The Truth Behind HomePlug “Speed”

Photo of author

Tim Higgins

I’ve often referred to the Home Plug AV2 profile graphic below in our powerline adapter reviews and used it as the basis of SmallNetBuilder’s Powerline device classification system. Turns out, neither the chipmakers nor powerline product makers use it.

I had an illuminating discussion yesterday with Dr. Stephen Palm. He’s a Senior Technical Director at Broadcom and also serves as Vice President and Board of Director member of the HomePlug Alliance. Dr. Palm said the AV2 profiles were created early in the development of the AV2 standard. But it’s not a binding standard and basically "no one follows it".

HomePlug AV2 Profiles: Fiction

HomePlug AV2 Profiles: Fiction

My takeaway from our discussion as that each AV2 chipmaker (there are currently only Broadcom and Qualcomm Atheros) uses its own secret sauce of bandwidth and modulation techniques so that product makers can play the old game of slap-the-biggest-number-on-the-box.

For example, here’s the calculation behind the 1000 Mbps "speed" claimed for ZyXEL’s PLA5206, a “1000 Mbps” adapter based on Broadcom’s BCM60333 AV2-SISO chip.

  • The BCM60333 can use a bandwidth of up to 84.3 MHz (from ~1.8 MHz up to ~86.1 MHz).
  • In this bandwidth, a total of 3455 OFDM carriers are employed with a minimum symbol time of 40.96 us
  • The maximum bit allocation per carrier is 12
  • The maximum PHY rate is obtained as follows: 3455 carriers x 12 bits/carrier ÷ 40.96us = 1012.2 Mbps

For adapters based on Broadcom’s BCM60500 AV2-MIMO chip such as D-Link’s DHP-701AV, a 2X multiplier gets thrown in there somewhere to yield the "2000 Mbps" rating you see on the D-Link’s box.

I don’t have QCA’s calculation handy, but it’s apparently way more conservative, with products claiming only 600 Mbps for AV2-SISO products and 1200 Mbps for AV2-MIMO.

Dr. Palm said the HomePlug Alliance has different Certification suites for AV and AV2 products, but doesn’t differentiate between SISO and MIMO products in the AV2 certification suite. The suite focuses primarily on four key areas:

  • Interoperability
  • Throughput
  • Power Save
  • Pushbutton Security

We didn’t get into the specifics behind each area, but it’s interesting there aren’t different minimum throughput requirements to Certify AV2-SISO and AV2-MIMO.

SmallNetBuilder’s New Powerline Product Classes

So since the AV2 Profile chart is fiction, we’re simplifying our classification system. The new classes are in Table 1.

Advertised Link Rates Devices
AV 200 Mbps – INT6400 / INT1400
– QCA6410
– BCM 60321
AV500 500 Mbps – QCA AR7420 / AR1540
– AR7400 / AR1500
AV2-SISO 600 Mbps – QCA7450 / AR1540
1000 Mbps – BCM60333
AV2-MIMO 1200 Mbps – QCA7500
2000 Mbps – BCM60500
Table 1: Powerline product classes

Although the HomePlug Alliance says it doesn’t treat AV2 SISO and MIMO devices differently, we’ll continue to class and rank them separately.

All products have been reclassed and reranked as needed to reflect this new system. We hope it helps reduce the confusion powerline product marketeers have created in the effort to win your wallets.

Related posts

Owning IOS at Black Hat 2005

You may have heard of the trouble Michael Lynn got himself into with Cisco, ISS and maybe the Department of Homeland Security at Black Hat 2005 yesterday in Las Vegas. But Humphrey Cheung's report has had some of the slides that Cisco's army of page cutters didn't want you to see.

Can DD-WRT or Tomato Fix Bad Routing?

Alternative firmwares can provide lots more features. But neither of the two most popular loads is a clear winner when it comes to improving routing performance.

Hardware Router Chart – June 2006 Update

In this month's update, we've added four new routers and introduce a much-requested new chart!