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Is it possible to combine 2 cable internet connections via load balancing router?

bud951

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Software Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate x64
I would like to purchase two fast cable internet connections at the same location (my home) and combine them into one super fast connection using a load balancing router. I have heard of this being done but I was hoping to hear from someone actually doing this. The Netgear FVS 538 router seems to be capable from what I have read but I am not sure. Does anyone have any info on this subject? Thanks.
 
It could be the same as putting 2 ethernet ard on your computer. The speed would remain the same...just when one of the port lose packets the other one isthere to transmit them.
 
I believe Win7 has built in load balancing, so you can always just connect the second connection directly to the computer that needs all that bandwidth and save yourself a buttload of money.
 
Why not just get 1 faster connection?

I am already on the fastest that Time Warner has to offer and they offer the fastest speeds in my area which is San Antonio TX. No Verizon fios here yet. Dont get me wrong.. my connection is fast but I want to run a file server, game server and I can use more bandwith.
 
I believe Win7 has built in load balancing, so you can always just connect the second connection directly to the computer that needs all that bandwidth and save yourself a buttload of money.

I am not looking just to share connections. I would like to double my speed and I am willing to pay for two connections if its possible to do so. Thanks
 
what sucks is time warners upload speed is capped around 1mb
 
It could be the same as putting 2 ethernet ard on your computer. The speed would remain the same...just when one of the port lose packets the other one isthere to transmit them.

Thats more redundancy correct? I would like to get the speed of two connections on one connection. Doesnt a load balancing router take the two WAN's and combine them to one ip address and alow them to split the packets? Then I could connect my LAN with a much faster connection?
 
Like I said, Win7 does load balancing I believe. So, connect both connections to the computer that you want to have all that speed, and it will do exactly what you want.

A load balancing router, or any load balancing, does not combine the two connections into a single IP. Externally, you would still have two IPs.
 
So if for say I am downloading a 25gb file from a news group will my bandwith double to receive the file at 4 megabytes per second instead of my normal 2mbs? If I am hosting an online game will the amount of players that my server can handle also double? Thanks so much for the input.
 
Like I said, Win7 does load balancing I believe. So, connect both connections to the computer that you want to have all that speed, and it will do exactly what you want.

A load balancing router, or any load balancing, does not combine the two connections into a single IP. Externally, you would still have two IPs.

Don't you just bridge the 2 connections in Vista\Win7 ?.
 
So if for say I am downloading a 25gb file from a news group will my bandwith double to receive the file at 4 megabytes per second instead of my normal 2mbs? If I am hosting an online game will the amount of players that my server can handle also double? Thanks so much for the input.

It depends on how you are downloading the file. If you are using something like Bittorrent, then yes, since it makes multiple connections to multiple different sources to download the single file.

If you are downloading it via something like an FTP or through the web, then generally no. Since these methods tend to only create one connection to the source to download the file, it would only use one of the internet connections.

If you are hosting servers, then to anyone connecting to your servers, you would have two IPs. That means they would have to connect to either or, but they couldn't connect to both.

Don't you just bridge the 2 connections in Vista\Win7 ?.

No, bridging just connects the two network segments. Think of bridging as taking the two ethernet cables coming into the computer and connecting them directly together.
 
Why not just get 1 faster connection?

I know you already answered negative to this but in this vein, have you looked in to a business package? It might cost around the same as 2 consumer-grade connections that you're considering anyway and you'd get better guarantees for uptime, better support etc.
 
Load balancing 'single tasks' would require bonding on your side (router) as well as on the ISP side. I've never seen that offered by an ISP except for higher level lines such as T's, or way back in the day with modem bonding (dual 56K yeah!! ;)).

Couple options that I can think of with two separate lines is relying on DNS round robin or segmenting your services.

The first one means assigning two IP's to a single domain name (yourdomain.com). The DNS server handling your records will return the IP list in response to a request, with the order switched each time.

The second is to simply advertise your game server on one IP and the file server on another. Neither get the benefit of both lines, just the benefit of having their own lines, which is step above sharing a line. Probably the best option if both services are to run 24/7.

Though having said all that, I agree with MadMan. Look into a business class line first. Unlike consumer packages, they're more likely to customize your speeds depending on how much you want to spend.
 
The real issue you will have with this is no cable company will allow you to have 2 cable modems in one residence.
There is no logical reason for this but they simply wont allow it, ive hooked 4 cable modems up at one time to my single cable line, since there MAC Add is whats registered with Comcasts servers once one is registered and the bill is being paid it will work in any house with service.
I know this first hand as my roommate was going to get his own cable modem to eliminate us lagging out the connection by us both downloading stuff.

Now if you where to get a dsl/Other line you could bridge that with your cable on Vista/7.
 
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The real issue you will have with this is no cable company will allow you to have 2 cable modems in one residence.
There is no logical reason for this but they simply wont allow it, ive hooked 4 cable modems up at one time to my single cable line, since there MAC Add is whats registered with Comcasts servers once one is registered and the bill is being paid it will work in any house with service.
I know this first hand as my roommate was going to get his own cable modem to eliminate us lagging out the connection by us both downloading stuff.

Now if you where to get a dsl/Other line you could bridge that with your cable on Vista/7.

This is something that has crossed my mind, whether or not I could even get two commercial lines in my home. I was going to use the roommate scenario to see if it could be done. I guess it would not hurt to ask but the business line option looks to be my best bet. Its weird, others are doing this and Win7 allows for this so I would assume Cable companies would want to make more money. What is the problem? I am willing to pay for the extra line. On the dsl/cable binding, would that be efficient enough to make a big difference in DL speeds or server performance? Wouldn't the delay from grabbing packets from two different isp's slow it down? I am not as knowledgeable as others on this board. Thanks for input.
 
This is something that has crossed my mind, whether or not I could even get two commercial lines in my home. I was going to use the roommate scenario to see if it could be done. I guess it would not hurt to ask but the business line option looks to be my best bet. Its weird, others are doing this and Win7 allows for this so I would assume Cable companies would want to make more money. What is the problem? I am willing to pay for the extra line. On the dsl/cable binding, would that be efficient enough to make a big difference in DL speeds or server performance? Wouldn't the delay from grabbing packets from two different isp's slow it down? I am not as knowledgeable as others on this board. Thanks for input.

Think of it like RAID. You now have two copies of the same set of information that you need and can now access the files from both HDDs. The system accesses different files from both drives at the same time to allow something to happen faster.
 
I don't quite understand the cable company's view point on this either besides the fact they would like it better if we all used less bandwidth hence most isp's enforcing monthly caps.

Business route is most likely a no go if your at a residential address i tried saying i was running an at home business even and they still wouldn't let me get business class service.

Tho this topic did present an interesting though is there any software available to control the windows load balancing so i could per say assign utorrent to use a cable connection and have firefox use tethered internet from my phone?
 
"Tho this topic did present an interesting though is there any software available to control the windows load balancing so i could per say assign utorrent to use a cable connection and have firefox use tethered internet from my phone?"

Sorry, I didn't quite understand that last paragraph.

I would hope that Time Warner could sell me business class internet speed. I guess I will find out on Monday. Is anyone on this board getting business class speed from thier ISP or pairing via dual WAN router or Windows 7? Thanks for the info.
 
I used to use a program called wingate, you can use this to configure two modems for use on one pc.

It is complicated to use tho. And some things dont work as you would expect, but for torrents and the like it worked well.
 
After reading a few posts all over it seems a lot of people found windows se7en can load balance to a certain degree.

So i thought i would give it a bash. I used two seperate cable modems. One is configured for 20mbps and the other for 10mbps. All i did was plug both modems straight into the dual lan ports on my mobo. Win 7 assigned them ip addresses, etc. Here is my results.

2mod.jpg


Obviously both connections were maxed out and added together!

Now don't expect internet browsing, speed test or anything like that to double i speed. At the end of the day you still have two ip address's. Only things that can handle multiple connections from multiple ip address's will work. For example torrents and newsgroups.

Oh and I deleted the torrent afterwards. Not that im against piracy lol, i just cant stand cameron diaz!
 
Now don't expect internet browsing, speed test or anything like that to double in speed. At the end of the day you still have two ip address's. Only things that can handle multiple connections from multiple ip address's will work. For example torrents and newsgroups.


i came here expecting to have to say that, so thank god! you saved me from saying it all myself!
 
i came here expecting to have to say that, so thank god! you saved me from saying it all myself!

HaHa i'm one step ahead of you lol!
 
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