• out of stock

TP-Link TL-PA411KIT 500mbps Mini Powerline Ethernet Adapter AV500 $33.38 Delivered @ Shallothead eBay

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TP-LINK’s AV500 Nano Powerline Adapter Starter Kit TL-PA411KIT turns your existing powerline into a high speed network with no need for new wires or drilling. No configuration is required, simply plug your adapters into your power sockets and you can establish networking infrastructure in a flash. With a speed of up to 500Mbps, TL-PA411KIT transmits HD streaming and even 3D movies to every room, making it a great choice for an easy to build multimedia entertainment network

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closed Comments

  • I reckon, in my opinion, Netgear powerline performed better than TP Link's.

    • +1

      This kit got me onto these devices. Because I wrote them off as bs voodoo gadgets, previously.

      Delivered with every setup. Almost 10 sites. This price is amazing!

      My only beef. All providers talk UTTER SHT with speed capabilities.

      But these don’t bottleneck 100/40 NBN, so I’m happy.

  • +3

    nice to wake up to, was going to buy this today from local retailer for near double that :)

  • +4

    I like your profile picture

  • Looks like these are the kinder-aged offspring of these ones from the deal on Thursday night:

    https://www.ozbargain.com.au/node/368184

    These nano ones are much smaller and rated slower than their big bro. I grabbed a set of the big ones to try but wondering if these would have sufficed in performance with console use?

    • If you have NBN and have a Wan speed of 100 megabit this would actually bottleneck download speeds

      For gaming dl speeds don't matter but it will impact game updates and media streaming for eg

  • What is the latency like on these?

    • +1

      Wait and see

  • Already out of stock :(

  • +1

    this one looks sold out now but can be grabbed @ the wireless1 ebay store for ~$2 more currently

  • If you've already got Powerline on your network - same brand - can you add these into other rooms as an expansion set (is. Neither of these ones directly into a router)?

    • +1

      You only ever seem to see the starter packs advertised, not the additional units. In the link above, I Googled (Shopping) and only the starter set showed. Guess you could buy the starter pack and use the one that plugs into the router as a 'spare' and use the other as your new outlet.

  • +1

    Why there are so many people interested in Powerline Ethernet this few days?
    To be honest, I have been tried the 200mbps to 500mbps products and the "actual" speed was not that good
    In some cases, performance on wireless were even better and faster
    (Just from my personal exp tho..)

    • +2

      Generally I would only use it for cases where wireless won’t penetrate through.

    • Plus the cost of power.

      If it is possible to install a cable then after a while it will be free because the power you have not used.

    • +1

      your house wiring sux, that's why.

    • +2

      Well. When I had the 360 in the living room and used wifi it couldn't break past the 5mbps threshold. Friend gave me a Foxtel branded Netcomm one and it could reach 50mbps no problem.

      Wireless is good throughout the house but the card was crappy in the console.

    • The printed speed is the biggest lie ever told. Like 500mbps in one component inside, strapped to a 200mbps component. There have been articles on it. Industry wide.

      I’ve used them for secure, fast, cheap ways to get nbn to sheds 50+ metres out in the yard.

  • I run them for my main PC, and for a wireless extender in an outdoor area.
    Brilliant devices (as long as you're electrical wiring is not from the 1960s) - and a very robust, cheap alternative, especially if you have single brick walls etc.

    • especially if you have single brick walls etc.

      Why would that be out of curiosity?

      • Harder for wireless to penetrate to all rooms of the house if most walls are brick, implying that this is a cheap alternative to get internet to those rooms.

        • Oh right. That makes sense. We have double brick walls at our place :/

  • +1

    powerline remains a good product - and cheap fast tplink are very good for a very simple reason.

  • +1

    I use one kit in a 1890s massive mansion.. and it saves us for the hard to reach places. (eg google chromecast runs on EOP in 1080, we control via wifi. )
    based on the powerpoints, it has been rewired to some level in the last 20 years.

    I also use it at work, to cover ~ 130m from FTTN Xdsl connection point to warehouse.. both are 99% troublefree.. and saved my skin from much more techincal implementations.

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