The last deal expired and was for £15 for the pair, now they are £13.95 with free delivery :)
These Pair of BT Simpler Networks Powerline uses the Intellon INT6400 chipset to bring 200Mbps Networking to your home. Easy and quick to Install. They are universal so will work with all network providers.
Top comments
getmeone
15 Feb 1618#25
I think I saw a deal on keyboards. It seems as though your Full Stop isn't working. (here are some for you...............................)
miffyl
15 Feb 169#26
I'm hanging round to see how this goes... :smirk:
Captainbeavus to argosextra
15 Feb 165#17
I don't get much action downstairs either.
chapchap
15 Feb 164#6
That would explain it then.
Latest comments (117)
verysleepy
19 Apr 16#117
Now £19.99 just shows how much profit companies make..!!!
jb66
20 Feb 16#116
Why would I care about that?
AndyRoyd
20 Feb 161#115
Not aware of the brand "Simpler Networks" having any suitable wifi products. You could consider other brands to meet your requirements that do not need OP item, such as a total solution at £29.99 for the TL-WPA281KIT that provides for two ethernet/wired connections as well as wifi connectivity at the extension. I assume all the ethernet and wifi connections can be accessed simultaneously. Obviously for that example you do not have the passthrough mains socket on the front of the devices, but you do have a 3 year warranty.
Wireless160
20 Feb 16#114
All of these toxic powerline adaptors should have been banned. Mains wiring was designed to carry 50Hz ac, not RF. All these so-called powerline adaptors radiate radio frequency interference inside the house and a considerable distance beyond, depending on the wiring, contributing to unacceptable pollution of the LF HF and VHF Radio Spectrum.
BT, Talktalk et al, as responsible telecommunications providers, should be thoroughly ashamed of themselves promoting such a nasty technology. Another example of business interests and lax EEC regulations over-riding common sense. If you doubt this, look up the OFCOM RSGB and many RFI reports.
Mark300ZX
20 Feb 16#113
Many thanks, in your opinion could I get the same brand of product to integrate with the OP's product and give me one wired outlet and another wireless?
AndyRoyd
20 Feb 161#112
Majority of recent wifi routers can provide this feature, or a dedicated access point. All have advantages / disadvantages, although set-up may appear complicated depending on what the end user requires of the network, especially if the user wants to extend the existing wifi network (offering seamless transition between wifi sources) rather than simpler set-up of separate wifi network (with different wifi name etc). Random examples of kit that can convert wired to wireless rated at similar speed or above to OP items: http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/361357495107 which may also be used without the powerlines and still extend the existing wifi network, although in that application it will need to be situated in an area of reasonable reception of the source wifi network, and the resultant repeat function will be at half the received speed (as is true for all wifi repeaters of this type). Could arguably be prudent to buy this type of repeater and evaluate results prior to deciding if your requirement would benefit from being used in conjunction with OP item as well, although three devices (including source) to convey a network is questionable practice. http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B006Q7FG3W/
Or you could consider a powerline product with integral wifi function...
AndyRoyd
20 Feb 16#111
That is a typical example of an application for this product. Note that a previous post said that only one network cable is supplied, so you may need to source another network cable from somewhere (poundshop or 99p random ebay example etc)
AndyRoyd
20 Feb 16#110
Correct. This product has no wireless features, but could be used to supply internet to a device capable of converting wired to wireless.
Mark300ZX
20 Feb 16#109
Hi Andy, please excuse the noobie question, but could you provide an example of a piece of kit capable of converting it?
tom6195
20 Feb 16#108
I need a set of home plugs in order to use my bt vision box, recently got 38mb infinity installed but it's on the other side of the room.
Will these work?
Mark300ZX
20 Feb 16#107
Just want to confirm these are not wireless but for wired internet from the adaptor?
Lancman
20 Feb 16#106
Mine arrived today (from Switzerland!) and they work ok but they cause terrible interference on my computer speakers. I get a constant buzzing/popping noise. Makes them useless for me. Anyone else have this problem? Is there a simple solution?
zwarder
19 Feb 16#105
got mine this morning only one network cable include miserable sods
Gordon Bell
19 Feb 16#104
See above post
Gordon Bell
19 Feb 16#103
Its possible to separate Homeplugs into separate networks, if the plugs allow it. If they are set his way, adapters will not link as they have different network names. (The 'Network Name' being referred to here is nothing to so with your Windows network, its purely an internal powerline name to help powerline adapters identify which ones should be linked).
Obviously this help is for TP Link sets and may not be applicable, but you could give it a look:
Per TP Link help: http://uk.tp-link.com/faq-406.html
Q: Can several Powerline networks exist simultaneously in same power circuit?
A:Yes.The powerline networks can be separated by different network names. About how to change the network name, it can be made by the pair button or attached Utility. However, the overall throughput is shared by the multiple networks, please be informed of this. Please refer to the FAQ 258 to change the powerline network names.
If you have a software utility for both sets, try making sure that the network names are identical on each brand of powerline adapter (the synch button is supposed to do this). Given BT seems to be the common factor in J1000 and RoxyB1234, it could be that one of the BT powerline adapters types are not switching the network name - This is a complete guess.
RoxyB1234
18 Feb 16#102
I bought a pair of these last time, to add to my pair of BT ones already in use. Although all 4 use the Homeplug Av system, the 2 pairs won't talk to each other. Each pair will work independently. So I think I'll order another set of these, in the hope that 4 of the same will work together!
also try a factory reset on both sets and try again.
j1000
18 Feb 16#100
Thanks for your advice.
Tried the sync buttons on both devices with no luck.
Tried pressing them but they don't want to communicate with each other.
I tried the new BT ones attached to my router and attached the other BT one to a socket and they work but the On Networks ones and BT simply don't link with each other either way.
Gordon Bell
18 Feb 16#99
Assuming the BT adapters are Homeplug AV (check the model online), you may have to click the Synch Button (doubles up as the WPS encryption button on some units) to get them to synch up. If you're using encryption, this will definitely have to be done. Without encryption, mine have always linked fine without any need to synch (On Network, Trendnet and Staples rebranded Wifi powerline).
Hello. Would appreciate if someone could help.
Purchased a few sets of these in addition to my current homeplug setup at home.
Existing sets are On Networks brand 200Mbps. On Networks one connected to my router.
When i plugged the BT one in nothing happens, i don't think it can communicate with the main On Networks adapter.
Can someone help please. I assumed these would be compatible as they are the same speed and I believe all powerline adapters have the homeplug AV standard.
Any help/ advice would be appreciated.
porphyria
18 Feb 161#97
Ordered one, code savoo5 worked too, thanks!
shapalando
16 Feb 16#96
sounds like it lol. :smile:
argosextra
16 Feb 16#95
Sorry I forgot the full stops .................. and this one is for you.....
argosextra
16 Feb 16#94
Don't be it's forgotten apology accepted now move on, don't drag this conversation any further than it already has because I am tired and now I'm not getting any connection (action) downstairs
argosextra
16 Feb 16#93
Yes because we are the action experts people call me Action Man
Captainbeavus
16 Feb 16#92
Should I be concerned?
Captainbeavus
16 Feb 16#91
Please don't give me action.
I'm sorry.
Gordon Bell
16 Feb 16#90
If you don't want encryption, there is no configuration:
Plug the adapters into power sockets -
1] one near your router
2] the other in the target room that has the device you want to connect.
You can use extensions that do not have Surge Protectors, but they may weaken the connection. Plugging powerline adapters into surge protectors will stop them working.
Plug the network cable from the router into the powerline adapter
Plug the network cable from the device in the target room into the powerline adapter
The computer/device in the target room should now connect to the router. If you are still having trouble, and have a Wi-fi dongle/card plugged in, you may want to disable it and reboot. Let the wired network take priority.
Just to be clear, these only create a wired LAN port in the target room, not a Wi Fi connection (you would need an 'access point' to turn the LAN port back into a wireless connection in the target room).
I've got these but not sure how you get them working? anyone help?
jojo4142
16 Feb 16#82
I've got these but not sure how you get them working? anyone help?
drcarlos
16 Feb 16#81
The real con is that they're allowed to quote the powerline speed, which maybe 200Mbps but until they put on more expensive uplink Gigabit ports on the devices instead of hobbling them with cheap 10/100Mbps ports they will never achieve anything more than 100Mbps. If they did I think we would all find they could never achieve the quoted speeds unless running on a mains install that was only 5m between plugs and had nothing else plugged in.
octopus
16 Feb 16#74
Can these be used in conjuction with the ZyXEL PLA4215 - 500Mbps Gigabit Passthrough Powerline Kit? Currently my Sky router is plugged into one of the Zyxel adapters.
Gordon Bell to octopus
16 Feb 161#80
http://uk.tp-link.com/faq-406.html
This is the Answer that TP Link gives. Assuming your current adapter is using HomePlug AV Standard:
Q: Are TP-LINK AV200,AV500,AV600,AV1200powerline adapters compatible with each other? Are TP-LINK PLC adapters compatible with adapters of other Brands?
A: TP-LINK AV200,AV500,AV600 powerline adapters adopte HomePlug AV Standard, so they are compatible with each other,AV1200 adopt HomePlug AV2,that is also backward compatible with HomePlug AV standard,which means TP-LINK AV200,AV500,AV600,AV1200 are all compatible with each other.However, the powerline rate will drop to lowest one’s rate when use different AV adapters together.
For adapters of other brands,if they adopt the same standard,they should also be compatible with TP-LINK adapters.However,different brands’ products will have different ways to pair and configure,it might be much easier to use adapters from the same brand.
This should apply to all HomePlug AV adapters. HomePlug AV is a standard, so in theory all homeplug adapters should work together. They will shut the whole network down to the slowest speed.
NomiKaay
16 Feb 16#61
So I got 50mb Virgin media fibre optic. If I get this to improve wifi reception upstairs; would that work?
getmeone to NomiKaay
16 Feb 16#79
No. They are not WIFI. If you have that quality of service I suggest you spend a little more on a better router or higher speed Powerline and a wifi access point positioned upstairs. Got an old BT one laying around?
blimpo
16 Feb 16#71
Been trying to order but my payments aren't going through on either Paypal or Card :/
Gordon Bell to blimpo
16 Feb 161#72
I have the same problem with my card (it fails the banks extra Security check) on MyMemory (no other site has problems), but Paypal works for me. Not that there is anything dodgy about MyMemory, I've ordered a lot of stuff from them in the past - bank simply doesn't seem to like them.
getmeone to blimpo
16 Feb 161#78
Send me your card details and I will try for you.:sunglasses:
These days powerlines or homeplugs would be much more useful with wifi. i haven't noticed any hot deals of these lately.
beastman
16 Feb 16#65
No big deal but how are you calculating that?
I am assuming a top end of 4 watts per device so 8 watts x 24 x 365 - 70, 080 watts per year divided by 1000 = 70 kilowatts @ say 15p each = £10.50.
bloodshoteyes
16 Feb 16#64
Damn hotukdeals turning me into steptoe and sons
bloodshoteyes
16 Feb 16#63
Ordered - cheers op
jb66
16 Feb 16#62
No it will be around £1 a year 0.001p per hour
beastman
15 Feb 16#60
thanks - so my rough calcs comes up with £10 a year to run 2 of these.
beastman
15 Feb 16#58
Does anyone now how many watts these use in real use?
Basic question but do these have to work in pairs as in 1 sender and 1 receiver? Just wondering if I buy 2 sets can I end up with 1 sender from the router and 3 receivers spread around the house rather than the 2 in and 2 out which wouldn't be as good!
Gordon Bell to beastman
15 Feb 162#56
All 4 will create one network (so one at router and 3 satellites). Any devices plugged into them will be able to see each other, regardless of location (there is no master plug). If you use encryption, you will need to configure them all.
If you need to turn any poweline plug back into a wireless connection (eg. the poweline adapter is plugged into a room where your routers Wi-Fi can't reach, but your using devices without lan port), you need to use an 'access point'. If you have an old router, you can sometimes configure this to act as access point or buy a dedicated one.
InternetBowser
15 Feb 16#55
Does this work with fibreoptic?
FINNY D
15 Feb 16#54
used code savoo5 and got it for £13.25? still cheap as chips and heat added
sho_me_da_money
15 Feb 16#53
Use the code savoo5 at checkout and go through quidco
sho_me_da_money
15 Feb 16#51
Ordered for 12.85. Boom
zidane1845 to sho_me_da_money
15 Feb 16#52
how did you get 12.85?
getmeone
15 Feb 161#50
I think it must be that he works at Argos Extra and I would assume that he is not in a customer facing position.
Mrdom
15 Feb 16#49
With the example of 40mb download speed you could be fine with either, assuming the signal is reasonable. But you may get a faster speed with 500 over the 200, though probably neither will give the full advertised speed, in reality that means you might get 40mb actual speed with the 200mb adapters, and 60mb with the 500mb adaptors, in which case there would be no benefit. BUT it might just as likely be that you get 20mb with the 200mb adapters and 30mb with the 50mb adapters, so then there would. Depends on your wiring.
brainbug100
15 Feb 16#2
could be my set up but these reduced my wired connection to 100mbs max. when connected to the router my desktop only got 100mb. disconnect these and I was back up to 200mbps, strange, still voted hot for pass through
chapchap to brainbug100
15 Feb 161#3
Taking everything into consideration getting half the advertised speed is about right i would think.
freakstyler to brainbug100
15 Feb 161#9
These are only 10/100 Ethernet anyway hence your 100Mb speed. They might be rated at 200Mb (the speed the plugs can communicate with each other) but you're still only connected via 10/100 and not gigabit Ethernet.
greatkingshark to brainbug100
15 Feb 16#47
its probably because the sockets are limited to 10/100mpbs.
on a separate note I have these in the house and love them. hot for price and pass through
whitey6272
15 Feb 16#46
So if your network is purely used for Internet there will be no benefits of the 500 over the 200 like in my situation?
Cheers
Blueandy99
15 Feb 16#44
do these work with any pass throughs?
My other set are TP link.
Logic suggests that the ethernet is being opened up onto the rings, not encrypted or anything like that so these would be fine.
Logic doesn't always prevail :smile:
lilbeastie to Blueandy99
15 Feb 16#45
depends on the chipset used and the IP addresses of the units etc as to whether they can talk to each other.
I used to run these and a set of Comtrend adapters at the same time - they wouldn't talk to each other, but each set worked fine without interfering with each other.
whitey6272
15 Feb 16#38
My internet is 40mb download and 10mb upload so surely the difference between the 200 and the 500 adapter a I wouldn't notice is that right? I don't see how many people in the UK buy ones bigger than 200 as only now has virgin brought out that kind of speed internet
lilbeastie to whitey6272
15 Feb 16#43
Because people use their networks for more than just the internet. PowerLine is great for a cheap, simple way to an an extra ethernet connection without running in new wires, but network transfers (to a network hard drive etc) are much faster over a 'proper' gigabit connection using cat5e or better.
Mrdom
15 Feb 16#42
You definitely can do that, but not being on the same ring main will usually mean a drop in speed which may or may not be acceptable and it could reduce the signal to the point it wont work at all, you would have to test it in your situation to find out. The age and condition of wiring can have a massive impact on speeds too so its impossible to predict what results you will actually get.
Blueandy99
15 Feb 16#37
Do these only work on old ring main systems? My house is wired on a split RCD board and so the two rings are entirely separate and I'm not sure I'm getting great if any ethernet upstairs, my smart telly struggles with youtube.
I'm looking for a solution for the loft but if I cannot put these on the different rings then aren't they in fact pointless.
whitey6272 to Blueandy99
15 Feb 161#39
Pretty sure you can as they are still physically connected at the consumer box
lilbeastie to Blueandy99
15 Feb 161#41
I used to run 4 of these across ring mains on 3 different RCDs in 2 different boards (in the same property) without issue.
gdp-it
15 Feb 16#40
apologies code DOES work just not on 2 or more ordered at the same time. created separate orders so many thanks
argosextra
15 Feb 16#36
Don't need them don't use them if you got a problem then why read my comment and why give a stupid reply I don't need full stops you might need them use them don't care get lost fool
stu83
15 Feb 16#35
Plus 3% Quidico I think
Hjcarter
15 Feb 16#30
Extra 5% off with 'savoo5' so 13.25
gdp-it to Hjcarter
15 Feb 16#34
code not but good deal
tvlovesme
15 Feb 16#33
great price. ordered.
Gollywood
15 Feb 162#32
Says the guy called 'argo sex-tra'
Relax buddy....
crazyal
15 Feb 161#31
Oh chillout ffs.
DrRossi
15 Feb 16#29
thanks op
PulseTurbo
15 Feb 16#28
I'm wondering if these would suit my dad's requirements.
He needs to connect his Sky box to an ethernet cable, but his router is on the other side of the room. Would this work? (Presumably with the ethernet in to one, and out of the other?
markkeenan
15 Feb 161#27
This made me lol
miffyl
15 Feb 169#26
I'm hanging round to see how this goes... :smirk:
getmeone
15 Feb 1618#25
I think I saw a deal on keyboards. It seems as though your Full Stop isn't working. (here are some for you...............................)
argosextra
15 Feb 16#24
Please don't be stupid I'm asking a question about the deal if you got something funny to say then don't share it with me if your not getting action then please ask your parents for guidance and they will take you through it for you or watch them do it and gain experience from it ok don't reply or I will give action to you ok
abulkasam
15 Feb 16#23
200Mb is combined. So realistically 100Mb in Lab conditions. Typical is 10%-25% of that figure in real world situations. So expect 10-25Mb real world speeds.
chapchap
15 Feb 161#7
These look very much like they are re-badged Simpler Networks HomePlug AV 200Mbps? If so, some reviews below if anyone is interested.
Out the Box requirements A basic level of intelligence. Not for sale to complete idiots. sometimes includes a trace of nuts
Mrdom
15 Feb 16#21
Ah, beaten to it
Mrdom
15 Feb 161#20
The main reason for this is that unlike any other networking you care to mention power line networking manufacturers have somehow conned people into allowing them to quote combined up and down speed as the headline speed (so 100 up plus 100 down = 200).
friar_chris
15 Feb 16#19
upto 100mb upload and 100mb download means a total transfer rate of up to 200mb
76zedfour
15 Feb 16#16
NERDY QUESTION ALERT
I have just had electric run to an outside cabin. It draws power from the consumer unit through a breaker. I want to be able to pick up internet in the cabin. Do these have to be on the same electrical ring main or merely being connected through the same consumer unit is fine?
getmeone to 76zedfour
15 Feb 161#18
Anything consumer side of the meter should be fine. Extension leads can create some issues. I have just installed an old pair from my house to a shed 60 meters away and they are fine for most things. Coupled them up with a HH3 and I now have wifi in the back field.
argosextra
15 Feb 161#14
I don't get internet downstairs are the wifi extenders or something else
AndyRoyd to argosextra
15 Feb 161#15
These extend ethernet connection. To provide additional wifi coverage, you would need to wire it to an additional device capable of converting ethernet to wifi.
Captainbeavus to argosextra
15 Feb 165#17
I don't get much action downstairs either.
adi0604
15 Feb 16#13
Many don't realise how useful these are..
CrazyBob
15 Feb 16#12
Nice deal. thanks OP
nefertiti6969
15 Feb 16#11
Yes there were 3 but i got the last set unless they relist more.
nefertiti6969
15 Feb 16#8
How is it i bought some of these (well the 500 version) just half an hour ago after finding no current deals when searching on here! sods law!
Well the BT twin 500 flex pass through were £18.73 on currys ebay open box so hopefully they will be fine!
chapchap to nefertiti6969
15 Feb 16#10
I had a look but couldn't find them-have they all gone?
chapchap
15 Feb 164#6
That would explain it then.
Tj17usa
15 Feb 161#5
A whole £2 more when I posted
Tj17usa
15 Feb 161#1
People voted this cold when I posted it last month. I have them and they are brilliant, heat from me.
Opening post
These Pair of BT Simpler Networks Powerline uses the Intellon INT6400 chipset to bring 200Mbps Networking to your home. Easy and quick to Install. They are universal so will work with all network providers.
Top comments
Latest comments (117)
BT, Talktalk et al, as responsible telecommunications providers, should be thoroughly ashamed of themselves promoting such a nasty technology. Another example of business interests and lax EEC regulations over-riding common sense. If you doubt this, look up the OFCOM RSGB and many RFI reports.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/361357495107 which may also be used without the powerlines and still extend the existing wifi network, although in that application it will need to be situated in an area of reasonable reception of the source wifi network, and the resultant repeat function will be at half the received speed (as is true for all wifi repeaters of this type). Could arguably be prudent to buy this type of repeater and evaluate results prior to deciding if your requirement would benefit from being used in conjunction with OP item as well, although three devices (including source) to convey a network is questionable practice.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B006Q7FG3W/
Or you could consider a powerline product with integral wifi function...
Will these work?
Obviously this help is for TP Link sets and may not be applicable, but you could give it a look:
Per TP Link help:
http://uk.tp-link.com/faq-406.html
Q: Can several Powerline networks exist simultaneously in same power circuit?
A:Yes.The powerline networks can be separated by different network names. About how to change the network name, it can be made by the pair button or attached Utility. However, the overall throughput is shared by the multiple networks, please be informed of this. Please refer to the FAQ 258 to change the powerline network names.
This is how TP Link handle it (I have no idea if BT or this set can do this) - http://uk.tp-link.com/faq-258.html
If you have a software utility for both sets, try making sure that the network names are identical on each brand of powerline adapter (the synch button is supposed to do this). Given BT seems to be the common factor in J1000 and RoxyB1234, it could be that one of the BT powerline adapters types are not switching the network name - This is a complete guess.
I'm assuming these are the BT powerline adapters you have.
http://bt.custhelp.com/ci/fattach/get/2673070/1346669984/redirect/1/filename/Simpler%20Networks%20Powerline%20Adapter%20user%20guide.pdf
also try a factory reset on both sets and try again.
Tried the sync buttons on both devices with no luck.
Tried pressing them but they don't want to communicate with each other.
I tried the new BT ones attached to my router and attached the other BT one to a socket and they work but the On Networks ones and BT simply don't link with each other either way.
This briefly covers it (step 5 & 6)
http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/how-to/network-wifi/set-up-powerline-networking-adaptors-3380482/
Purchased a few sets of these in addition to my current homeplug setup at home.
Existing sets are On Networks brand 200Mbps. On Networks one connected to my router.
When i plugged the BT one in nothing happens, i don't think it can communicate with the main On Networks adapter.
Can someone help please. I assumed these would be compatible as they are the same speed and I believe all powerline adapters have the homeplug AV standard.
Any help/ advice would be appreciated.
I'm sorry.
Plug the adapters into power sockets -
1] one near your router
2] the other in the target room that has the device you want to connect.
You can use extensions that do not have Surge Protectors, but they may weaken the connection. Plugging powerline adapters into surge protectors will stop them working.
Plug the network cable from the router into the powerline adapter
Plug the network cable from the device in the target room into the powerline adapter
The computer/device in the target room should now connect to the router. If you are still having trouble, and have a Wi-fi dongle/card plugged in, you may want to disable it and reboot. Let the wired network take priority.
Just to be clear, these only create a wired LAN port in the target room, not a Wi Fi connection (you would need an 'access point' to turn the LAN port back into a wireless connection in the target room).
http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/how-to/network-wifi/set-up-powerline-networking-adaptors-3380482/
There is a video icon just at the bottom of the advert. If you cant get them going, shout.
This is the Answer that TP Link gives. Assuming your current adapter is using HomePlug AV Standard:
Q: Are TP-LINK AV200,AV500,AV600,AV1200powerline adapters compatible with each other? Are TP-LINK PLC adapters compatible with adapters of other Brands?
A: TP-LINK AV200,AV500,AV600 powerline adapters adopte HomePlug AV Standard, so they are compatible with each other,AV1200 adopt HomePlug AV2,that is also backward compatible with HomePlug AV standard,which means TP-LINK AV200,AV500,AV600,AV1200 are all compatible with each other.However, the powerline rate will drop to lowest one’s rate when use different AV adapters together.
For adapters of other brands,if they adopt the same standard,they should also be compatible with TP-LINK adapters.However,different brands’ products will have different ways to pair and configure,it might be much easier to use adapters from the same brand.
This should apply to all HomePlug AV adapters. HomePlug AV is a standard, so in theory all homeplug adapters should work together. They will shut the whole network down to the slowest speed.
Devolo Espana
http://www.devolo.com/uk/Press/Press-Releases/2014/Powerline-Networking-Specialist-devolo-expands-into-Spain
http://www.rapidtables.com/calc/electric/energy-cost-calculator.htm
although I did not account for 2 devices
I am assuming a top end of 4 watts per device so 8 watts x 24 x 365 - 70, 080 watts per year divided by 1000 = 70 kilowatts @ say 15p each = £10.50.
http://uk.hardware.info/reviews/3579/9/32-powerline-adapters-round-up-internet-from-your-power-grid-energy-consumption
If you need to turn any poweline plug back into a wireless connection (eg. the poweline adapter is plugged into a room where your routers Wi-Fi can't reach, but your using devices without lan port), you need to use an 'access point'. If you have an old router, you can sometimes configure this to act as access point or buy a dedicated one.
on a separate note I have these in the house and love them. hot for price and pass through
Cheers
My other set are TP link.
Logic suggests that the ethernet is being opened up onto the rings, not encrypted or anything like that so these would be fine.
Logic doesn't always prevail :smile:
I used to run these and a set of Comtrend adapters at the same time - they wouldn't talk to each other, but each set worked fine without interfering with each other.
I'm looking for a solution for the loft but if I cannot put these on the different rings then aren't they in fact pointless.
Relax buddy....
He needs to connect his Sky box to an ethernet cable, but his router is on the other side of the room. Would this work? (Presumably with the ethernet in to one, and out of the other?
http://www.amazon.co.uk/-/dp/B00G48IVIU
https://www.avforums.com/threads/simpler-networks-hp200pt64-homeplug-review.1238370/
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Simpler-Networks-Powerline-re-seller-instructions/dp/B006R72YJU/ref=sr_1_2?s=computers&ie=UTF8&qid=1455534884&sr=1-2&keywords=Simpler+Networks+HomePlug+AV+200+Mbps#customerReviews
Out the Box requirements A basic level of intelligence. Not for sale to complete idiots. sometimes includes a trace of nuts
I have just had electric run to an outside cabin. It draws power from the consumer unit through a breaker. I want to be able to pick up internet in the cabin. Do these have to be on the same electrical ring main or merely being connected through the same consumer unit is fine?
Well the BT twin 500 flex pass through were £18.73 on currys ebay open box so hopefully they will be fine!