this post was submitted on 08 Jan 2024
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It was more to distribute load rather than separate traffic. My main router seems to start pooping the bed once I have 40+ devices connected to it, so I wanted to reduce the number of devices connected to it to prevent that as I need it to be stable for work… and gaming, haha.
If it’s the WiFi that’s crapping out, get a ubiquiti UniFi 6+ access point. It will handle up to 300 devices for $130. You will need to by the POE adapter for it but it’s ~$15.
It's ok to put iot stuff on an overloaded network tho, it doesn't need too much bandwidth.
I've found cheaper routes tend to crap out due to numbers, not just load. I'm not sure what's actually causing it, but it's not network congestion due to traffic.
Best I can tell, it's overhead congestion. They try and give each device a chance to talk. Unfortunately they don't multitask this well. IoT devices are a little notorious for being slow to respond (because of sleep modes etc). With enough of them, this can leave critical devices with a long lag time before they get a proper window.
Most routers that can handle vlans can more than handle this issue. My ubiquiti router blazes along, and it's under a far worse load than my cheap provider's router was failing under.
I've got the ubiquiti dream machine and it's been bombproof so far.