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April 04, 2017, 05:22:17 AM |
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Hardwired LAN is always the best since it is running on fairly short lengths of wire designed to minimize interference and cross-talk and you will enjoy sub 1 ms pings (latency) inside of your network. This helps keep additional contributions to latency negligible when you communicate with a remote server. Hardwired is also the most reliable as network drops are going to be either the router, your rig, or ISP causing issues (rarer), not just random wifi drops (more common).
With that said, Wireless LAN can be useful in limited situations. If you want to spread a few rigs around the house to minimize heating one area too much, or for noise, wireless allows you to do this easier without having to run wires all over. However, there will be a slightly higher latency penalty, which depending on your setup and how much interference your wifi is encountering, could add from 5 to 20 ms on top of your normal router to server latency. As others have correctly pointed out, this can sometimes cause an slight increase in stales at the pool.
The big problem is when you start to increase your rig count. Each rig will increase the wireless or RF "noise floor" in your house and depending on a multitude of other factors, can quickly get to the point where wireless become unusable. You will also notice this with other wireless technologies such as remote controls for garage door openers no longer working properly. This combined with the open air nature of most dedicated mining rigs and lack of proper grounding/shielding to dissipate the RF being generated, will quickly saturate your house with RF noise.
There is no hard and fast rule for this, as it will depend on your current noise floor, how many other wireless devices you have in your home (not just wifi), proximity to neighbors with wifi and wireless devices, power lines, etc., but once you hit anywhere from 5-10 rigs on wireless, you will probably start to notice the effects.
TLDR: Use hardwired LAN if you can, but for a small number of rigs on wifi the small hit on profits probably won't be noticeable.
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