMG1312 has only 2.4G
- VMG3925 has Gigabit Ethernet ports, the VMG1312 has 100M ports
- VMG3925 is physically larger, even though they are a similar shape
- VMG3925 has a dedicated WAN Ethernet port, the VMG1312 has a shared LAN/WAN Ethernet port
- VMG3925 has a better wall mount
Detailed differences
You may note that the VMG3925-B10B has a slower CPU, however it also contains more dedicated hardware for packet processing compared to the VMG1312-B10D which needed the extra CPU clock cycles to deal with processing packets.
The VMG3925-B10B's SoC contains 1 Gigabit PHY, which connects to the Switch chip for the WAN and LAN ports. Radios are connected to the SoC, so packets passing through LAN<>WLAN or WAN<>WLAN would be limited to the bandwidth of the single Gigabit PHY inside.